Then I reached into my leather portfolio and pulled out a small black recorder. I set it gently beside the resignation letter. “Before I sign anything, Marcus,” I said, “the partners should hear what you told me last Thursday in the parking garage.” His face went the color of wet cement. I pressed play. His own voice filled the boardroom, crisp and unmistakable, listing exactly which promotions he’d block if I didn’t ‘be friendlier,’ naming two other women by name, bragging about the NDA he’d forced on an intern in 2022. Forty-one seconds. That’s all it took. Margaret Whitmore, the founding partner and the woman who had hired me straight out of Cornell, slowly removed her reading glasses. “Elena,” she said, never breaking eye contact with Marcus, “is this the only copy?” I shook my head. “My attorney has three. So does the EEOC. I filed Monday.” Marcus lunged for the recorder. Security, already waiting outside the glass doors because I had warned Margaret that morning, stepped in before his fingers touched the table. As they escorted him out, I slid a second folder across the wood. Inside were signed statements from six other women at the firm, two former assistants, and the intern. Margaret read the first page, then looked up at the partners. “Effective immediately, Marcus Hale is terminated for cause. His equity reverts to the firm.” She turned to me. “Elena, the Riverside Tower project is yours. So is his office.” I finally picked up the pen he had slid toward me — and drew a single line through the resignation letter. Then I stood, smoothed my mother’s blazer, and walked out past the glass walls I had designed myself. Three weeks later, the firm became Whitmore & Reyes. The garage cameras, it turned out, had audio too.
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