The Consultant They Mocked In Munich Took The $240M Deal Himself-olive

The first thing Drew Patterson noticed in Munich was the coffee.

It was not the bitter lobby coffee Apex International served in paper cups during quarterly reviews.

It was real coffee, dark and fresh, poured into white porcelain cups with handles turned at the same precise angle.

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Beside each cup was a small spoon, polished enough to catch the window light.

The cream pitcher was silver.

The folders were leather.

The documents sat aligned with the table edge like someone had measured the room with a ruler before sunrise.

Everything in that conference room had been prepared with care.

Drew had not.

His navy suit had creases in both sleeves because he had slept in it somewhere over the Atlantic.

His flight from Chicago had been rerouted through Frankfurt, then delayed almost three hours after a security argument over a commercial drone in someone’s carry-on.

By the time he landed in Munich, the itinerary had stopped being a plan and become a sequence of apologies.

He had no time to shower.

He had no time to change.

He barely had time to stand in the taxi, press his shirt collar flat with two fingers, and discover that the crease had already won.

There was a coffee stain on his left sleeve.

His tie was twisted by half an inch.

His eyes looked red from recycled airplane air and too many hours awake.

But Drew had the work.

That mattered more than the suit.

Fourteen months of it sat inside his laptop, his printed packet, and the battered notebook he carried because no spreadsheet could hold every human detail in a negotiation.

Fourteen months of midnight calls with port coordinators.

Fourteen months of cold dinners beside customs-delay reports.

Fourteen months of learning what Müller Industries said in public, what it worried about in private, and what it would never say in front of a room full of Americans.

Müller Industries was not just a German manufacturer.

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