They Stole My Project , Now the CEO Is Begging Me Back
The open vote for the Cloudridge Estates Luxury Residences project lead was held today.
Kenneth Fletcher: thirteen votes. Me: zero.
Thirteen people in the design department. Not a single one picked me.
Edmund James jabbed his pen against my name on the ballot, pressing hard.
The ink bled into an illegible smear.
"Ronnie, it was a fair vote. You don't have a problem with that, do you?"
The corner of his mouth curled into the kind of smirk that said I run this department, and you know it.
"Fair."
I rolled the word around in my mouth, slow and quiet.
I'd been on the Cloudridge project for a full year, practically living on-site since the day the structural work finished.
A thousand units. Eighteen buildings. Twenty stories each.
I'd climbed every single floor myself.
Seven unit types, a hundred and eight design plans. All mine.
Forty-five firms competing for the bid. I won it.
The $40 million design fee. I negotiated it.
And now it had been handed to an intern who didn't even know the name of the client's contact person.
And he was telling me this was a fair vote?
I looked down at the supplementary agreement Cloudridge had just sent over.
Under "Designated Project Lead," one name was printed: Ronnie Butler.
I let my gaze drift away from the screen.
Quietly, I opened LinkedIn and updated my resume.
"No problem."
Edmund looked mildly surprised. He reached over and gave my shoulder a pat.
"Well, well. Designer Butler's really showing some team spirit today. Then again, you've been here nine years. A veteran like you should understand how the company operates. Got to make room for the new blood."
I didn't respond. I turned and walked out of the conference room.
The moment the door swung shut, I caught a glimpse through the glass: Kenneth and Edmund, high-fiving each other.
"Eddie, we finally got rid of that dead weight."
Edmund was trying to keep his composure, but the glee leaked through the door like it couldn't be contained.
"Forty million in design fees, and he was taking all the credit. How was I supposed to do my job as director with him around?"
I turned and walked through the open office. Low murmurs rippled around me as I passed.
"Vote's done? Look at him, wilting like a frost-bitten plant. Guess he lost?"
"Holy crap, forty million in fees, twenty percent commission. That's almost ten million gone. I'd lose my mind too."
"So what if he's upset? He hogged everything. Every project that came through the design department, he'd show his face at the site for five minutes, slap his name on it, and pocket all the credit and the cash. Who does that?"
"Exactly. Meanwhile Kenneth, the new intern, was still at the site at midnight drafting plans. Not like Ronnie, who just sat at his desk all day warming his chair until the cushion fell apart."
Winston Chavez raised his voice deliberately, his tone dripping with spite:
"Isn't he supposed to be some hotshot mid-level designer? Thinks he's above the director, figured the project couldn't survive without him. Bet he never dreamed he'd get voted off. That's hilarious."
"Big deal, mid-level designer. Kenneth has a master's degree, and his father works at the Housing Authority. Getting his senior certification would be a cakewalk for him. His drafts are better than Ronnie's. He could pick up Ronnie's workload without breaking a sweat."
"I think so too. Kenneth's got the talent and the work ethic. He deserves to lead this project."
"Unlike certain people. No real skill, just good at stealing credit. Getting cut was inevitable."
"If I were him, I'd take the hint and leave before they push me out."
Those vicious mouths, every last one of them, spitting out their petty satisfaction and their twisted lies one syllable at a time.
Not a single person remembered how I'd spent the last nine years pulling all-nighters over design plans, sleeping in construction trailers on-site to keep the schedules on track.
These people came from every department: interior finishing, marketing, engineering, materials.
Which one of them hadn't come to me begging for help at some point?
Last week, the finishing team botched their measurements. They dragged me out of bed at two in the morning to renegotiate the design specs with the client.
Yesterday, marketing had a difficult client they couldn't close. I pulled an all-nighter and put together eight separate proposals to land the deal for them.
All they saw was the $8 million commission on a $40 million design contract. None of them saw me crawling through construction sites every day, caked in mud like a stray dog.
The guy they called incompetent, the "glory hog," the one who "hogged all the credit" I was the one holding up more than half the company's revenue, making sure they had salaries to collect and bonuses to spend.
I held my breath, walked to my desk.
Picked up the glass "Outstanding Contribution Award" trophy, and hurled it into the aisle.
CRASH.
Glass shattered everywhere, the sound ripping through the entire office.
Every whisper died instantly.
The whole floor went dead silent.
The conference room door flew open. Kenneth still had a cigarette pinched between his fingers, not even bothered to put it out.
