
After Dumping Him, I Found Myself
Chapter 2
I sat at the small metal desk in my temporary hotel room, staring at the resignation letter I'd drafted. The words blurred before my eyes: "Effective immediately, I hereby tender my resignation from O'Brien Manufacturing..."
My finger hovered over the print button. Once I pressed it, there would be no going back.
"Are you sure about this, Haven?" Rebecca Walsh had asked when I called her last night. She was the only coworker who'd ever shown me genuine kindness.
"I've never been more sure of anything," I'd replied.
I pressed print. The hotel printer hummed to life, spitting out the single page that would sever my eight-year connection to the company—and to Travis.
Forty-eight hours. That's all it took to erase my existence from the company housing. I'd packed only what mattered—clothes, my laptop, and the small succulent that had survived on my desk despite everything. The rest I left behind, including the photographs of Travis and me that had once lined the hallway.
"Haven Marshall?" The HR director looked up as I entered her office, resignation letter in hand. Her expression shifted from surprise to understanding as she took in my resolute stance.
"I didn't expect to see you this morning," she said carefully.
I placed the letter on her desk. "I'm resigning, effective immediately."
She glanced at the paper, then back at me. "May I ask why?"
"Hostile work environment," I replied, my voice steady. "Harassment documented by multiple employees, including Mr. O'Brien himself."
Her eyes widened slightly, but she maintained her professional composure. "I see. Well, we'll need to process your separation benefits..."
As she spoke, my phone buzzed with a text from Travis: *Where are you? We need to talk.*
I silenced it without responding.
---
Three days later, I was settled in my hotel room when my phone rang. It was Rebecca.
"Haven, you need to know what's happening here," she said, her voice hushed. "Marleigh submitted the quality control reports for the merger yesterday."
"And?" I asked, though I already suspected the answer.
"They're completely wrong. Basic calculation errors, missing data points—things you would have caught instantly." Rebecca paused. "The investors are asking questions Travis can't answer."
I closed my eyes, picturing the chaos unfolding at the plant. The merger had been Travis's pet project for months—a deal that would double the company's size if successful.
"Marleigh's been trying to fix them," Rebecca continued, "but she doesn't understand the technical specifications. She's making it worse."
"Haven!" Another voice suddenly came on the line—Marcus Chen, our quality control manager. "Thank God you're still talking to someone here. We need you."
"I'm sorry," I said, meaning it. "But I can't help."
"The vendor representatives are threatening to walk," Marcus said urgently. "They're saying the reports don't match what they've been providing us."
I thought of all the times I'd stayed late, double-checking Marleigh's work, fixing her errors before anyone noticed. All the times Travis had dismissed my concerns about her incompetence with a wave of his hand.
"I wish you the best of luck," I said, and hung up.
---
The knock on my hotel room door came at 7:30 the next morning. I knew who it was before I even looked through the peephole.
Travis stood in the hallway, holding two coffee cups and wearing the same suit he'd worn to our company Christmas party last year.
"Haven," he said when I opened the door, his expression a careful blend of contrition and confidence. "Can I come in?"
"No," I replied, blocking the doorway with my body.
He held out one of the coffee cups. "I brought your favorite. Vanilla latte, extra shot."
I left it untouched. "What do you want, Travis?"
"To apologize." He set the coffee down on a small table near the door. "I didn't realize how much that nickname bothered you. It was just a joke that went too far."
"A joke?" I repeated, my voice dangerously quiet.
"I'll talk to the guys," he promised, stepping closer. "We'll tone it down. And Marleigh—I'll make sure she's more professional."
The mention of her name made something inside me harden. "It's too late."
"It's not!" He reached for my hand, but I pulled back. "Haven, the merger project is falling apart without you. Those technical specifications—no one understands them like you do."
Finally, I understood what this was really about. Not me, not my feelings—the project. The company.
"I'm not coming back, Travis," I said, my voice steady and final.
His expression shifted, the mask of contrition slipping to reveal frustration underneath. "You're being ridiculous."
"No," I replied, closing the door slowly. "For the first time in years, I'm being myself."
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