The Buick In The Reserved Spot Was The First Warning Aaron Cross Missed-olive

Aaron sat because his knees made the decision before his pride could object.

The conference room stayed so still that the air conditioner clicking above the glass wall sounded like a gavel. Outside the window, morning light slid across the hood of my dented 2003 Buick, parked directly under the small white sign Aaron had ignored for three years: Cornerstone Group Reserved.

His eyes moved from the sign, to the board members, to the legal folders, then back to me.

Image

“William,” he said, but my name came out thinner than usual.

Not Dad. Not Serena’s dad. Not the harmless old guy with the bad car.

William.

I placed both hands flat on the table. The polished wood felt cool beneath my palms. The room smelled of printer toner, black coffee, wool suits, and the sharp lemon cleaner the night crew used on the glass. Aaron’s expensive watch caught the overhead lights every time his wrist trembled.

“I’m going to speak plainly,” I said. “You will not interrupt.”

His jaw moved once. No sound came out.

Linda Carver, our general counsel, opened the first folder. She had gray hair cut sharply at her chin and the kind of reading glasses that made dishonest men sit straighter. Beside her, two board members watched Aaron with the professional blankness of people who had already voted before breakfast.

Linda slid a document toward him.

“This is your employment agreement, signed May 14, three years ago,” she said. “Section twelve. Fiduciary duty. Section fourteen. Non-compete. Section seventeen. Use of company assets.”

Aaron stared at the paper but did not touch it.

“You built a competing logistics venture while serving as CEO of Crosspoint,” I said. “You used company devices. Company contacts. Company strategy documents. You contacted seven clients under private cover and moved two vendor relationships into preliminary side agreements.”

A red mark climbed from his collar to his ears.

“That’s not—”

I lifted one finger.

He stopped.

Linda placed the second folder on top of the first. It landed with a soft, final sound.

“Email logs. Calendar entries. Device records. Draft pitch decks. Client call notes. The first documented activity began eight months ago at 7:13 a.m. from your Crosspoint laptop.”

Aaron finally reached for the water glass in front of him. His fingers missed the rim, tapped the side, then found it. The ice clicked hard against the glass.

I let him drink.

There are men who apologize when they are sorry. There are men who apologize when the exit narrows. I wanted to see which one sat across from me.

“Aaron,” I said, “look at me.”

He did.

Read More