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"What?" I say.

Nadia grins. "Nothing."

Liv smiles into her coffee cup. "Absolutely nothing."

Priya picks up her phone and finally types something into the notes app. I lean across the table and catch a glimpse of the screen before she locks it.

Phase Two: Wedding Pinterest Board.

I roll my eyes and take a sip of my latte.

It's cold now.

I drink it anyway.

Chapter twenty-one

Tom

"Ican't make the call." The words come out fast the second Sam answers her phone. "You decide. Option A or Option B."

Silence on the other end of the line. The heavy, wait-and-see kind of silence.

"Tom."

"Option A is safe," I say, staring at the two tablets spread across my desk. "It's clean, technically flawless. Exactly what the Board expects. Option B shows the neighborhood character, the human scale. But—"

"Come to the office."

I stop pacing. "What?"

"I'll book a conference room. We can look at them together."

"Sam, I just need you to tell me which direction to go."

"Come to the office." There's a surprising, steady warmth in her voice. "We'll work through it."

I lean back against my desk, rubbing a hand over my face. "Your week is insane. I know you're playing catch-up from the hard drive crash. I don't want to—"

"Tom." Firm now. The project manager is back. "Shut up and come to the office."

Three months ago, this wouldn't have been a conversation. I would have picked Option B, sent the files, and moved on. I've made a thousand creative calls on my own. But the second presentation is still playing on a loop in my head. The Developer's jaw tightening. Sam stepping in, taking the hit for my lack of communication.

We bounced back during last Thursday's check-in, but we still have a grueling series of weekly Board updates to survive before the final Capital Investment meeting next month.

If I choose wrong this time, she pays again. It isn't just my job anymore.

"Just when I need you to take control, you aren’t going to. Are you?" I ask.

"We're partners," she says, her voice dropping, going softer. "Partners work together. I'll even spring for lunch."

The cursor blinks on Screen Left.

"Okay," I say, grabbing my bag. "I'm on my way."

***

The conference room has three glass walls. I spread both tablets across the table, pulling up the decks side by side. Through the barriers, Sam's firm moves—people between desks, someone gesturing at blueprints, a woman on her phone.