The Board Tried to Call It Temporary — Until the Microphone Read Harper Lane’s Authority Into Record-eirian

“—ately,” the board secretary finished.

The last three syllables came through the ceiling speakers with a clean metallic edge that seemed to cut the room in half.

Effective immediately.

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No one shifted. No one reached for water. The only sound was the soft fan inside the projector and the rain needling the windows twenty-eight floors above downtown Portland.

Dad’s hand stayed flat on the table beside the term sheet. His thumb had gone pale where it pressed into the wood.

“That’s premature,” he said.

He did not raise his voice. He never did when other people were watching. That made it land harder.

The general counsel adjusted his glasses, opened the leather folder in front of him, and spoke without looking up.

“The motion passed seven to two at 11:06 this morning. Interim executive authority over merger integration, digital strategy, and investor communications is effective upon entry into the record.”

He slid the resolution toward the center of the table.

My name sat there in black print. Harper Elise Lane.

The room smelled like warm paper, espresso gone bitter, and the faint ozone heat of overworked screens. My fingertips rested on the laptop remote in my palm. The plastic edge had left a dent across my skin.

Mrs. Owens leaned back in her chair, crossed one ankle over the other, and looked at my father instead of me.

“Richard,” she said, “the market added nine-point-four percent in less than twelve hours. Three institutional investors asked this morning why the woman who negotiated the deal doesn’t already have authority over its rollout. That question won’t disappear because you dislike who it’s about.”

One of the older directors cleared his throat. Another stared at the graphs still frozen on the screen behind me, the green bars of projected growth climbing over the company logo like they had always belonged there.

Dad turned toward me at last.

“You’re enjoying this.”

The leather seam of the chair under my hand felt cool and sharp.

“No,” I said. “I’m documenting it.”

That was when the board secretary pushed the microphone slightly closer and read the rest of the resolution into record, every clause precise, every syllable polished by legal habit.

Authorization to brief media.

Authorization to communicate with analysts.

Authorization to assemble a cross-functional integration team within forty-eight hours.

Authorization to sign preliminary post-merger directives with countersignature from general counsel.

Dad’s jaw flexed once. His phone lit beside his hand. Another call. Another one after that. The glass vibrated lightly against the tabletop with each buzz.

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