“Derek,” I said softly, “before I pack anything — could you remind the board which projects you’ve personally signed off on this year?” He smirked. He listed four. The Crescent Tower. The Bayfront Library. The Redwell Hospital wing. The Monroe Civic Center. The room nodded along, impressed by his confidence. I slid a thin blue folder across the table. “Then I think the board should also know,” I said, “that all four of those projects use load calculations from the 2011 code revision. We adopted the 2021 standards in March. I flagged it in April. In May. In June.” Derek’s smile flickered. “You ignored my emails because, and I quote, ‘Grandma should stick to sketching.'” I opened the folder. Inside were printouts — his replies, time-stamped, dismissive, arrogant. The board chair, Eleanor Pratt, picked one up. Her jaw tightened. “If we’d broken ground next month,” I continued, “the city inspector would have shut down every site. Fines, lawsuits, decade-long reputational damage. I held the corrections back, Derek, because I wanted the board to see exactly who they were promoting.” Silence. Real silence — the kind that has weight. Eleanor turned to Derek. “You told us she was obsolete.” “She is —” he started. “Sit down,” Eleanor said. Then, to me: “Margaret, what would you like to do?” I stood, smoothed my blazer, and walked to the head of the table — the seat Derek had been sliding toward for months. “I’d like Derek to spend the next ninety days personally redrawing every calculation under the supervision of our newest intern. Then I’d like his title revised to Junior Associate, pending review.” Rachel covered her mouth, eyes shining. The motion passed unanimously. As I walked out, I paused at Derek’s chair. “This century,” I said gently, “still runs on math, sweetheart.” The door clicked shut behind me, and for the first time in months, I breathed.
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