Chapter 2

Chapter two

Sam

Richard’s assistant doesn't knock.

That’s my first warning. I am halfway through reviewing my inbox, my calendar perfectly color-coded to the fifteen-minute mark, when she appears in the doorway of my office.

"Richard needs you. Now."

I don't ask questions. I just stand up and follow her down the corridor.

When I step into his suite, my boss is standing at the glass wall looking out at the city. His jaw is set. A muscle near his temple twitches once. "Harbor District client review," he says, his voice clipped. "They moved it. Nine-thirty."

I check my watch. It is exactly 8:15 AM.

"Sam." His tone stops me flat. "Make it work."

I turn on my heel and walk fast. Back at my desk, I wake up my monitors and pull up the shared drive. My eyes go straight to the file names for the presentation deck.

Render_Harbor_v2_DRAFT_unedited.

Slides_Harbor_WORKING_DO_NOT_PRESENT.

I open the first image and my stomach drops. The lighting is wrong. It is flat, washing out my careful work around the windows. Worse, the building materials look like cheap plastic. I open the slide deck. Tracked changes are still visible.

Seventy-five minutes. I have exactly seventy-five minutes to rebuild a multi-million-dollar pitch from scratch.

My throat tightens. It is a sharp dread. I know this feeling from the week the heat shut off when I was fifteen, when my mother was working a double shift and I had to figure it out alone. It is the cold truth that the system failed, and no one is coming to save you.

But I know what to do with that feeling. You don't sit in it. You move.

I load the rendering software. The file for the south side of the building opens. I dim the bright light, fix the sun angle, and let the shadows fall naturally across the design. I hit process.

My earpiece buzzes. I close my eyes for a second, take a deep breath, and answer.

"Samantha." My mother's voice is tired in that specific, worn-down way. "They're saying the March claim is still pending."

"I know." I have the insurance portal open in a second tab before she finishes the sentence. "I'm looking at it right now. Let me call them."

For the next forty minutes, I keep every plate in the air. I argue with a bored insurance rep, pay a three-hundred-dollar balance that isn't in my budget, manually fix twelve architectural images, and scrub the wrong fonts off seven slides.

By 9:30 AM, I am in the conference room. I show the partners the Harbor District concept without stopping once. I explain the site logic, walking paths, and the light on the building. My voice is steady. The laser pointer doesn't shake.

When the lights come up, Richard is nodding. "Sam will be leading this project going forward."

"Strong technical bones," Carter, the senior partner, adds. He turns a pen in his fingers. "Precise. We'd like to see the work breathe a bit more, though. The emotional resonance reads as somewhat... sterile."

I keep my face exactly where it is. "Noted. I'll develop that layer."

Back in my office, I shut the door, lean back against the wood, and exhale. I pulled it off. I walk over to my desk and open my email.

New message. Richard, flagged urgent.

Subject: Harbor District — Photography.

Sam — Developer has requested we bring in a dedicated photographer for the bid package. They want the visual narrative to match your design intent. Partners will identify candidates and loop you in once we've selected someone.

I read it twice.

A photographer. Someone the partners will choose. Someone I'll have to work with, who will make visual decisions that go directly to the developer—and I don't get to pick who it is.

My jaw tightens. I’ve held this project together by sheer force of will. I have perfectly calibrated the shadows, double-checked every font, and mathematically guaranteed this presentation would succeed. And now I’m supposed to trust the first impression to a stranger?

No. Absolutely not.

I grab my coat from the back of the chair. My pulse is humming again, sharp and angry. I need a coffee. I will not let my meticulously built project be ruined by some chaotic, disorganized creative who thinks rules are just suggestions.

I won't let it happen.

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