The investor, Mr. Haneda, let Marcus talk for nine full minutes. He nodded politely. He asked one question: “Who wrote the volatility layer on slide fourteen?” Marcus didn’t miss a beat. “Trevor and I built that from the ground up.” Trevor smiled his TV-anchor smile. Mr. Haneda closed his folder. Then he looked directly past them, at me, still holding an empty sugar packet against the wall. “Ms. Ortiz. Would you please come sit down.” The room went silent so fast I heard the AC click on. Marcus laughed, confused. “Sir, she’s just support staff —” Mr. Haneda raised one finger and Marcus stopped talking mid-sentence. “Ms. Ortiz emailed me a working prototype of that volatility layer fourteen months ago, when she was an unpaid intern, asking if I thought the math was sound. I have kept every version she has sent me since. I did not fly eleven hours to invest in a slide deck. I flew eleven hours to invest in her.” He slid a term sheet across the table. Forty million dollars. My name on the top line as lead architect and co-founder of the spinoff. Marcus’s face went the color of wet paper. Trevor actually tried to laugh, then realized no one was laughing with him. HR walked in three minutes later — not for me. For them. Turns out stripping an employee’s name off intellectual property to defraud an investor is a very specific kind of federal problem. As they were escorted out, Marcus finally looked at me, really looked, and whispered, “Who ARE you?” I picked up his abandoned coffee cup, took one slow sip, and smiled. “Two sugars, sunshine.”
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