He spotted the shattered trophy on the floor and strolled toward me with a smirk.
"Ronnie, come on, no need for all that. If you've got a problem with how things were decided, I can step aside for you."
I sat in my chair, chin tilted up to meet his eyes.
Same face from three months ago when he first walked in as an intern. But the humble act had long been replaced by the gloating mask of a man who'd lucked into something he didn't earn.
"Sure."
I said it calmly.
"Go tell Mr. James right now. I'll wait."
The smirk on his face froze solid. His eyes shifted from shock to irritation, then landed on pure embarrassment.
He forced out a stiff laugh. "Bro, I was kidding. That's above my pay grade."
I ignored him and turned to my computer, sorting through my files.
Kenneth draped one arm over the glass partition of my cubicle.
The other arm planted itself on my desk. He leaned in, watching my face with that lazy, entitled look.
"Ronnie, Edmund wants you to hand over all the Cloudridge client files. Everything."
"Everything?"
"Yeah. Proposals, material quotes, contact agreements, and the design drafts."
He blew a lazy smoke ring, watching me like he had all the time in the world.
Last month, Cloudridge had requested a lighting design package. Kenneth submitted over a dozen proposals. Every single one got rejected.
On the last day before the deadline, he called me at midnight begging for help.
I pulled an all-nighter to finish it.
The next morning, he walked in with my designs and took full credit.
When Edmund reported to the boss, he said the entire design department had worked overtime to get it done.
I nodded.
"Fine. I'll organize them and send them over."
He smiled, satisfied, and turned to leave.
The stench of cigarette smoke lingered over my workstation long after he was gone.
I opened my hidden files and clicked on a folder labeled "IMPORTANT DO NOT DELETE."
Inside were eight floor plans for Cloudridge, 108 design proposals, and 2,888 design sketches.
Every single one drawn by my hand. Every single one revised by me alone.
Every last sketch had only one name on it. Mine.
Not one of the other twelve people in the design department had contributed a single line.
Because none of them ever believed I could land this project.
When the Cloudridge luxury renovation project first launched, Edmund had been eager enough to submit a bid.
But out of 150 design firms, only 44 made the cut.
Pinnacle Design got eliminated in the first round.
Edmund gave up on the spot. I was the only one who kept going.
Every day, I showed up at the construction site and worked alongside the laborers.
Whenever I spotted something wrong, I spoke up. I was more thorough than Cloudridge's own construction supervisor.
One time, I noticed the bathroom drain placement was off and flagged it immediately.
"The drain's positioned so the washing machine and the toilet are going to collide. The machine door won't be able to open. I'd recommend shifting it back about four inches."
The site supervisor was a guy named Ken Lawrence, a stubborn old bulldog of a man who made no effort to hide his annoyance with me.
"That's how it was designed. Whether the door opens or not isn't my problem. I build to the blueprints."
I smiled. "But the interior finishing is on your team. A layout like this is going to cause major problems during renovation. Unless you swap the front-loader for a top-loader, but would the homeowners agree to that? Wouldn't that count as fraud?"
He checked the blueprints, measured the dimensions over and over again.
Then he looked up the washing machine specs, and went completely silent.
After a long pause, he finally asked me.
"How do you know all this so well?"
I didn't bother hiding my calculating smile.
"Because I want this project. I know the exact deviation of every single unit you've got here."
He studied me for a moment, something shifting behind his eyes.
"Kid, you've got grit. Reminds me of myself when I was your age."
It wasn't until later that I learned he was Herbert Delgado's uncle.
Three days later, I walked into a meeting with Delgado himself, carrying a thick stack of proposals.
He glanced at the first page and shook his head.
"Pinnacle doesn't have a Senior Designer on staff. You're not qualified."
The words hit me like a bucket of ice water, cold straight through to the bone.
But I wasn't ready to give up. I pulled out the certificates for my two national design awards.
"Mr. Delgado, I've already applied for my Senior certification. I meet all the requirements. It's just that the Housing Authority's approval process has been slow."
He looked at the two awards. The dismissiveness in his eyes faded, degree by degree.
"I've seen both of these winning designs. At the time, I remember thinking the designer had a remarkably intuitive sense of space. So that was you."
Only then did he start going through my proposals carefully, his expression growing more focused with every page.
"You did over a dozen variations for a single floor plan? Each one in a different style. You've got something going on up here." He tapped his temple.
My heart was racing, but I kept my face composed.
He nodded. "Leave these with me. If I have questions, we'll talk."
That day, he added me on WhatsApp. His initiative, not mine.
