They Fired Me From My Own Biotech Sale — Then The Buyer Read Page Eleven Out Loud-thuyhien

The only sound in the room was the dry whisper of paper.

Page eleven slid under the buyer’s attorney’s hand with a soft scrape against the polished walnut table. Brent’s pen kept rolling until it tapped the base of my coffee cup and stopped there. Nobody reached for it. The vent above us kept breathing cold air into the room. Somewhere beyond the glass wall, an elevator chimed. My father’s knuckles were still spread against the table where he had slammed his hand a second earlier, but now even he had gone quiet.

The attorney adjusted his glasses and read one paragraph twice.

Image

Then he lifted his eyes and looked directly at me.

“Ms. Carter,” he said, very carefully, “are you stating that the core Helix Engine architecture was never assigned to Helixen Biotech?”

My mother answered before I could.

“She’s confused,” she said, smiling too fast. “Everything developed under the company umbrella belongs to the company.”

The attorney did not look at her.

He was still looking at me.

“No,” I said. “The application layer and all derivative workflows created after 2019 were licensed through Helixen. The core predictive engine was not. It remained under Ember Ridge Analytics, LLC.”

Brent turned his head so hard I heard the collar of his shirt drag against his neck.

“My what?” he said.

The buyer finally spoke. His voice was low, almost conversational.

“Why wasn’t that disclosed in diligence?”

My father straightened, color rising from his throat into his face. “Because there is no separate issue here. She’s trying to blow up a legitimate transaction because she’s upset about a staffing decision.”

I opened my leather folder and slid a thin stack of documents across the table. No drama. No flourish. Just paper.

The LLC filing was on top. Beneath it was the patent counsel memo from Cambridge, dated twelve years earlier. Beneath that, the licensing addendum my father had signed without reading because he was in too much of a hurry to impress an investor from Chicago.

I had known this day might come long before anyone else in that room did.

Not this exact day. Not the buyer from Austin. Not the $3 billion number.

But the shape of it.

The moment when my work would become valuable enough for my family to rename it theirs.

That shape had been with me for years.

The first time I felt it was in Cambridge, before Helixen had any real office, before there were magazine profiles and catered board lunches and custom signage in the lobby. Back then it was just me, an overheating laptop, two whiteboards from Craigslist, and a sink that clanged every time the upstairs neighbor used hot water.

I was twenty-three, living in a one-bedroom apartment three blocks from Kendall Square, writing code until my wrists ached and my eyes started skipping lines. The radiator clicked all winter. In summer, the window unit rattled and leaked onto a towel I kept folded beneath it. I used cereal bowls for soup because I had broken two plates and never replaced them. At night I ran simulations while eating dry granola over the keyboard because I was afraid to lose a thought if I got up.

That was where the Helix Engine was born.

Not in Cedar Falls. Not in my father’s office. Not in any conference room where my mother could call it a family dream.

In a cramped apartment that smelled like dust, coffee, and hot circuitry.

A patent attorney named Nora Feldman had come recommended by one of my professors after I presented an early modeling framework at a biotech systems seminar. She was blunt, impatient, and impossible to charm.

“Your science is ahead of your legal hygiene,” she told me over takeout Thai food in her office. “If you plan to work with family, separate the crown jewel now or you’ll spend the next decade trying to get your own fingerprints back.”

So I did.

We formed Ember Ridge Analytics on paper for almost nothing. I retained the core architecture, the training framework, and the base model design. Anything Helixen built on top of it could be licensed. Anything customized for clients could belong to the operating company. But the engine itself stayed with me.

When my parents called two years later and said the company was struggling, I flew home with a hard drive in my backpack and Nora’s warning folded in my wallet.

I should have listened harder.

At first, returning to Iowa had felt almost holy. Helixen then was four rented rooms above a hardware store on the edge of town. The hall smelled like sawdust and oil. The winter light came in flat and gray through windows that rattled when the freight trucks passed. I slept on an air mattress in the conference room for three weeks because we couldn’t afford an apartment and server costs in the same month.

I remember my father hugging me in that office, his cheek cold from the wind, telling me I was saving the family.

Read More