My Pitch Was Interrupted by the CEO’s Daughter Saying, “We Don’t Need Your Ideas Anymore” – So I…
The Showdown
Ellis stood in his doorway, face flushed with anger, his designer suit somehow making him look more desperate rather than powerful.
“Closed the door,” he barked when I entered.
I did so carefully, then stood waiting. I wouldn’t sit unless invited, a small act of defiance that I knew would register with him.
“Where is it?” he demanded.
I tilted my head slightly.
“Where is what, exactly?”.
“Don’t play games with me. You know exactly what’s missing. The investors are arriving in an hour to finalize everything, and suddenly we can’t access the core stabilization process, the one you were responsible for”.
I let his words hang in the air between us, enjoying the way his certainty began to crack in the face of my silence.
“I’m afraid I don’t know what you mean,” I said finally. “According to yesterday’s meeting, you’re going with Belle’s concept instead. My ideas aren’t needed anymore”.
Ellis’s face darkened.
“Her concept relies on your stabilization process, which is suddenly incomplete in our systems. What did you remove?”.
I smiled then, the kind of smile that comes from knowing you hold all the cards while your opponent has just realized they’ve been bluffing with nothing.
“I didn’t remove anything from company systems, Ellis. That would be unethical and possibly illegal”.
“Then explain to me why we can’t replicate your results this morning. The investors are expecting a demonstration in 60 minutes”.
The door opened behind me and Belle swept in, her confidence from yesterday replaced with barely contained panic.
“Daddy, the lab team can’t—”.
She stopped short when she saw me.
“What is she doing here?”.
I turned to face her, maintaining my calm.
“I came to collect my things, since you made it clear yesterday that my ideas aren’t needed anymore”.
Belle looked from me to her father and back again.
“You did something. We can’t get the stabilization process to work”.
“That’s unfortunate,” I said, adjusting my bag on my shoulder. “Have you tried following your own innovative approach, the one you presented yesterday?”.
The color drained from her face.
“You know I was building on your work”.
“Did I? That wasn’t mentioned in your presentation. In fact, I believe you specifically said you’d developed an alternative approach”.
Ellis stepped forward.
“Enough games. The investors will be here soon. Fix this, and we can discuss compensation, a promotion, whatever you want”.
I looked at him directly.
“I’m afraid I can’t help you, Ellis. As I said, I didn’t remove anything from company systems. Everything I developed while employed here remains intact”.
“Then why isn’t it working?” Belle hissed.
I checked my watch deliberately.
“Perhaps because science requires understanding, not just slides and buzzwords”.
I moved toward the door now.
“If you’ll excuse me, I have a meeting of my own to attend”.
Ellis moved to block my path.
“You’re not going anywhere until you fix this”.
I kept my expression neutral as I looked up at Ellis.
“Are you physically preventing me from leaving? Because that would create a whole different set of problems for you”.
The implied threat hung between us. Ellis was many things—ruthless, calculating, privileged—but he wasn’t stupid. After a moment, he stepped aside, his jaw clenched so tight I could almost hear his teeth cracking.
“This isn’t over,” he said.
“Actually, it is,” I replied, walking past him. “I quit yesterday, remember? When your daughter announced that my ideas weren’t needed anymore”.
I felt their stares burning into my back as I walked through the lab. Colleagues who had been whispering minutes earlier now watched in stunned silence. Most would never dare to stand up to Ellis; his reputation for crushing opposition was legendary.
As I reached the main door, Belle’s voice rang out, high and strained.
“She sabotaged us! She must have!”.
I didn’t turn around. I didn’t need to see the expressions to know the damage was spreading: doubt, confusion, fear. The investors would arrive to find chaos instead of confidence. The perfect presentation Belle had delivered yesterday would crumble when they asked for demonstrations.
