The Secretary Who Sent One Email and Shattered a $2B Deal-kieutrinh

The presentation room was always too cold.

That was the first thing I noticed that morning, even before Dalton started lying.

The air-conditioning blew down from the ceiling vents with that dry office chill that made coffee turn bitter and fingers stiff around a pen.

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The projector hummed against the far wall.

The long glass table reflected twenty-three faces, all of them polished, waiting, expensive, and already convinced they knew who mattered.

I stood near the back wall with a notepad in my hand.

There were no empty seats, but that was not unusual.

People like me did not need seats in rooms like that.

We needed to be close enough to hand over a file, quiet enough not to interrupt, and invisible enough that nobody wondered whether we understood what was being said.

Dalton stood at the front of the room like he owned the numbers on the screen.

He wore a navy suit, a silver watch, and the relaxed smile of a man who had never once been punished for taking up too much space.

Behind him, the first slide glowed with the Grandstone acquisition summary.

Two billion dollars.

That was the number everyone kept saying softly, carefully, with the reverence people usually save for weddings or funerals.

Grandstone Holdings wanted to acquire a manufacturing group with overseas operations, and our firm had been hired to advise on risk.

The investors had flown in for the final strategy presentation.

Senior partners sat along one side of the table.

Analysts lined the wall.

I stood behind everyone else, holding the notepad Dalton had told me to bring because, in his words, “someone should keep track of questions.”

He clicked to the second slide.

“The key,” Dalton said, one hand in his pocket, “is recognizing that the Brussels branch has been masking losses by shifting inventory between regions.”

My jaw tightened so quickly it hurt.

The words were mine.

Not similar.

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