“You reek of bleach and failure. Do you even know who I am? I close deals worth more than your entire miserable pension. Get on your knees and wipe every drop off my shoes, or I swear I’ll have you fired, blacklisted, and living under a bridge by lunchtime.” The lobby had gone silent. Twenty people watching. The security guard at the front desk stared at his monitor, refusing to look up. A senior director stepped out of the elevator, saw Chloe’s face, saw me on the wet floor, and immediately stepped right back in. Nobody moved. Nobody spoke. I slowly bent down and started wiping her red-bottomed heel with a paper towel, my hands shaking, not from fear but from something much older and much quieter. Chloe filmed me doing it on her phone, laughing, captioning it live for her followers. Then the private elevator behind her chimed. The one that only goes to the fifty-eighth floor. Three men in charcoal suits stepped out, flanking a fourth. Chief of Staff. Head of Legal. Head of Global Security. And between them, a tall silver-haired man carrying a leather portfolio embossed with the Halston crest. He walked straight past Chloe like she was furniture. Stopped in front of me. Extended a hand to help me up. “Dad,” he said, loud enough for every phone in the lobby to catch it, “you promised Mom you’d stop covering the night janitor’s shift on your birthday.” He turned. Looked at Chloe. Looked at her phone, still recording. Looked at the paper towel crumpled in her hand. His voice never rose. “Ms. Vance. My father founded this company in 1979. He mops floors on Tuesdays because he likes to remember where he started. You have thirty seconds to explain to the Chairman of Halston Industries why you just ordered him onto his knees.” Chloe’s phone hit the marble and cracked. She opened her mouth. Nothing came out.
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