I kept my head down and scrubbed. Not because I was afraid, but because I wanted every camera in that lobby to catch every second of who he really was when he thought no one important was watching. Grant leaned over me, close enough that I smelled his cologne. “Beg,” he whispered. “Beg the Vice President not to fire you, and maybe I’ll let you keep pushing that mop until Christmas.” The elevator dinged. Heels on marble. My chief of staff, Diane, walked out flanked by two board members and a man in a dark suit carrying a leather folder. Grant straightened instantly, smoothing his tie, flashing that television smile. “Diane! Perfect timing. I was just, uh, addressing a staffing issue.” Diane didn’t even look at him. She looked at me. Then she extended a hand, palm up, waiting. I let her pull me to my feet. She handed me a folded blazer with the company crest stitched on the pocket. Grant’s smile cracked at the corners. “Diane, what is this? Who is this woman?” Diane finally turned to him, calm as a closed door. “Mr. Halloway, allow me to formally introduce you. This is Margaret Halden. Founder’s daughter. Majority shareholder. As of six a.m. this morning, acting Chief Executive Officer.” The blood left his face in a single wave. The man in the dark suit stepped forward and slid the leather folder into Grant’s shaking hands. Inside: a termination notice, an internal investigation summary, and a printout of every wire he’d quietly routed to shell accounts he thought no one could trace. I buttoned the blazer over my coveralls and finally met his eyes. “You told me to beg on my knees, Mr. Halloway. Now it’s your turn. Beg the board. Beg the auditors. Beg whoever answers the door at the federal building on Tuesday morning.” The interns weren’t hiding their phones anymore. Grant opened his mouth. Nothing came out but a small, wet sound. I picked up the mop, handed it to him gently, and walked toward my elevator.
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