I clicked the pen open, then closed. “Damien,” I said softly, “before I sign — you should see something.” I set the briefcase on his pristine desk and turned the latches. He rolled his eyes, but curiosity won. Inside were three folders, neatly labeled. Folder one: the original Harborline load-stress calculations, signed and dated by me eighteen months ago. Folder two: Damien’s revised version, where he’d quietly reduced the rebar specifications to shave four million dollars off the budget — and pocket the difference as a “performance bonus.” Folder three: emails between Damien and the concrete supplier, arranging the kickback. Damien’s face went the color of wet cement. “Where did you get those?” he whispered. “From the shared server you forgot I built,” I said. “Every file you’ve ever deleted lives in a backup you don’t have access to.” I closed the briefcase. “Tomorrow morning, at the ribbon-cutting, the mayor is going to cut that ribbon. And then the structural inspector from the city — a woman named Priya Shah, who happens to be my old classmate — is going to receive an anonymous package. Same folders. With photos of the actual rebar pulled from section C-12 last Tuesday.” His mouth opened. Nothing came out. “You were going to let people drive over that bridge, Damien. Families. School buses.” I slid the resignation letter back toward him. “I’m not signing this. You are. Effective tonight. And you’re going to call the city yourself before sunrise and halt the opening, or Priya gets the package anyway — plus the FBI gets a copy.” He sat down hard. The skyline behind him suddenly looked very far away. I picked up my briefcase. At the door I turned. “Six years, Damien. You called me invisible. Turns out invisible men see everything.” The next morning, the ribbon-cutting was canceled “for urgent safety review.” By noon, Damien Vance was in handcuffs on the front page. By Friday, I was named interim CEO by the board. I kept the pen.
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