Blake POV:
The confrontation in the lobby was just the appetizer. The main course of humiliation was served an hour later, piped directly to my desk through the company's internal phone system.
I was trying to set up my development environment when the phone rang, its shrill cry cutting through the low hum of the office. I picked it up. "Blake Steele."
"It's been ten minutes," the voice on the other end purred with malice. It was Jaden. She must have gotten my extension from Connor' s office. "Where is my coffee?"
I took a slow, steadying breath. "I'm sorry, Ms. Juarez. The pantry machine uses pods, not fresh grounds. I'm trying to find out if there's another machine available for staff use."
"Pods?" She sounded personally offended. "Are you kidding me? This is a billion-dollar company, not a motel. I need a proper Americano. That means two shots of espresso, hot water poured over it-not the other way around, do you understand? The crema must be preserved. And I want it in a ceramic mug, not one of those hideous paper cups with the company logo on it."
The level of detail was absurd. She wasn' t just asking for coffee; she was crafting a loyalty test.
"And I want it now," she added, her voice dropping. "Don't make me wait."
"I'm on it," I said, hanging up before she could add another ridiculous demand.
I walked to the high-end kitchenette reserved for the executive floor, a place I technically shouldn't have access to. The elevator ride was a slow torture, each ding of a passing floor amplifying the pressure. The machine was a gleaming silver beast, complicated and intimidating. It took me a full three minutes just to figure out how to grind the beans.
As I was waiting for the espresso shots to pull, my phone buzzed in my pocket. A text from Connor.
Everything okay? Jaden seems a little on edge.
I stared at the words, a bitter laugh bubbling in my throat. A little on edge? She was on a warpath, and he was acting like she' d just had a mildly inconvenient morning.
Before I could type a reply, the phone at my desk, which I could hear from the hallway, started ringing again. The sound was frantic, insistent. I grabbed the mug as the last drops of espresso fell and hurried back, the hot ceramic warming my hands.
The entire development team was staring at me. The ringing had been going on for a while.
Jaden's voice was a shriek the second I answered. "Where have you been? Are you incompetent? I asked for a simple coffee, not for you to fly to Colombia and pick the beans yourself!"
"The machine took a moment to warm up," I said, my voice tight with forced calm. "The coffee is on its way."
"A moment? A moment?" she screeched. "My mood is ruined! Do you know how delicate my constitution is? The acidity is probably all wrong now because it sat for too long! If it tastes burnt, I'm holding your entire department responsible!"
She was on speakerphone. Everyone could hear her unhinged tirade. Faces were a mixture of pity, disgust, and a healthy dose of fear. This was their daily reality. This toxic, irrational woman held power over their livelihoods.
I tried to keep my professionalism intact, a shield against the sheer absurdity of it all. "I assure you, Ms. Juarez, it was made just seconds ago. I'll bring it right over."
I hung up and started towards the executive wing, mug in hand. But she was faster. She met me in the hallway, her arms crossed, her face a thundercloud.
Without a word, she snatched the mug from my hand. The hot coffee sloshed over the rim, scalding my skin. I cried out, a sharp gasp of pain, and instinctively pulled my hand back.
"Clumsy idiot!" she hissed, though she was the one who had grabbed it. She took a theatrical sip, then made a face of utter disgust. "It's lukewarm. And you burned the espresso. Pathetic."
She looked down at my hand, which was already turning an angry red. There was no flicker of concern, only contempt.
"Look at you," she sneered. "Can't even handle a simple delivery without hurting yourself. I'm going to have a word with Connor. People like you shouldn't be working here. You're a liability."
The pain was a sharp, throbbing fire, but the fury that ignited in my chest was hotter. My fingers curled into a fist. Every instinct screamed at me to wipe that smug, cruel look off her face. I took a step forward, my jaw clenched so hard it ached.
"Blake, don't!"
Mark, my manager, was suddenly there, his hand on my arm, his eyes wide with terror. He physically pulled me back, putting himself between me and Jaden.
"Ms. Juarez, I am so, so sorry," he said, his voice placating. "She's new. It won't happen again. Please, forgive her."
He was practically begging. It was humiliating to watch.
He turned to me, his grip on my arm tightening, his whisper urgent and low. "Let it go, Blake. For God's sake, let it go. She will get you fired. She will get us all fired." He emphasized the last words, a stark reminder that my defiance had consequences for everyone.
Jaden looked from Mark's terrified face to my furious one, and a slow, triumphant smile spread across her lips. She had won. She had asserted her dominance, and the whole department had witnessed it.
"Fine," she said, her voice dripping with condescension. "Since you asked so nicely, Mark."
She took another slow sip of the coffee she' d just declared undrinkable. "I was just thinking," she announced to the assembled, captive audience of developers. "This place feels a bit stuffy. I think I'll take a little tour. See how the little people work. Starting with the cafeteria. I hear the lunch options are simply dreadful."
My blood ran cold. The cafeteria was a massive operation, serving hundreds of employees. It was a place with strict health and safety protocols-a place where a loose cannon like Jaden could do real damage.
"Ms. Juarez," I said, my voice low and steely, "the cafeteria is a restricted area for non-food-service personnel."
Mark's hand clamped down on my arm again, a silent, desperate plea for me to shut up.
"Oh, is it?" Jaden arched a perfect eyebrow. "Don't worry. I'm sure Connor won't mind. After all," she added, her eyes locking onto mine, "he and I are... very close. He tells me everything."
The implication hung in the air, a greasy smear of a threat. She wasn't just a friend of the CEO. She was positioning herself as something more.
"She can get your name on the layoff list tomorrow," Mark whispered frantically in my ear. "Just because she doesn't like your face. Don't fight her. You can't win."
I stared back at Jaden, my mind flashing to the pact. To the promise Connor and I had made. We were supposed to be building a company on respect and integrity. What I was seeing was a monarchy built on fear, with a cruel, capricious queen.
Jaden laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "Cat got your tongue, junior developer?"
She turned on her heel, her hips swaying with smug victory. "Let's see what slop they're serving you all today."
She headed for the elevators, leaving a trail of stunned silence and the faint, bitter scent of burnt espresso.
"I'm going to have you fired," she called over her shoulder, a final, parting shot aimed directly at me. "I promise."