
After Dumping Him, I Found Myself
Chapter 3
The Morrison Textiles building stood tall against the Portland skyline, its glass facade reflecting the morning sun. I smoothed my navy blazer and took a deep breath before pushing through the revolving doors. This interview could change everything.
"Haven Marshall?" The receptionist smiled warmly. "Mr. Chen is expecting you."
Marcus Chen, the department head, greeted me with a firm handshake. His office was cluttered with blueprints and samples, a controlled chaos that somehow felt more authentic than Travis's sterile workspace.
"Your work at O'Brien Manufacturing was impressive," he said, gesturing for me to sit. "Especially your quality control protocols for the Westridge merger."
I blinked in surprise. "You've reviewed my work?"
"Thoroughly." He slid a folder across his desk. "Which is why we're particularly interested in your approach to supplier verification."
As we discussed technical specifications and process improvements, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years—professional respect. Marcus wasn't just interviewing me; he was engaging with my ideas.
"Ms. Cruz and Mr. Garza will be working closely with you," he explained, leading me through the production floor. "They're our best team."
Penny Cruz looked up from her computer when we approached, her dark curls escaping from a practical ponytail. "You must be Haven," she said, extending her hand. "Marcus has been singing your praises all morning."
"And I've been trying to make him stop," joked Donovan Garza, who was sketching something on a whiteboard. "My ego can't take it."
Their warmth was immediate and genuine. No sideways glances, no whispered nicknames.
"Welcome to the team," Penny said, already pulling up a chair for me at their work station. "We've got a technology acquisition project that could use your expertise."
For a moment, I froze. The old Haven would have hesitated, would have touched her collarbone anxiously. But that Haven was gone.
"When do we start?" I asked.
---
Back in Seattle, Travis was drowning in spreadsheets.
"The numbers don't match the vendor specifications," he muttered, running his hands through his hair as he paced his office. The conference call with potential investors had been a disaster.
"Maybe we should double-check the calculations," Marleigh suggested, perched on the edge of his desk in a skirt that was shorter than company policy allowed.
"I've checked them three times," Travis snapped. "These are basic errors, Marleigh. Errors Haven would have caught immediately."
Marleigh's smile tightened. "Well, she's not here, is she?"
The investors' concerns had been specific and damning. Data inconsistencies that shouldn't exist. Missing quality benchmarks. Supplier information that contradicted what they'd been told.
"Get me the original vendor specifications," Travis ordered. "And the contract terms."
"I already looked," Marleigh replied, sliding closer to him. "Nothing seems wrong to me."
Travis barely noticed her hand on his arm. "Then look again."
He was working sixteen-hour days now, trying to salvage what should have been a slam-dunk merger. The vendor representatives were threatening to walk. The investors were demanding answers.
And all Travis could think about was Haven's meticulous attention to detail—the way she'd always caught Marleigh's mistakes before they became problems.
---
"I accept the position," I told Marcus, signing the employment contract with steady hands.
"Excellent," he said. "The technology acquisition project is our priority right now."
My first week at Morrison passed in a blur of productive meetings and collaborative sessions. Penny and Donovan included me in every discussion, valued my input, treated me like a colleague rather than a convenience.
On Friday afternoon, Marcus handed me a thick folder. "The supplier contracts for the acquisition project," he explained. "Review these over the weekend. We need to identify any potential issues before finalizing."
I took the folder back to my temporary apartment, spreading the documents across my kitchen table. As I reviewed the technical specifications, a familiar logo caught my eye.
O'Brien Manufacturing.
My heart skipped a beat as I realized what I was looking at—the same supplier contract Travis's company had been pursuing for months. The same merger project that was apparently falling apart without me.
I flipped through the pages, my mind racing. These weren't just any supplier specifications—they were the ones I'd personally vetted during my time at O'Brien. I knew their weaknesses, their pricing strategies, their quality control blind spots.
My phone buzzed with a text from Travis: *Please call me. The project is falling apart.*
I silenced the phone and turned back to the contract, a strange calm settling over me. For the first time in my professional life, I had insider knowledge that mattered. Real leverage.
And Travis had no idea what was coming.
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