The Badge Madison Wanted Destroyed Turned Her Boardroom Silent-olive

Madison did not look up when she ended my career.

That was the first thing everyone remembered later.

Not her words.

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Not the papers.

Not even the security guards waiting outside the glass.

They remembered that the new CEO of a logistics company handling hazardous materials across state lines tried to erase compliance without making eye contact with the woman who had kept the company alive for twelve years.

“Security will escort you out,” Madison said, her finger still sliding across her tablet.

Her voice was flat, expensive, and bored.

It was the voice of someone clearing a meeting item.

It was not the voice of someone who understood what she had just touched.

The boardroom went still.

Not quiet.

Still.

The air conditioner pushed cold air over the polished mahogany table, and the vents hummed above us like they were trying to cover the sound of cowardice.

Someone’s coffee smelled burnt.

The leather chair under my hand felt too smooth, too clean, too untouched by the mess Madison had been making for months.

Around the table, people found places to look that were not my face.

One director studied the cap of his pen.

Another checked a blank page in his folder.

A consultant in a navy suit stared down at her own reflection in the black glass of her phone.

Nobody wanted to be the first person to admit that what was happening in that room was not transformation.

It was disposal.

Madison sat at the head of the table like the room had been built around her.

She wore a cream blazer, a gold watch, and the calm of a woman who believed confidence could substitute for memory.

Since the board appointed her, she had moved through the company with cameras, consultants, and phrases that sounded impressive until they touched real operations.

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