Chapter 13: The Boardroom Backlash
The aggressive cancellation of the viral PR campaign cost Evan significantly more than just public embarrassment.
Within exactly three hours, the Pierce Holdings Board of Directors called a mandatory, emergency executive meeting. They commandeered the top-floor boardroom, the massive glass windows overlooking the gray, rainy Chicago skyline.
Evan sat calmly at the head of the long marble table. Mara was officially present in the room as a paid consultant for the reform team, seated rigidly beside Leah Morgan with a thick folder of practical recommendations.
A major, highly aggressive investor named Richard paced the length of the room.
“Public sympathy is a highly valuable, monetizable asset, Evan!” Richard yelled, slamming his hand on the marble. “And this extensive reform you are proposing is outrageously expensive!”
“The reforms are necessary, Richard,” Evan replied smoothly, not breaking eye contact. “The current culture is a massive legal and operational liability.”
“The new caregiver benefits review? The mandatory management retraining? The complaint escalation system?” Richard listed off, his face turning red. “These corrections will add millions in operating costs with absolutely no guaranteed financial return!”
“We bought Bright Line’s revenue stream, yes,” Evan countered, leaning slightly forward. “But we also inherited its people. And human beings are not just operational clutter to be swept under the rug.”
“They are employees, Evan, not your personal charity case!” Richard shot back, pointing an accusing finger at Mara. “You are completely overreacting to a single PR incident because you have an emotional blind spot!”
Mara gripped her pen so tightly her knuckles turned white. She opened her mouth to defend herself, but Evan held up a single hand to stop her.
“If doing the morally right thing only survives in this company when it is cheap, Richard, then it was never a corporate value to begin with,” Evan stated, his voice turning to ice. “It was just cheap window decoration.”
“The cost of this humane workplace you suddenly want is a direct threat to our quarterly dividends!” Richard argued violently.
“It is not a threat to the business,” Evan corrected him, standing up to his full height. “It is the exact price of no longer lying to the public about what kind of company we actually are.”
The room did not cheer for him. Boardrooms filled with wealthy investors rarely ever did.
But a heavy, undeniable shift settled into the tense air. Mara watched Evan carefully from the side table. This specific time, he was not actively defending her.
He was not defending the four-dollar coffee, and he wasn’t defending the viral story. He was fiercely defending a core principle, even when it made the financial math significantly uglier for his own pockets.
Richard stopped pacing. He stared at Evan with a look of cold, calculating malice.
“You think you hold all the cards here, Evan?” Richard sneered, walking slowly toward the head of the table. “You think you can just unilaterally rewrite our entire operational budget to play the hero?”
“I am the Chief Executive Officer,” Evan stated flatly. “I don’t play the hero. I write the checks.”
“Not if the board decides your emotional compromises make you entirely unfit to lead,” Richard threatened in a low whisper, leaning over the table. “If you try to pass these bloated reforms today, I will trigger an immediate vote of no confidence, and I will personally…”
👉 [Tap here for Next Part] 👈