I stood up slowly, coffee dripping from my sleeves, and I did not reach for the badge. I simply walked to the elevator, past the frozen interns, and pressed the top button, the one that required a black key card. Marcus laughed until he noticed the card in my hand. Where do you think you’re going, sweetheart? he called after me. The doors closed on his smirk. Upstairs, the full board was already waiting in the glass conference room, twelve directors on their feet the moment they saw me. Good morning, Ms. Vale, the chairman said softly, pulling out the head chair. I sat down still in my soaked uniform. I had inherited this company from my father six months ago, and I had gone undercover as a cleaner to see who deserved to keep their offices. On the wall of screens, the lobby footage was already playing on loop, Marcus’s voice booming through the speakers, every insult, every kick, every cigarette. Security escorted him up in cuffs of his own making, his face the colour of the coffee he had spilled. When the doors slid open and he saw me at the head of the table, he actually laughed, certain it was a prank. Then he saw the twenty new hires watching from the doorway, the same ones he had performed for an hour earlier. I stood up, still in grey, and slid a single envelope across the polished wood. Inside was his termination, and a cheque for every cleaner he had ever mocked, funded from his own severance. Marcus, I said quietly, you were right about one thing. Nobody will remember your name here. But they will remember mine. The interns began to clap, hesitantly at first, then louder, until the whole floor was on its feet. I walked out past him without looking back, coffee still dripping, head higher than the skyline.
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