Damien laughed. “Effective ten minutes ago. Security’s already at your desk.” I nodded once, picked up my purse, and walked out without looking back. What Damien didn’t know — what he never bothered to read in the contracts he’d been signing blindly for weeks — was that every single one of those marquee clients had a personal loyalty clause tied to me, not the agency. I’d negotiated it myself, quietly, after the first time he tried to take credit for the Halston rebrand. By the time I reached the lobby, my phone was already buzzing. Priya from Halston. Then Marcus from Verra. Then the Lindbergh family directly. I answered each one from the back of an Uber, calm as a Sunday morning. “Yes, I’ve left Hawthorne. Yes, I’m opening my own shop Monday. Yes, I’d love to keep working with you.” By 9 p.m., I had signed letters of intent representing forty-two million dollars in annual billings. By Friday, Hawthorne’s stock — quietly traded among the partners — had cratered, and the founder, Damien’s uncle, called me himself. His voice was hoarse. “Maya. Please. Name your price to come back.” I poured myself a glass of wine and watched my daughter sleep on the monitor. “I don’t want to come back, Robert. But I’ll buy the Halston and Verra contracts off you for a dollar each, since they’re walking anyway. Consider it a parting gift.” There was a long, broken silence. Then he asked the question I’d been waiting six years to hear. “What do you want me to do about Damien?” I smiled into the dark. “Nothing, Robert. The clients already did it for me.” Three weeks later I opened Marlowe & Co. in a sunlit loft across the river. Damien sent one final email, all caps, calling me ungrateful. I didn’t reply. I just framed his termination letter — the one he’d handed me with such a smirk — and hung it above my new desk, right where every morning sun could hit it.
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