On my way out, his assistant Alfred Chavez said, "Forty-four firms sent representatives. You're the first one he's given his personal contact to."
I rushed back to the office, buzzing with excitement, and reported everything to Edmund.
No excitement. No praise.
He didn't even look up.
"You want to waste your time chasing pipe dreams, that's your business. I'm not going to the boss with some half-baked lead and getting chewed out for it."
But the moment the project was locked in, he was the first one in Mr. Donaldson's office to claim credit.
"Mr. Donaldson, the Cloudridge project came through because I led the team and ground out every last detail."
One sentence. A full year of my sweat and sleepless nights, reduced to a stepping stone under his feet.
I selected the files, compressed them, and uploaded everything to my personal cloud.
Then I deleted them. Permanently.
I packaged up the basic Cloudridge documents and sent them to Kenneth.
Ten minutes later, Kenneth came storming out of the director's office and marched straight to my desk.
"Ronnie, why is there no building orientation data in these files? Where's the solar analysis? The ventilation simulation models?"
"No idea."
"No idea?"
Kenneth's brows twisted into a knot.
"You practically lived on that construction site. How can you not know? What the hell were you even doing out there?"
I let my gaze sweep across the office, slow and deliberate.
"They told me I was just there for show. So that's what I did."
Every pair of eyes that met mine dropped instantly, heads ducking behind monitors, suddenly very busy.
Kenneth faltered, his expression flickering with unease.
"And the design drawings? You didn't include a single one. Send them to me. Now."
I leaned back in my chair, watching him with an unhurried gaze.
"No."
"No?"
His temper was slipping.
"On what grounds? That's a company project!"
I kept my voice even, measured. "You all voted me off the team. Those designs are my personal work. Why would I hand them to you?"
He was practically snarling now. "Your personal work? Without this company, your designs are nothing but scrap paper!"
I nodded. "Sure. Then go design your own. Stop asking me for scrap paper."
"What kind of attitude is"
"Kenneth." Edmund pushed open his office door. "Send him in. You go contact the Cloudridge people."
Kenneth shot me a glare but stepped aside to clear the aisle.
I stood and walked into the director's office, every pair of eyes in the department following me like spectators at a show.
Edmund gestured for me to sit. I didn't move.
"Mr. James, just say what you need to say."
He flashed me the same fake smile I'd been looking at for nine years.
"The decision to reassign the Cloudridge project lead was made by senior management after careful consideration."
His fingers tapped the desk in that habitual rhythm of his.
"Kenneth has the credentials and the connections. He's a better fit for this project. You've been in this industry long enough to understand how these things work without me spelling it out."
"But I've been on this for a year!" My eyes burned. "Do you have any idea how many doors got slammed in my face? How many people looked right through me? How many nights I worked until dawn?"
"Not a single person in this department believed in this project. I wrote the proposal alone. I coordinated with every agency alone. I drafted every design and drew every blueprint alone. And now that we're about to sign, you hand it to someone else? How is that fair?"
"Ronnie," he said, switching to that patronizing, fatherly tone. "I'll admit you contributed to this project. But let's be honest, it was the company's platform that made it possible. On your own, you couldn't have gotten past the front gate at Cloudridge."
He looked at me, his eyes carrying the weight of a lecture he clearly enjoyed giving.
"You came here straight out of school. All these years, without the company investing in you, would you even have a salary? A design fee? People shouldn't forget where they came from. Show some gratitude."
"Gratitude?"
I laughed. Not because anything was funny.
"My second year here, the company landed a rush project right before the holidays. Everyone left. On New Year's Eve, I was the only person in this entire building, revising design drafts alone. After the contract was signed, you didn't mention my name once at the meeting. No design fee. No overtime pay."
"Two years ago, when Chen's project blew up, I'd just come out of surgery for appendicitis. You called me in to fix the drafts. The strain tore my stitches open and I had to get re-sutured. Afterward, you told Mr. Delgado it was a 'team effort.'"
"And now you want to lecture me about gratitude? Tell me, which one of us actually has none?"
I held his gaze.
"Everyone in this department, yourself included, takes freelance jobs on the side. Have I ever? Not once. Not even a five-hundred-square-foot apartment renovation for a few hundred bucks. Every single project went through the company's books. You told me not to forget where I came from. Have you remembered any of that?"
Edmund's face cycled through shades of red and white before settling into something dark.
"Ronnie! Watch your tone! You want to know why everyone froze you out? Why you got zero votes? Maybe take a look in the mirror!"
