My Pitch Was Interrupted by the CEO’s Daughter Saying, “We Don’t Need Your Ideas Anymore” – So I…
Victory and Future
After she left, I sat alone in the lab, surrounded by the equipment I’d purchased with my own savings. The space was small compared to Ellis’s state-of-the-art facility, but it was mine. Every beaker, every centrifuge, every microscope represented a choice to bet on myself when no one else would.
48 hours after Belle interrupted my presentation, everything had changed. Ellis’s company was in freefall. The investors were negotiating with me instead. And the research that might help countless patients would continue under my direction.
The revenge wasn’t in destroying Ellis or humiliating Belle. It was in proving they had never been necessary to begin with.
My phone rang. Kieran again.
“The board’s finalized their decision,” he said without preamble. “We’re prepared to offer initial funding of 60 million, with performance-based additions that could take it to 100”.
I closed my eyes briefly, absorbing the magnitude of what had just happened.
“There’s something else,” he continued. “Ellis is being removed as CEO. The board’s lost confidence. I see they’re asking about you as a possible replacement”.
I laughed, genuinely surprised.
“I’m flattered, but no. I’m building something of my own now”.
“I thought you might say that. Worth asking, though”.
When we hung up, I walked through the quiet lab, running my fingers over equipment that represented not just scientific tools but freedom. The freedom to work on my own terms, to be recognized for my contributions, to never again stand silently while someone else took credit for my life’s work.
The next morning a courier delivered a package to my apartment. Inside was a lab notebook, my original one, the one that had disappeared from my desk months earlier. A small note accompanied it, written in Ellis’s distinctive handwriting.
“You’ve won. Was it worth it?”.
I closed the notebook, feeling the weight of years of work in my hands. *Was it worth it?* The question lingered as I prepared for my day, for investor meetings, for the beginning of something new.
The answer came later that afternoon when I walked into our expanded lab space where Zara and two other scientists were already setting up equipment. They looked up as I entered, their faces showing something I’d rarely seen directed at me in Ellis’s company: respect.
“Ready to change the world?” I asked.
Their answering smiles told me everything I needed to know.
“Yes, it was worth it”.
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