Twenty-Two Employees Followed the Fired CEO’s Wife Out the Door-kieutrinh

Thirty minutes was all Parker gave me to disappear from the company we built together.

He did it in the conference room because Parker never wasted an audience.

If he was going to remove his wife, his cofounder, and the woman who had held Eagle Investment together through its worst years, he wanted the board to watch him do it cleanly.

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The glass table smelled faintly of lemon polish.

The room smelled like burned coffee, expensive wool, and the dry paper scent of folders opened too early.

Outside the forty-second-floor windows, the Chicago River moved under a flat gray morning, quiet enough to make the whole city feel like it had stopped below us.

I remember the HVAC hum more clearly than I remember Parker’s first sentence.

That steady sound filled the pauses between people breathing, blinking, pretending they did not know what was about to happen.

Parker stood at the head of the table with a microphone he did not need.

He wore the navy suit I had picked out for the investor breakfast the month before.

I had told him it made him look trustworthy.

That was before I learned how dangerous a trustworthy-looking man can be when he decides the truth is inconvenient.

“To protect shareholder interests,” he said, “and in line with our new strategic direction, the board has decided to relieve Natalie Gray of her duties, effective immediately.”

Nobody moved.

A senior partner’s pen stopped halfway through a click.

One of the assistants outside the glass wall held a paper coffee cup near her mouth and forgot to drink from it.

Board members stared down at the polished table as if the reflection there might tell them where to look.

I looked at Parker.

Then I looked at Nia.

She sat two seats away from him with her pearl earrings, her perfect posture, and the kind of small smile people wear when they think a room has already chosen sides.

I knew those earrings.

I had seen them on my bathroom counter six months earlier and told myself they belonged to someone from the client dinner.

A person can survive a betrayal before she admits she is surviving it.

I had hired Nia two years before.

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