I walked out without a word. Security guard Eddie, who I’d brought homemade banana bread to every Christmas, whispered, “June, I’m so sorry,” and I just squeezed his arm. In the parking garage I sat in my old Civic and finally let one tear fall. Then I opened my laptop. Eleven months ago, our CEO Mr. Halverson had quietly pulled me aside. “Marcus’s numbers don’t add up, June. I need someone invisible to audit him. Someone he’d never suspect.” He’d given me a private directive, a separate encrypted drive, and full forensic access under a shell account. Marcus, drunk on his own charm, had been inflating client revenue, funneling phantom bonuses to two cousins on payroll, and billing a fake consulting firm registered to his fiancée. I had every transaction, every forged signature, every Slack message where he bragged about “the idiot in the cardigan who rubber-stamps anything.” I’d been waiting for Halverson’s green light. Firing me was the green light. I sent the 84-page report at 5:02 PM. By 5:19, Halverson called. By 6:00 the next morning, Marcus was escorted out of the same lobby he’d paraded me through — except this time two federal auditors walked beside him. At 9:00 AM, I returned. Same gray cardigan. Same quiet smile. Halverson met me at the elevator with a new badge: Director of Financial Integrity. Triple Marcus’s salary. My first executive decision was approving Eddie’s request for a paid week off — he’d been saving up to visit his daughter. As I walked past Marcus’s emptied desk, I dropped the old badge he’d thrown away into the same recycling bin. Some trash, it turns out, belongs exactly where you leave it.”}
Related Posts
You’re forty-two, single, and still answering phones, Claire. Of course Dad left the bakery
The lawyer, Mr. Halvorsen, adjusted his glasses and finally spoke. “Before we proceed with Mr. Whitaker’s will, Claire has asked me to introduce a second […]
Sweetheart, the catering staff eats in the kitchen. Don’t embarrass yourself
What Vivian didn’t know was that the estate she was standing on — the Ashcroft Manor she bragged about at every charity gala — sat […]
Hand over the company laptop, Grandma, before you embarrass yourself any further
I slid the laptop across the polished wood. It glided to a stop directly in front of Brandon. He laughed, popping it open like a […]
