Don almost lost it.
"What's the deal?" Clutching the fresh resignation letter that had been handed to him, he bee-lined to Sophia's desk, "Why the sudden decision to bail? Are you not happy here or what?"
"No." Facing an almost fuming Don, Sophia felt somewhat apologetic, "It's nothing personal. I've just graduated, and my visa's about to run out. I can’t stick around much longer, so quitting was on the cards eventually."
"Well, then head back home," Don didn't get it, "Come back with me and help expand the new business. Sounds like a sweet gig, right?"
"I wanna take a break first."
"For how long?"
"Maybe a year or so."Don frowned on the spot. "That long?"Brandon had just green-lit the plan, and setting up the new company would be a breeze, a fortnight tops. He had a ready team on his side and at the Starlight Group, and there was no need for a new office lease or a makeover.
The Starlight Group had an entire office building with spare office space that could be whipped into shape in no time.
He couldn’t possibly wait on Sophia for a year and a half—the traditional Resort project was time-sensitive and needed to break ground within the year.
"Here's an idea," Don thought aloud, "You work out the design for the traditional Resort project first."
Before he could finish, Sophia looked ready to argue, so he added some weight to his tone. "Sophia, it's your job. You took on this project, and you can’t just drop the ball now."
Sophia hesitated, then nodded. "I do have a one-month notice period per my contract. I'll work on the design during this time. If we go ahead with it, I'll keep up with the project until completion. But like before, unless it's absolutely necessary, I won't be on site, and I won't be joining the new company. Once the design is out, you'll need to approve my resignation. Deal?"
Deal?
Don wanted to say no, but upon seeing the look in Sophia's eyes, he swallowed his displeasure.
"Let's talk about it when it's time." Don didn't make any promises, "Just get the design out first."
Sophia wasn't easily fooled. "You haven't said if you agree."
"I agree." The words practically popped through his teeth.
Once done, Don threw the resignation letter back at her. "Keep this thing for now. It's an eyesore."
With that, he spun around and stormed back to his office.
Sitting in his chair, he still felt peeved.
He thought he had made an offer she couldn't refuse. What did it take to sway Sophia?
Was it the job title that wasn't alluring enough?
Thinking this, Don immediately called Brandon. "Head of design for the new company, got anyone in mind?"
Brandon, who had just deplaned and was heading out with his luggage, replied, "Got a few candidates. Feel free to suggest someone too. It doesn't have to be from the Starlight Group."
"I have a good candidate in mind; I want to bring her in," said Don, "You keep your people."
"What's her background? How's her project experience?"
Don felt a bit sheepish. "The girl I mentioned the other day, the one handling the traditional Resort design, she's really talented."
"She won't cut it," Brandon dismissed without a thought, "Too green, too risky."
Don was speechless.
He could somewhat understand Brandon's concerns, and he knew how Brandon operated.
Without having interacted with Sophia or seen her work, Brandon prioritized past project experience, which was understandable.
"How about this—wait until the traditional Resort design is out, then you decide based on that?" Don offered a compromise.
"Mm-hmm."
Brandon hummed in response, not outright rejecting Don's suggestion but not taking it too seriously either.
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