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.”}
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