The executive floor of the building was designed to intimidate.
Glass walls. Marble floors. A view so high above the city that people down below looked like moving dots. This was where decisions were made that changed lives—usually without the decision-makers ever seeing the faces affected by them.

That afternoon, a long conference table sat crowded with men in tailored suits. Coffee cups sat untouched. Laptops glowed. Numbers flickered across a massive screen.
And near the door stood a woman holding a mop.
Her name was Rosa.
She had learned how to make herself small.
Years of cleaning offices like this had taught her the rules: don’t speak unless spoken to, don’t make eye contact, don’t exist more than necessary. She moved quietly, carefully, like someone afraid of breaking something far more fragile than glass.
Beside her stood her son.
Barefoot.
His shoes had worn out weeks ago, and Rosa had been waiting for her next paycheck to replace them. She hadn’t wanted to bring him today—but the babysitter had canceled, and missing work wasn’t an option. Rent never waited. Hunger never waited.
So her son stood there, toes touching marble that probably cost more than everything they owned.
The billionaire at the head of the table noticed him first.
He leaned back in his chair, smirk forming slowly, like a man bored enough to entertain himself with whatever was closest.
“Well,” he said loudly, drawing attention. “Looks like we’ve got a guest.”
Laughter rippled around the table.
Rosa’s stomach tightened. She lowered her head.
“I’m sorry, sir,” she said quietly. “I can leave early if—”
“Sit tight,” the billionaire interrupted, waving a dismissive hand. “We’re almost done. Besides…” He glanced at the boy again. “This could be fun.”
Fun.
He stood and walked toward a steel safe built into the wall. It was massive. Industrial. The kind designed to survive fires, floods, maybe even wars.
“You see this?” he said, patting it. “Worth more than most homes. Triple-locked. Custom-made.”
The men watched, amused.
Then he turned back to the boy.
“Tell you what,” the billionaire said, clapping his hands. “I’ll give you one hundred million dollars if you can open it.”
The room burst into laughter.
Not nervous laughter. Not uncomfortable laughter.
The kind that comes when cruelty feels consequence-free.
