I Let Him Read Page Eleven Before the Board Learned Which Work at Pinnacle Was Actually Mine-QuynhTranJP

The desk phone rang once, then again, a clipped electronic trill that seemed too small for what had just entered the room. Dominic did not reach for it. His fingers stayed on the bottom corner of page eleven, pressing the paper so hard the pad of his thumb blanched white. Through the glass wall behind him, late-afternoon traffic crawled along Wellington Street. A bus exhaled at the curb. Someone in the corridor laughed too brightly, then stopped as if they had remembered where they were.

He looked up at me.

There was no charm left in his face now. The grin that had worked on executives and clients and junior analysts had drained away, leaving the harder structure underneath. His jaw flexed once. The phone rang a third time.

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“What exactly did you send?” he asked.

I could smell his cologne from where I stood, that sweet synthetic note he wore like another credential. It mixed badly with printer toner and the bitter coffee cooling in the mug near his keyboard.

“The board chair has it,” I said. “So does the external compliance auditor.”

The silence that followed was not empty. It was full of calculations. I could see them moving behind his eyes, each one arriving a second too late.

He dropped his gaze back to the folder. Page eleven was the bridge between documentation and intent. The section before it laid out the versions, timestamps, metadata, and side-by-side structural lifts. Page eleven was where the pattern turned into proof.

Original segmentation model authored by Aroa Ngata. Correct source file attached. Altered version delivered to Dominic Reeves on 8:14 p.m. for purpose of authorship verification.

Beneath that sat three marked screenshots, each with his name on the final deck and mine in the underlying model history.

He swallowed.

“Aro, come on,” he said, quieter now. “You made me look incompetent in front of the investors.”

I watched his hand slide off the paper. “No,” I said. “You did that when you used work you didn’t understand.”

His office phone stopped ringing. Two seconds passed. Then his mobile lit up on the desk, vibrating against the wood in sharp insect bursts. GERARD flashed across the screen.

Dominic stared at it and did not touch it.

For a second I remembered the version of myself from two years earlier, still staying late to correct decks no one would ever associate with me, still believing that precision would eventually earn its own witness. Back then, Dominic had just arrived from Christchurch with pressed shirts, expensive shoes, and the kind of confidence that passes for leadership when senior men want themselves reflected back to them. He had learned everyone’s coffee order in the first week. He had stood near Gerard at office drinks and laughed half a beat before everyone else, as though he could smell which story mattered.

The first file he took from me had been small enough to excuse. A market-opportunity note on emerging sectors, written for Patricia before an executive planning session. Two days later, Dominic sent Gerard a summary in his own voice, but the framework was mine down to the sequence of risk flags. I saw it in my inbox and closed the email without replying. The second time, it was a client-retention pathway. The third time, a restructuring recommendation for a property group whose debt exposure I had spent three weeks untangling.

Each time, I told myself the same thing: the work matters more than the credit.

That lie had a pleasant shape to it. It let me stay useful.

Dominic’s mobile began buzzing again.

He snatched it up this time and stood. “Gerard,” he said, forcing steadiness into his voice.

I turned toward the door.

“Don’t walk out on this,” he snapped.

I stopped with my hand on the handle and looked back. He was already sweating along the hairline. The caller could speak loudly enough that I caught only the rhythm, not the words. Short sentences. No warmth.

“Understood,” Dominic said.

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