Chloe laughed in his face. “Or what? You’ll cry to HR? Sweetheart, my father owns three floors of this building.” She grabbed the ID badge clipped to his uniform, ripped it clean off, and tossed it into the dirty water. “There. Now you don’t even work here.” That’s when the revolving doors at the front of the lobby stopped spinning. All of them. At the same time. Outside, three matte black SUVs slid up against the curb and parked diagonally, blocking every exit. Eight men in dark suits and earpieces walked in, fanned out, and took position at every corner of the lobby without saying a single word. The woman filming lowered her phone. The security guards suddenly stood very, very straight. A tall woman in a charcoal suit stepped forward, knelt down beside the old man, and gently took the rag out of his hand. “Sir. We’ve been looking for you for forty minutes. The board is waiting upstairs.” She helped him to his feet. Someone else brought him a folded navy blazer. He slipped it on over the janitor uniform, and the embroidered initials on the pocket caught the light: E.W. Chloe’s face went white. E. Whitfield. The E. Whitfield. The founder whose name was carved above the door she’d just walked through — the man everyone assumed had died a decade ago, the man whose portrait hung on every floor. He liked to walk his own buildings once a month, unannounced, in the uniform of the lowest-paid worker on staff. To see who people really were when they thought no one important was watching. He looked at Chloe for a long moment, then at the security chief beside him. “She said my badge doesn’t work here anymore.” He picked the wet ID card out of the puddle and held it out to her, dripping. “She’s right. Effective immediately — it doesn’t. Neither does hers. Or her father’s lease on floors nine through eleven.” He turned to me, the trembling kid still holding a resume, and smiled for the first time. “You. You were the only one who stepped forward to help. Come upstairs. We should talk.”
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