The Fired Admin Whose Contract Clause Locked Out 200 Clients-olive

The Zoom window opened at exactly 11:00.

Derek Crane was already sitting there.

He had that careful blankness executives practice when they want you to understand that whatever is about to happen has already been decided somewhere without you.

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Pamela from HR was in the second square, smiling softly with her lips and not at all with her eyes.

Her gaze kept flicking down to a script on her screen.

She did not ask how I was.

Derek did not say hello.

My coffee sat untouched beside my keyboard, cooling in a paper cup I had brought back from the corner shop after school drop-off traffic slowed the whole main road.

The room smelled faintly like burnt beans and dust from the little space heater under my desk.

Outside my home office window, a delivery truck rolled past the mailbox and hissed at the curb like it was any ordinary Monday morning in suburban America.

For the rest of the block, it was.

For me, it was the morning nine years were reduced to four minutes and fifty-one seconds.

“Simone,” Pamela began, “as part of a strategic realignment, your position is being eliminated effective immediately.”

The word eliminated did not explode.

It did something worse.

It landed.

It sat there on my desk between my keyboard, my legal pad, and the unfinished final sentence of the licensing report I had been writing when the calendar alert popped up.

Derek leaned back in his chair.

He had been COO for six months.

I had been with the company for nine years.

Nine years is long enough to watch a startup learn how to stand, stumble, hire too fast, lose clients, win clients back, change offices, change slogans, and pretend every new executive invented the hard work that came before him.

Nine years is long enough for people to stop seeing your labor because it is always there.

The first time the platform broke at midnight, I took the call from my kitchen floor because the Wi-Fi was stronger there.

The second time, I missed my niece’s birthday dinner.

The third time, I was standing in a grocery store parking lot with melting ice cream in the back seat, walking a client through emergency permission restoration while a thunderstorm rolled over the rooftops.

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