The CEO Panicked Without a French Translator – Until the Janitor’s Daughter Took Charge and…
Chapter 3: The Youngest Diplomat
“Sophie, we need to prepare you for something very important,”
Michael said, his voice trembling with a dangerous mixture of desperate hope and paralyzing terror. Sophie straightened her small shoulders with military determination.
“Don’t worry, Mr. Harrison. Mama used to tell me that when people seem scary on the outside, it’s usually because they’ve forgotten how to be happy on the inside. Maybe I can help them remember what happiness feels like again.”
Rachel rushed to her mahogany desk and returned with a thick stack of papers covered in dense legal and financial terminology.
“Sophie, these are some of the complicated words they might use. Business terms in French. Can you read these and understand what they mean?”
Sophie took the papers in her tiny hands, her lips moving silently as she read. Michael watched in absolute amazement as her face gradually brightened with understanding.
“Oh, these are actually pretty easy!”
she exclaimed with genuine surprise.
“Investment means ‘investissement’. Benefits means ‘profits’. Contract means ‘contrat’, and strategy commerce means ‘stratégie commerciale’. My mama and I used to play educational word games with her business magazines from the bank where she worked.”
Michael’s eyebrows shot up in shock.
“Your mother worked at a bank?”
“Oui. She was super smart about money and business stuff. She worked at the Royal Bank of Montreal for eight years before she met Papa and moved to New York.”
Sophie’s voice filled with unmistakable pride.
“She used to tell me fascinating stories about helping young families buy their very first houses and about helping dreamers start their own companies from nothing. She always said that understanding money was important for survival, but understanding people’s dreams and hopes was infinitely more important for living.”
Rachel knelt beside Sophie, gently smoothing down her simple dress and re-doing her ponytail with motherly care.
“Honey, these are very powerful men who control enormous amounts of money. They might ask you really difficult questions. They might test your French skills to see if you’re truly as good as you seem to be.”
Sophie nodded with serious understanding.
“That’s perfectly okay with me. When I was scared about starting first grade last year, Mama taught me something really special and important. She explained that when people test you, they’re not trying to be mean or hurtful; they’re trying to see if you’re strong enough and capable enough for something truly important. And I know I’m strong enough because Mama taught me to be brave.”
Michael felt his chest tighten. If Sophie made even one tiny mistake, his life’s work would collapse into ruins.
“Sophie,”
he said gently, kneeling down to meet her eyes directly.
“I need to tell you something very important and serious. If this meeting doesn’t go perfectly well, many good people might lose their jobs right before the holidays. That wouldn’t be your fault, it would be mine, but I want you to understand exactly how important this meeting really is.”
Sophie looked at him with those impossibly wise brown eyes.
“Mr. Harrison, are you feeling afraid right now?”
The question hit him like a physical punch. In 40 years of business, no one had ever asked him that question so directly.
“Yes, sweetheart. I’m absolutely terrified.”
Sophie reached up and took his large, calloused hand in her tiny, soft one.
“It’s completely okay to feel afraid sometimes. Mama was really scared when the doctors first told her she was sick, but she explained to me that being afraid just means something matters to you very, very much. That’s not bad or wrong; that’s actually love showing itself.”
Chapter 4: The Million-Dollar Meeting
The elevator chimed with the finality of a church bell. Michael straightened his silk tie one final time.
Sophie stood beside him in the vast boardroom, looking impossibly small. She had changed into her very best dress—a simple yellow sundress with tiny white flowers—and polished black church shoes.
“Remember, Sophie,”
Michael whispered, his voice tight with nervous energy.
“Just translate exactly what they say to me and exactly what I say to them. Can you do that for me?”
Sophie nodded solemnly, her small hands clasped gracefully in front of her.
“Don’t worry at all, Mr. Harrison. I absolutely won’t let you down. Mama always said that when someone trusts you with something important, you protect that trust like it’s made of the most precious diamonds in the whole world.”
The elevator doors opened. Jacques Duboce entered first, a tall, impeccably dressed man in his early 60s.
His steel gray eyes held the cold calculation of someone who had destroyed entire companies with a dismissive wave of his hand. Behind him, Pierre Lauron moved with fluid, predatory grace.
Their penetrating eyes immediately fell on Sophie. Michael watched in horror as their expressions shifted to barely contained outrage.
“Monsieur Harrison,”
Jacques said in heavily accented English, his tone cold enough to freeze the Hudson River solid.
“Qu’est-ce que c’est exactement? What is this child doing here in our business meeting? We came here to discuss $800 million in serious investment opportunities, not to play silly games with children.”
Michael felt his empire beginning to crumble. But then, Sophie stepped forward with quiet dignity.
“Bonjour Monsieur Duboce. Bonjour Monsieur Lauron,”
she said in absolutely flawless French.
“Je suis Sophie Rodriguez et je serai votre interprète professionnelle aujourd’hui. J’espère sincèrement que votre vol depuis Paris s’est bien passé et que vous avez trouvé votre hôtel confortable. C’est un honneur de faire votre connaissance.”
The transformation in the room was instantaneous. Both powerful men’s eyebrows shot upward in complete shock.
Pierre leaned toward Jacques and whispered rapidly in French.
“Mon Dieu, did you hear that accent? It’s absolutely flawless. Better than most professional translators we’ve worked with in 20 years. Where could this extraordinary child have possibly learned to speak like this?”
Sophie turned to Michael with a gentle, reassuring smile.
“Mr. Harrison, Mr. Lauron just expressed amazement at my French accent and asked where I learned to speak so well. He seems very pleasantly surprised by my language abilities.”
“Messieurs, please make yourselves completely comfortable,”
Michael said, gesturing toward the polished mahogany table.
