They Sent Her for Ice Before the Deal, Then the Room Went Silent-Quieen - Chainityai

They Sent Her for Ice Before the Deal, Then the Room Went Silent-Quieen

I was standing in the doorway of my father’s conference room with a tray of sandwiches when I realized he was not looking at me.

He was looking through me.

The plastic wrap crackled under my thumb.

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The hallway smelled like stale coffee, printer toner, and mustard from the deli tray Rita had ordered because nobody upstairs remembered lunch until somebody’s blood sugar made them unpleasant.

Sterling Manufacturing had belonged to my family for thirty years.

It sat on the edge of Portland in a low industrial stretch where delivery trucks backed into docks before sunrise and men in steel-toed boots argued about pallet counts before most executives had checked their phones.

I had grown up in that building.

When I was little, I drew flowers on the backs of old invoice sheets while my father took supplier calls.

When I was twelve, I knew which vending machine stole quarters.

When I was nineteen, I came home from community college on weekends to help during inventory because Dad said family pitched in when things got tight.

By thirty-two, I knew every dock door, every scanner glitch, every supplier who lied about shipment windows, and every quiet place where Sterling was losing money by the hour.

My father knew I worked there.

He did not know me as someone who understood it.

That difference had built a wall in our family so slowly nobody admitted it was there.

Inside the conference room, Dad sat at the head of the table with my mother beside him.

She had spreadsheets lined up in front of her like she was guarding national secrets.

My brother Devon had his laptop open, his tie loosened, his voice low and important.

My sister Veronica, the CFO, was marking a printout with a red pen, pressing hard enough to leave grooves in the paper.

I raised the tray a little.

“I thought you might want lunch,” I said. “It sounded like it was going to be a long afternoon.”

Devon looked up first.

His smile was small and polished, the kind of smile people give when they have already decided you are embarrassing them.

“Maya, please,” he said. “We’re trying to save Dad’s company. This is serious financial strategy, not break-room talk.”

My mother did not even lift her eyes.

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