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“Mr. Laurent, the Times is requesting a statement regarding the partnership announcement. We recommend emphasizing the collaborative nature?—”

“Give us a moment,” Sebastian said without looking at them.

They didn’t move. The woman with steel-colored hair and the dead eyes of someone who’d traded their soul for partner track stepped forward.

“Sir, the optics of this conversation are already problematic. Ms. Rivera’s presence at this event, given the current media narrative?—”

“I said give us a moment.”

His voice had gone cold in a way I’d never heard directed at his own people. The lawyers exchanged glances and retreated exactly three steps, maintaining visual proximity while pretending not to listen.

And in that three-step retreat I saw it — the architecture of what had just happened. Not Sebastian choosing his empire over me. Sebastian surrounded by people whose entire function was to make exactly that choice on his behalf, and him not yet knowing how to override them when it mattered most.

It didn’t make it hurt less. But I understood it in a way I hadn’t three seconds ago.

“Em.” His voice was rough. “This isn’t over. I’m not letting this be?—”

The event screens that lined the ballroom’s walls flickered.

I didn’t notice at first, too caught in the wreckage between us. Then someone near the bar said, “Holy shit, is that?—”

The murmur spread like fire through dry grass. Heads turned. Phones rose.

And there, on every screen in the ballroom, was the op-ed.

Published. Live. Displayed in full.

Without my byline.

The attribution read: Sebastian Laurent, CEO, Laurent Enterprises. Analysis supported by investigative research.

Supported by.

Three words that stripped everything I’d built — every late night, every source cultivated at personal cost, every risk taken in service of a truth that powerful people wanted buried — and reduced it to footnote status. Supporting documentation. Background material. The kind of thing interns compiled before the real work began.

I heard the crowd buzz with reactions I couldn’t parse over the roaring in my ears.

For one unguarded moment, I let myself feel it — the specific devastation of having your name removed from the thing you made. Not anger yet. Something quieter and more fundamental than anger. The feeling of being made invisible by someone you’d trusted to see you.

Then I put it down. Deliberately, the way you set down something breakable when you need both hands free.

Sebastian was watching me, his expression somewhere between horror and desperation. “Em, I swear?—”

“I thought we were equals.” The words came out quiet, steady, completely at odds with the earthquake happening inside my chest. “I thought you understood what this work means to me. What my name on it means.”

“I do understand?—”

“Then how did this happen?” I held up the press release, still crumpled in my hand. “How does a company you own publish my work as supporting evidence for your redemption arc without you knowing? Without you stopping it?”

He had no answer. Of course he didn’t. Because the answer was the same answer it had always been — his empire moved the way empires moved, consuming whatever served its purpose without asking permission.

Including me.

“I’m leaving.” I said it clearly, loud enough that the lawyers hovering nearby would hear every word. “And I’m walking out the front door, where every camera in this city is probably waiting. And when they ask me for a comment, I’m going to tell them the truth.”

“What truth?”

I looked at him — past the devastating face and the expensive suit and the empire that hung around him like armor he was still learning to take off. Past the man who had held me in the dark and told me I mattered and believed every word of it.