The managing partner stood as soon as I sat down. “For those who don’t know,” he said, “this is Hazel Whitmore, founder and majority owner of Whitmore & Grant.” The room fell silent. Camille looked as though the floor had vanished beneath her. Every story she had told herself about me—every judgment, every dismissal—collapsed in a matter of seconds.
The review began. No one mentioned the party. No one needed to. Instead, the committee discussed professionalism, leadership, judgment, and character. Then one partner quietly slid a written statement across the table. It came from the Hendersons. They had witnessed exactly how Camille treated me that night. “How an attorney treats people when they have nothing to gain,” the statement read, “reveals more than any résumé ever will.”
Camille finally looked at me. Tears filled her eyes. “Hazel, I’m sorry,” she whispered. For the first time, it sounded genuine. I believed she regretted what she had done. But regret and consequences are not the same thing. The committee voted unanimously to postpone her partnership appointment for one year and require leadership mentoring before reconsideration.
After the meeting, Camille followed me to the elevator. “You could have destroyed my career,” she said quietly. I pressed the lobby button and nodded. “I could have,” I agreed. “But I wanted you to learn something more valuable.” The doors opened. “The people you look down on today may be the very people holding the door open for you tomorrow.” A year later, Camille earned her partnership honestly. This time, when she celebrated, she invited me first—and when I arrived with my casserole dish, she saved me the seat beside her