The next morning at nine sharp, Marcus was called to the forty-seventh floor for an emergency board meeting he had not been invited to prepare for. He rode the private elevator smoothing his tie, rehearsing the quarterly numbers, certain this was the promotion he had been promised. The mahogany doors opened onto a room of twelve silent directors, and at the head of the long table sat me, Elias Ardent, in a charcoal suit that fit like it had been waiting in a closet for exactly this day. My silver hair was combed back, my hands folded over a leather portfolio stamped with the same crest that hung above the lobby. Marcus froze in the doorway, his mouth opening and closing like a fish pulled from clean water. I slid a small object across the polished table toward him. It was the name tag he had thrown in the trash, cleaned and pressed flat. Elias, custodial, three years of service. I told him quietly that I had founded Ardent Holdings forty-one years ago, that after my wife Ruth passed I had come back not as a boss but as a janitor, because she used to say a company forgets its soul the moment the man at the top forgets the man with the mop. Every morning I had watched who held doors, who said good morning, who stepped over a tired intern crying in the stairwell. Marcus had failed every quiet test a building can give. Security escorted him to clear his desk while the board voted unanimously to promote the young woman from accounting who had once brought me hot cocoa on a snowstorm night without knowing my name. Outside, the Chicago rain had softened into gentle sun, and through the tall windows I could see the marble lobby below, freshly mopped, waiting for someone kinder to walk across it.
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