The firm reception was modest but genuine. Hardman & Associates gathered in the conference room, wine and beer from the corner deli, pizza from that place on 6th Avenue. Twenty lawyers celebrating a settlent that had earned the firm nearly four hundred thousand in fees and established the firm as legitimate opposition to major players.
Associates congratulated —handshakes, back slaps, the particular camaraderie of people who'd worked brutal hours together. Jennifer Park approached with wine in hand, smile not quite reaching her eyes.
"Impressive work, Scott. Four weeks against Harvey and Jessica, ca out with favorable settlent." She sipped her wine. "You've beco Hardman's favorite."
The words were complintary. The tone suggested otherwise.
"Team effort," I said.
"Was it? Because from where I'm sitting, you handled everything—strategy, negotiations, client relationship. Hardman barely ntioned anyone else in his speech."
I didn't have a good response to that. She was right. The Carlson case had been mine from start to finish. That made valuable. It also made a target for associates who wanted that sa recognition.
"You did good work on the rchant case," I offered. "Heard you got favorable verdict."
"Three-week trial, unanimous jury. But nobody's throwing a reception." She smiled without warmth. "Congratulations on your success. Try not to get too comfortable as the golden boy. Favorites fall out of favor quickly around here."
She walked away before I could respond. I found a corner and nursed a beer, watching the celebration. Associates networking, partners schmoozing, everyone performing the social calculus of law firm politics.
My phone buzzed. Text from Donna: Heard you settled. Congratulations. Harvey actually used the word 'professional' about you.
That's almost a complint.
From Harvey? That IS a complint.
How's he handling it?
Exhausted but relieved it's over. Jessica's pleased with the outco. You did well.
I pocketed the phone and looked around the room. This was victory—firm success, client satisfaction, professional recognition. So why did it feel hollow?
"Scott." Hardman appeared at my elbow, voice low. "My office. Five minutes."
He walked away before I could respond. I finished my beer, set down the cup, headed to his office. The celebration continued without .
Hardman was at his desk, reading the settlent agreent for probably the tenth ti. He didn't look up when I entered.
"We could have destroyed them completely," he said finally. "Forced total acquisition. Made Jessica watch while her oldest client got dismantled. Made Harvey defend a losing position in court."
"We got our client thirty percent equity and board control," I said. "That's everything they wanted."
"I wanted more."
"You wanted Harvey humiliated. That's different from client objectives."
Hardman set down the agreent, looked at directly. "I hired you for a reason, Scott. Because you were angry at Jessica for firing you. Because you had sothing to prove. Because I thought you understood that sotis winning isn't enough—you need to make them feel it."
"I understand that's what you want. But that's not what I do. I serve clients, not vendettas."
"Everything here is about vendettas. Against Jessica, against Harvey, against firms that dismissed us. If you can't accept that, you're in the wrong place."
The office felt smaller. Hardman's expression was cold, calculating. This was the boss who'd dangled partnership in front of as motivation to destroy his enemies. Now he was realizing I had boundaries he didn't appreciate.
"The client is satisfied," I said evenly. "We earned substantial fees. We proved Hardman & Associates can compete at the highest level. That's success by any objective asure."
"Success is making them regret forcing out. Success is proving they need more than I need them. Success is—" He stopped, jaw tight. "You settled because you're still seeking their approval. Jessica's and Harvey's. You want them to think you're reasonable, professional, worthy of their respect."
"I settled because it was the right strategic decision."
"There's no strategic decision that doesn't also serve psychological needs, Scott. You're lying to yourself if you think otherwise."
We stared at each other. The celebration noise filtered through the door—laughter, conversations, the sound of people who didn't understand the tension in this room.
"Is this affecting my partnership discussions?" I asked.
Hardman leaned back. "Your partnership discussions were contingent on winning. You won. We'll begin those discussions next month." He paused. "But understand sothing—partnership here ans embracing what we're building. A firm that doesn't apologize for wanting to hurt the people who dismissed us. If you can't commit to that fully, you'll always be just an employee."
"Noted."
I left before he could say more. Walked past the celebration, grabbed my coat, headed for the exit. Jennifer Park watched leave, expression unreadable.
Outside, the September evening was cool, clear. I walked toward the subway, hands in pockets, processing the conversation.
Hardman was exactly who I'd known he was from day one—bitter, vengeful, using the firm as a weapon against Jessica and Harvey. The Carlson settlent proved I wouldn't be his unquestioning weapon. That made valuable but dangerous.
Partnership was still possible. But it would co with strings—expectations that I'd prioritize Hardman's revenge over client interests, that I'd be willing to sacrifice professional ethics for personal vendettas.
My phone buzzed. Multiple emails from other firms, all with subject lines like "Interested in speaking with you" and "Potential opportunity to discuss." Word traveled fast in legal circles. Scott Roden took on Harvey Specter and Jessica Pearson simultaneously and achieved favorable settlent.
That reputation was portable. I didn't need Hardman's firm to succeed anymore.
[ **Blackmail Archive: Strategic Assessnt** ]
Daniel Hardman: Relationship deteriorating Partnership value: Declining (conditional on unethical behavior) Alternative options: Multiple firms expressing interest Recomndation: Begin exploring exit strategy within 6-12 months
I dismissed the notification and kept walking. Not ready to leave yet—still had cases to finish, still had clients who depended on . But the seed was planted. Hardman & Associates had served its purpose. I'd proven myself, built reputation, established portable client relationships.
The question was timing. Leave too soon and I looked disloyal. Stay too long and I beca complicit in Hardman's vendetta-driven practice.
I called Donna. She answered on the second ring.
"How was the celebration?"
"Hollow. Hardman's unhappy I settled instead of destroying Harvey and Jessica completely."
"So he's exactly who you thought he was when you joined."
"Yes. The question is how long before that becos a real problem."
Donna was quiet for a mont. "You know you don't have to stay there. You've built enough reputation to go anywhere. Plenty of firms would hire you tomorrow."
"I know. But I have clients here. Cases pending. Walking away now would hurt them."
"So you'll stay until it doesn't hurt them. That's very you."
"Is that a complint?"
"It's an observation. You calculate everything except your own exit strategies. You'll stay at Hardman's firm managing his impossible personality until it implodes, sa way I stayed with Harvey for twelve years."
She wasn't wrong. I'd built a career on strategic thinking, but my personal decisions were reactive rather than proactive. I adapted to circumstances instead of creating them.
"What changed for you?" I asked. "What made you finally draw lines with Harvey?"
"You did. You showed what it looked like to choose your own path instead of managing soone else's. Maybe I'm returning the favor—showing you what it looks like to recognize when sothing's run its course."
We talked for another twenty minutes about nothing important. Her sister's wedding drama, my search for a better apartnt, whether the Knicks would ever be good again. Normal conversation between two people who'd chosen each other despite every complication.
After we hung up, I kept walking. The subway could wait. The city was pleasant in September—sumr heat fading, fall not quite arrived, that brief perfect window.
I'd won the Carlson case. Proven myself against the best. Built reputation that would last beyond any single firm. The victory was real, even if it didn't feel as satisfying as expected.
Sotis winning wasn't about destroying your opponent. Sotis it was about achieving objectives efficiently, serving clients professionally, maintaining principles under pressure.
Hardman wanted blood. I'd delivered results. That disconnect would create problems eventually.
But tonight, I'd just accept the win and deal with the consequences tomorrow.
The war was over. New battles would co.
They always did.
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