
Defeat of Lab Deceit
Chapter 2
The hallway seemed endless as I stormed toward Bennett's executive office, my resignation letter clutched in my trembling hand. Seven years of devotion, of scientific breakthroughs, of humiliating myself for acceptance—all of it crystallized into a single moment of clarity that cut through my exhaustion.
I didn't knock.
The door swung open to reveal exactly what I'd suspected but never wanted to confirm. Bennett stood behind his massive oak desk, his hand resting on Arya's lower back. She leaned into him with practiced intimacy, her fingers curled possessively around his forearm. The perfect power couple—him in his tailored suit, her in her designer dress, both looking like they belonged on a magazine cover rather than in the middle of destroying someone's life.
"Grace," Bennett's voice cracked slightly, his eyes widening before narrowing defensively. "What are you doing here?"
Arya's lips curved into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Shouldn't you be in the lab, Grace? Or perhaps cooling off somewhere after your... policy violation?"
I crossed the room in three strides, my footsteps echoing against the marble floor. Neither of them moved apart. Neither of them denied what I was seeing.
"Thirty-six hours," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "Thirty-six hours in a ninety-five-degree laboratory. My team nearly collapsed from heat exhaustion, but we achieved something remarkable." I slammed my resignation letter onto his desk. "And this is how you repay us?"
Bennett's face flushed dark red. "You're overreacting. Arya was simply enforcing—"
"Enforcing what?" I cut him off. "Policies that endanger lives? Policies that punish people for basic human needs?"
I looked between them, these two people who had systematically dismantled everything I'd built. "I'm taking my team with me. Every single one of them."
Arya laughed, the sound like glass breaking. "They're under contract. You can't just—"
"They'll follow me," I said simply. "Because unlike you two, I actually care about their wellbeing."
I reached for my engagement ring, twisting it off my finger. The diamond caught the light as I set it deliberately on top of my resignation letter.
"Your company will crumble without the people who actually do the work," I continued, meeting Bennett's gaze directly. "You know it. I know it. The question is whether that five-hundred-thousand-dollar fine was worth losing everything."
I turned and walked out without waiting for his response, the heavy door closing behind me with finality.
---
My apartment felt cavernous in the darkness. I sat cross-legged on the floor, surrounded by seven years of memories spread across the hardwood like evidence of a crime. Photographs of Bennett and me at various galas and conferences, his arm around my waist, his smile never quite reaching his eyes. Research notes with my name alongside his, though I'd done the work alone. Newspaper clippings announcing our engagement, my face glowing with hope that now looked pathetically naive.
I picked up a photo from three years ago—me standing outside the Morgan estate in the pouring rain, waiting for Bennett's parents to acknowledge my existence. Three days I'd stood there, drenched and humiliated, while Bennett attended a business dinner inside.
The memory burned like acid. I'd actually believed I wasn't good enough. I'd actually thought I needed to prove my worth to people who saw me as nothing but a convenient asset.
My phone rang, its screen illuminating the dark room. Kayleigh Warren's name flashed across it.
"Gracie?" Her voice was warm with concern. "I just heard. Are you okay?"
I stared at the ceiling, unable to form words around the knot in my throat.
"I'm coming over," she continued when I didn't respond. "Wine is required for this level of catastrophe. Don't move."
Twenty minutes later, my doorbell rang. Kayleigh burst in like a force of nature, arms loaded with wine bottles and takeout bags.
"I've been watching you suffer under Bennett's exploitation for years," she announced, setting everything on my kitchen counter. "And I've been waiting for this call."
"You have?" I managed, still sitting on the floor surrounded by my past.
Kayleigh knelt beside me, her eyes fierce with determination. "I have something to offer you. Not charity—a partnership."
She pulled a folder from her bag and opened it to reveal preliminary contracts and facility plans. "Co-leadership of an expanded research division. Complete autonomy. Ethical workplace policies. Equal profit sharing."
I shook my head slowly. "I don't know if I can trust my own judgment anymore. If I was so wrong about Bennett..."
"His betrayal doesn't diminish your brilliant scientific mind," Kayleigh said firmly. "It doesn't touch your exceptional leadership skills or your fundamental worth as a person."
She squeezed my hand. "This is a serious offer, Gracie. Not because you need saving, but because together we could build something extraordinary."
I looked at the contracts, then back at my best friend's face. For the first time in years, I felt something unfamiliar stirring in my chest.
Hope.
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