They stole my six-month project in front of the CEO. Then he asked one

Can’t stop thinking about last night, baby. That was the Slack message Chelsea accidentally sent to the shared project channel at 2 a.m., tagged to Brandon, right under a screenshot of my architecture diagram they were rehearsing from. I saw it. I screenshotted it. I said nothing. In the boardroom, Brandon finished his stolen pitch. Applause. Mr. Halston nodded slowly, then turned to me in the corner. Daniel, our CTO, was beside him. Mr. Halston said, Priya, you’ve been quiet. You built the prototype logs I reviewed last night, correct? The room froze. I stood up. My hands didn’t shake. I said, Yes sir. Every commit is timestamped under my ID. Every model version is signed. Brandon’s face went grey. Chelsea’s smile locked. I opened my laptop and mirrored it to the screen. Git history. Six months of my name. Then the Slack thread where Brandon told Chelsea, quote, she’s too timid to speak up, we take it. Then the 2 a.m. message. Mr. Halston read it twice. He looked at Brandon and said, You forgot to tell your wife about the Marriott, Brandon. HR was already at the door, folders in hand. Chelsea started crying about a misunderstanding. Daniel slid a paper toward me. Promotion. Lead Data Scientist. Corner office. Brandon tried to speak. Mr. Halston lifted one hand. Stand up and walk out of my building before I have security escort you out in front of every analyst on this floor. They left. I stayed. I finished the presentation myself, in the same soft voice they’d mocked for two years. When I sat down, Mr. Halston said one word. Finally. Chelsea texted me that night begging. I didn’t reply. Some silences are louder than any comeback.

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