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Too Late, Mr. CEO: Watch Me Shine
img img Too Late, Mr. CEO: Watch Me Shine img Chapter 3
3 Chapters
Chapter 8 8 img
Chapter 9 9 img
Chapter 10 10 img
Chapter 11 11 img
Chapter 12 12 img
Chapter 13 13 img
Chapter 14 14 img
Chapter 15 15 img
Chapter 16 16 img
Chapter 17 17 img
Chapter 18 18 img
Chapter 19 19 img
Chapter 20 20 img
Chapter 21 21 img
Chapter 22 22 img
Chapter 23 23 img
Chapter 24 24 img
Chapter 25 25 img
Chapter 26 26 img
Chapter 27 27 img
Chapter 28 28 img
Chapter 29 29 img
Chapter 30 30 img
Chapter 31 31 img
Chapter 32 32 img
Chapter 33 33 img
Chapter 34 34 img
Chapter 35 35 img
Chapter 36 36 img
Chapter 37 37 img
Chapter 38 38 img
Chapter 39 39 img
Chapter 40 40 img
Chapter 41 41 img
Chapter 42 42 img
Chapter 43 43 img
Chapter 44 44 img
Chapter 45 45 img
Chapter 46 46 img
Chapter 47 47 img
Chapter 48 48 img
Chapter 49 49 img
Chapter 50 50 img
Chapter 51 51 img
Chapter 52 52 img
Chapter 53 53 img
Chapter 54 54 img
Chapter 55 55 img
Chapter 56 56 img
Chapter 57 57 img
Chapter 58 58 img
Chapter 59 59 img
Chapter 60 60 img
Chapter 61 61 img
Chapter 62 62 img
Chapter 63 63 img
Chapter 64 64 img
Chapter 65 65 img
Chapter 66 66 img
Chapter 67 67 img
Chapter 68 68 img
Chapter 69 69 img
Chapter 70 70 img
Chapter 71 71 img
Chapter 72 72 img
Chapter 73 73 img
Chapter 74 74 img
Chapter 75 75 img
Chapter 76 76 img
Chapter 77 77 img
Chapter 78 78 img
Chapter 79 79 img
Chapter 80 80 img
Chapter 81 img
Chapter 82 img
Chapter 83 img
Chapter 84 img
Chapter 85 img
Chapter 86 img
Chapter 87 img
Chapter 88 img
Chapter 89 img
Chapter 90 img
Chapter 91 img
Chapter 92 img
Chapter 93 img
Chapter 94 img
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Chapter 96 img
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Chapter 3

The white Tom Ford suit fit like armor.

Kayla checked her reflection in the glass doors of Innovest's SoHo headquarters, adjusting the jacket's single button. The cut was aggressive, shoulders sharp enough to cut glass.

She walked inside.

The lobby was nothing like ApexAlgo's mahogany tomb. Floor-to-ceiling windows flooded the space with natural light. Exposed ductwork painted matte black. A reception desk carved from a single slab of concrete.

She gave her name to the receptionist.

The woman's eyes widened slightly-recognition, not surprise. She picked up a phone and spoke two sentences.

Sixty seconds later, the glass elevator opened.

Sterling Lester stepped out.

He wore a navy Brioni suit without a tie, the collar of his shirt open in a way that managed to look intentional rather than sloppy. His dark hair was slightly too long, brushing against his collar.

He crossed the lobby in four strides, hand extended.

"Kayla." His grip was firm, dry, the handshake of someone who treated her as an equal rather than an acquisition. "Welcome to Innovest."

"Sterling." She matched his pressure exactly. "Thanks for the invitation."

He didn't lead her to a conference room.

Instead, he swiped a keycard at a restricted door and held it open for her. "I want to show you something first."

The R&D floor hummed.

Kayla walked past rows of server racks, the air conditioning cold enough to raise gooseflesh on her arms. Real-time data visualizations danced across wall-mounted screens-market flows, volatility indices, predictive models rendering in three dimensions.

Sterling stopped at a central console.

"This is our flagship," he said, gesturing to a complex interface showing a dynamic trading algorithm. "Predictive modeling for high-frequency environments. We're launching in eight weeks."

Kayla studied the screen.

The architecture was elegant but flawed. She could see it immediately-the data cache layer, the synchronous call structure, the bottleneck that would choke under real-world load.

"We're hitting latency walls," Sterling admitted, watching her face. "Above certain throughput thresholds, the whole system degrades exponentially."

Kayla stepped closer.

She studied the screen for nearly a minute, her eyes tracing the flow of data rather than the glossy UI. "Can I see your latency logs from the last stress test?" she asked, her voice quiet but firm. "Specifically the I/O wait times."

Sterling blinked.

She could see it in the micro-expression-the slight widening of his pupils, the unconscious lean forward.

He turned to the keyboard and typed rapidly, pulling up a cascade of raw performance data. Graphs and tables filled a secondary screen.

Kayla's finger hovered over a spike in one of the charts. "There," she said. "Ninety-five percent of your latency is on the database read. I'm guessing your cache layer is using synchronous distributed calls. Switch to asynchronous with localized buffering. The latency drops to the network round-trip time."

Sterling stared at the screen, then back at her.

He implemented her suggestion in a test environment.

The progress bar filled.

Latency metrics appeared on screen. Fifteen percent improvement. Then eighteen.

Sterling turned to look at her.

The polite interest in his eyes had transformed into something sharper. Hungrier.

"Wall Street gossip says you're Brennon Bauer's top sales asset," he said slowly. "They don't mention you speak fluent systems architecture."

Kayla smiled.

It didn't reach her eyes. "I speak several languages."

Sterling studied her for a long moment.

Then he gestured toward the elevator. "My office."

The corner office had views of the Hudson River, the Statue of Liberty visible in the distance. Sterling poured sparkling water from a glass bottle into two tumblers.

He pulled a document from his desk drawer.

Thick paper. A wax seal on the cover page. He slid it across the desk to her.

"Business Development VP," he said. "Full P&L authority. Your own hiring budget. And this-" he flipped to the compensation page, "-is the equity package."

The numbers were significant. Life-changing. Generational wealth if the company performed.

Kayla read the terms carefully.

No non-compete clauses that would trap her. No intellectual property grabs. No restrictions on technical involvement.

She looked up.

"The engineering team," she said. "Will they take direction from a 'sales VP'?"

Sterling leaned back in his chair.

"At Innovest," he said, "competence is the only currency that matters."

The words hit her like oxygen after suffocation.

She closed the folder.

"Twenty-four hours," she said. "I have some personal history to resolve."

Sterling stood and extended his hand again.

"We'll be waiting," he said. "Take your time."

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