The Clause Her Boss Ignored Before Firing Her Cost Everything-thuyhien

The text hit my phone before I had even stepped fully out of the elevator.

URGENT PERFORMANCE REVIEW. 9:15 A.M. CONFERENCE ROOM C.

There was no greeting.

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There was no name at the bottom.

There was only that cold little block of words glowing in my palm while the lobby lights buzzed overhead and the glass doors behind me breathed in another gust of winter air.

I remember the smell first.

Burnt coffee from the reception station.

Floor polish from the marble.

Someone’s paper cup of cinnamon latte left cooling near the visitor badges.

I had worked in that building for six years, long enough to know the difference between a meeting and a message designed to scare you before you sat down.

This was not a review.

This was a warning label.

I looked up from my phone and saw Melissa Grant near the security desk.

Melissa was my supervisor, though that word had always made our relationship sound cleaner than it was.

She had spent the last year smiling at me in team meetings, forwarding my work to executives, and introducing my ideas with phrases like our group developed and leadership aligned, as if the models had built themselves while I was asleep.

She stood beside a security guard that morning with her arms folded too tightly over her cream blouse.

When our eyes met, she looked away.

That was the first honest thing she had done all week.

I had not slept much the night before.

The four-million-dollar bonus was scheduled to hit the next day, and even saying the number in my own head still felt unreal.

It was not lottery money.

It was not a gift.

It was not some generous reward handed down because the company loved me.

It was the last installment attached to Project Chimera, the system I had built from the wreckage of a dozen failed prototypes, three burned-out teams, and a deadline that had embarrassed two executives before anyone finally called me into the room.

Back then, Chimera was a name on a whiteboard.

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