Hand over the badge, sweetheart. Real engineers don’t cry on the factory floor

What Marcus didn’t know was that I’d been quietly documenting his sabotage for eleven weeks. Every time I’d flagged a defect, he’d overridden it after I clocked out. Every time I’d requested a recalibration, he’d signed off as ‘completed’ without touching the machine. I had timestamps. I had badge swipes. I had the security camera footage I’d legally requested through my union rep, who happened to be my college roommate’s husband. At 6 a.m., when the morning shift rolled in, so did three people Marcus wasn’t expecting: the VP of Operations, a federal NHTSA compliance officer, and Brightline’s Chief Legal Counsel. I’d emailed the dossier at 3 a.m. from the locker room floor, hard hat still covered in metal shavings. Marcus strolled in whistling, holding a box of donuts for his buddies, ready for another day of running ‘his’ floor. The VP asked him one question: ‘Can you explain why 47 override signatures on critical safety flags all match your badge ID, Mr. Hollins?’ Marcus’s face went the color of drywall. He stammered something about ‘Elena being emotional’ and ‘misunderstanding the process.’ That’s when the compliance officer slid my report across the table, the one with his forged signatures highlighted in yellow. He was escorted out by security in front of the same night-shift crew who’d filmed me the evening before. One of them, a kid named Trevor, quietly handed me his phone and deleted the video while looking at the floor. Two weeks later, I was named Interim Plant Director. My first official act? I walked down to Line 4, fished my old hard hat out of the scrap bin, cleaned it off, and hung it in a glass case in the lobby with a small brass plaque underneath. It reads: ‘Integrity doesn’t shout. It documents.’ Marcus now works at a tire shop in Toledo. I hear he doesn’t laugh as loud anymore.

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