Ninety Percent
My boss fired me on a Tuesday at 4:47 in the afternoon, and the room went quiet in that particular corporate way where everyone present pretends a human being is actually a scheduling problem being resolved. Derek Vaughn leaned back in the conference room chair with the practiced ease of a man who had confused posture with authority for so long he could no longer tell the difference. His jacket was unbuttoned, his tie loosened exactly half an inch, a studied informality meant to signal that firing people was simply part of the work he moved through efficiently.
Two department managers sat along the wall. The HR representative, Nina Brooks, kept her eyes fixed on a folder in front of her as though something urgent was written on the cover of it. The room smelled of burnt coffee and dry-erase marker fumes, the same combination that had soaked into the carpet years before I ever joined Harborstone Components.
My operations dashboard was still up on the wall monitor behind Derek’s head. Supplier lead times. Defect spikes.
Late shipments. Warranty exposure trending upward in a slow, patient arc. A recovery plan I had drafted after Derek’s restructuring had thrown our production schedule into a ditch it was still trying to climb out of.
“We don’t need incompetent people like you,” Derek said. “Leave.”
I looked at him for a moment. “Incompetent based on what, exactly?”
He waved a hand toward the screen without turning to look at it, the gesture of a man pointing at evidence he had not actually examined.
“Based on the fact that you always push back. Every meeting, Elena. Another warning, another concern, another reason we can’t move quickly.
This is manufacturing, not graduate school. We need people who execute.”
That was his favorite reframe. Turn caution into weakness.
Turn expertise into attitude. Turn anyone who could see trouble coming into the obstacle standing between leadership and its vision. It was a technique that worked reliably on people who mistook confidence for competence, and Derek had refined it into something close to an art form.
In the six months since the executive search firm had deposited him into the chief operating officer role, he had cut quality assurance hours, overridden engineers on material compatibility questions that deserved more than a five-minute conversation, pushed a lower-grade resin through a supplier change that no one with actual production experience would have approved, and celebrated each of these decisions as margin discipline. When defects reached customers, he blamed operators. When plant managers raised concerns, he accused them of resisting change.
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