Brittany wasn’t done. She yanked out her phone and started filming him, laughing. “This is what happens when you can’t afford retirement, folks. Say hi to the internet, gramps!” She kicked his mop bucket over. Dirty water spread across the polished floor toward the executive elevator. Henry slowly straightened up, his knees popping audibly, and looked at her with the saddest, most patient eyes I have ever seen. He said nothing. He just picked up the empty bucket. That’s when the private executive elevator, the one nobody except the top floor is allowed to use, chimed open. Out stepped Marcus Vance, the thirty-two-year-old CEO of Hartwell Industries, flanked by three men in suits from the board. The entire lobby went dead silent. Marcus took one step forward, saw the coffee stains, saw the overturned bucket, saw Henry standing there dripping. His face drained of every drop of color. Then, in front of the board, in front of Brittany, in front of forty employees pretending to work, Marcus Vance dropped to both knees on the wet marble floor. He grabbed Henry’s stained hands and pressed them against his forehead. “Dad,” he choked out, loud enough for everyone to hear, “I told you to stop coming in on your day off. I told you.” Brittany’s phone slipped from her fingers and shattered on the tile. Henry Vance wasn’t a janitor. He was the founder of Hartwell Industries, the man whose name was etched into the cornerstone outside. He mopped floors on Saturdays because he said it kept him humble, kept him remembering where he started as a nineteen-year-old immigrant with seven dollars. Marcus stood up slowly, his tailored suit soaked at the knees, and turned to face Brittany. He didn’t yell. He didn’t have to. He simply pulled out his own phone, tapped one contact, and said four words into it. “Security. Escort her out.” Then he looked at HR standing frozen by the desk. “And whoever hired her without a background check on basic human decency, clear your desk too.” Henry just patted his son’s shoulder and quietly went back to mopping. Some kings wear crowns. Some carry mop buckets.
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