I placed the folder on the table without a word. Vivienne smirked, expecting my signature on the exit papers she’d drafted that morning. Instead, twelve identical folders slid down to each board member, courtesy of Nadia from legal, who I’d befriended over cafeteria coffee months ago. “Before I resign,” I said, my voice steadier than I expected, “I think the board deserves the truth about the Nordic contract.” Vivienne’s smile cracked. Inside each folder: three years of forwarded emails where she’d sold client forecasts to a competitor under a shell company called Ashvale Holdings. Bank statements. Signed NDAs she’d violated. And a recorded call, played softly from my phone, where she laughed about “letting the little scholarship girl fix my messes until I dump her.” The room went silent. Mr. Ashcroft, her uncle, opened his folder with shaking hands. “Vivienne,” he whispered, “tell me this is fabricated.” She couldn’t. Security was already at the door. As she was escorted out screaming that I was nobody, I finally pulled the silver cross from under my collar and set it on the table. “My mother mopped this floor for twenty-two years,” I told the board. “She used to say the building would remember her one day.” Mr. Ashcroft looked at me for a long moment, then slid a new document across the table. Not a resignation. A promotion. Head of the Nordic division, effective immediately. Six months later, I renamed the executive lounge after my mother. Vivienne sends letters from her federal sentencing hearings asking for character references. I never open them. But every morning, I walk past the brass plaque with my mother’s name, and I whisper the same thing. The building remembers you, Mama. The building remembers.
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