"I'll ask you one last time. The designs. Are you handing them over or not?"
"No."
Not a second of hesitation.
"Then I take it you don't want this job anymore?"
"Take it however you like."
He was visibly seething.
"Fine. Don't come crying to me later."
Without another word, I unclipped my ID badge and set it on his desk.
"Don't worry. I won't."
I walked out of the director's office and headed for the restroom.
At the door, I heard Kenneth inside, on the phone.
"Hello, is this Mr. Delgado's direct line at Cloudridge Corp? This is Kenneth Fletcher, the new project lead from Pinnacle Design. I'll be handling things from here on out. Would it be possible to go over some details with Mr. Delgado?"
He didn't have it on speaker, but the restroom was dead silent, and the voice on the other end came through crystal clear.
I recognized it immediately. Alfred Chavez, Mr. Delgado's assistant.
"I'm sorry, we haven't received any such notification. We only work with the designated point of contact for this project. That would be Ronnie Butler."
The dial tone after the hang-up was piercing.
Like a death knell.
Kenneth stood frozen, phone still pressed to his ear.
I walked in. He looked at me, panic written across his face.
"You heard that?"
I smiled, said nothing, and stepped into a stall.
The moment I walked back into the office, the buzzing chatter died. The room went eerily quiet.
Dozens of contemptuous, gleeful stares pressed into my back like needles.
I sat down at my desk. My inbox had exploded with over a dozen emails, all from recruiting firms. Every single one was a rejection.
The reasons were nearly identical.
Mr. Butler, we regret to inform you that your overall qualifications and professional conduct do not meet our firm's referral standards. Thank you for your understanding.
I stared at those emails in silence, and the hostile looks suddenly made sense.
And I finally understood what Edmund had meant by "don't come crying later." He'd cut off every escape route.
A cold bitterness rose in my chest.
Not for my career.
For this rotten company.
Nine years I'd played it straight. Nine years of integrity. And now I was the one who "didn't meet professional conduct standards."
Meanwhile, the ones who'd poached clients under the company's name climbed the ladder without a scratch.
What a joke.
My phone rang. It was Herbert Delgado.
I didn't move from my seat. Just picked up.
"Mr. Delgado."
"Ronnie, what the hell is going on? Alfred just told me your company swapped out the project lead?"
"Yeah. Got the notice today."
"Whose call was that?"
I paused for a beat.
"The entire design department voted on it."
"That's absurd!"
His tone shifted, sharp and hard. "We're about to sign the contract and they pull you off? They think my forty-million-dollar design fee is some office popularity contest?"
His voice surged loud enough that it punched through the speaker and filled the silent office.
"Have they not read the supplementary agreement? You tell your people that Cloudridge's designated liaison is Ronnie Butler. We work with you and no one else!"
Kenneth shot up from his desk like he'd been spring-loaded and shoved open the door to the director's office.
"Edmund, Delgado from Cloudridge is on the phone. Says the only person he'll deal with is Ronnie."
I watched Edmund hurry to the doorway, steal a glance at me through the gap, then settle back into his chair.
He took a slow, deliberate sip of tea.
"Relax. We'll have Mr. Donaldson make the call. You think some low-level employee gets to hold us hostage? Just let it play out. A client isn't going to blow up a deal over one guy."
Smug certainty was written all over his face.
"A thousand luxury units. A project worth hundreds of millions. Delgado knows which side his bread is buttered on."
I looked away and listened to the sigh on the other end of the line.
"So what's your plan now?"
"I'm going to resign."
"Do it. A company like that is garbage."
I was quiet for two seconds.
"Mr. Delgado, is that supplementary agreement naming me as designated liaison still valid?"
He seemed caught off guard for a moment, then his voice came back firm. "It's valid. I wasn't joking. They swap you out, the contract doesn't get signed. Period."
I let out a quiet breath.
"Thank you, Mr. Delgado."
The second I hung up, I uploaded a photo of that agreement to LinkedIn.
Then I printed a resignation letter.
I pushed open the door to the director's office and set the letter on his desk.
"Mr. James. My resignation. Sign it."
He stared at the paper for a few seconds, then lifted one eyebrow.
"You're sure about this?"
"I'm sure."
He signed it with a dismissive scoff, pen scratching across the page.
"Didn't you get the rejections?"
"I did."
"And you still have the nerve to quit?"
I placed the supplementary agreement on his desk.
My voice was perfectly calm.
"Because I have this."
Download
NovelReader Pro
Copy
Story Code
Paste in
Search Box
Continue
Reading
