The quarterly shareholder meeting was scheduled for Friday at ten. I arrived at six, as always, and began polishing the glass doors of the executive floor. Brandon stormed in at eight-thirty, already shouting into his phone about a promotion he expected to announce that day. When he saw me kneeling to wipe a coffee spill, he kicked the bucket over, soaking my shoes. Then he grabbed my collar, tore off the small silver pin, and threw it across the floor. He told me I was fired, effective immediately, for being an eyesore in front of important guests. Two security guards stepped forward, but neither moved to touch me. They only lowered their eyes. At nine fifty-five, I walked into the boardroom in the same wet uniform. Brandon was already at the podium, smiling at a room full of investors. His smile cracked when the chairman stood, walked around the long table, and pulled out the head chair for me. Mr. Hensley, welcome, sir, he said, loud enough for every phone in the room to catch. Brandon’s face drained of color as the screens behind him lit up with my photograph and the words Founder and Majority Owner. I did not raise my voice. I simply picked up the silver pin someone had placed on the table, fastened it back to my collar, and asked Brandon to sit down. Then I announced three things. The pregnant receptionist would be reinstated with full back pay. Every cleaner in the building would receive a raise and health insurance, effective that morning. And Brandon would spend the next ninety days shadowing the night janitor, learning the names of every person he had ever walked past without seeing. For the first time in years, I felt my wife smiling somewhere behind me. I was not alone anymore. I was home.
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