I picked up the pen. Trevor’s grin widened. “Smart girl,” he murmured. I clicked the pen once — then set it down beside the unsigned paper. “Before I decide, Trevor, I think you should meet someone.” The conference room door opened, and in walked Margaret Pierce — yes, that Pierce, the founding partner everyone assumed had retired to Aspen. Behind her was Daniel Cho, our biggest client, the one Trevor had been bragging about landing. Trevor’s face drained of color. “Margaret, I — this is a private personnel matter —” “It stopped being private,” Margaret said calmly, “the moment you emailed Elena threats from the company server.” She set a tablet on the table. On the screen: every message Trevor had ever sent me. The bribes. The sabotage. The stolen design credits. The silver pin on my lapel wasn’t decoration — it was a recorder Margaret had given me six weeks ago, after I’d quietly contacted her about the pattern. Daniel Cho cleared his throat. “Trevor, I signed with this firm because of Elena’s Riverside Tower concept. The one you presented as your own. I have the original sketches she sent me two years ago, before you ever knew my name.” Trevor stammered. “This is — this is a misunderstanding —” “No,” Margaret said. “This is a transition.” She turned to me. “Elena, effective immediately, you’re Director of Design. Trevor, security is waiting at your office to escort you while we review your contract for cause.” Trevor lunged for the resignation paper, suddenly desperate. I slid it gently out of reach. “Funny thing about signatures, Trevor,” I said softly. “They matter who writes them.” As he was walked out, Daniel smiled and extended his hand. “Ms. Reyes. Shall we discuss the Riverside Tower — properly this time?” I shook his hand, the morning light finally warm on my face. Three years of silence. Twelve minutes of truth. And the blueprint of my life, finally drawn in my own name.
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