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Silence.

“Before or after you slept with her,” Mark presses.

I don’t answer.

Alex sits back. “You didn’t want to risk losing her.”

“And instead,” Mark says quietly, “you guaranteed it.”

My phone vibrates again. I glance down this time.

PR:

We need confirmation on whether the woman referenced last night was an employee or guest. Media is digging.

My stomach drops.

“No,” I say immediately. “Absolutely not.”

Alex watches me carefully. “What.”

“They’re fishing,” I say. “Trying to attach a name.”

Mark’s jaw tightens. “Audra.”

“Yes,” I say. “And it’s not happening.”

I stand and start pacing, adrenaline finally cutting through the shame.

“She is not part of this,” I say. “She didn’t do anything wrong. She didn’t ask for any of it.”

“And the board?” Mark asks. “They push?”

“They can push all they want,” I say. “She’s off-limits.”

Alex arches a brow. “Congratulations. You’ve identified the bare minimum.”

I ignore him and start typing.

Me:

She is not to be named, referenced, speculated about, or approached. She is not an employee involved in misconduct. Shut it down.

Another message comes in.

Legal:

We can try, but?—

“I don’t care,” I snap, already typing. “You make it airtight. If this turns into collateral damage, I’m done.”

Mark studies me. “This doesn’t fix what you did.”

“I know,” I say. My voice breaks slightly on the word. “But I’m not letting her get dragged into this. Not after?—”

Not after I already made her feel small.

Alex stands. “Good. Because if her name shows up anywhere, this conversation gets a lot uglier.”