Part 2
The guards advanced on Annie, their heavy boots thudding against the floor. Annie backed up against the reinforced glass window, her knuckles white around her phone. Something about Evelyn’s frantic urgency rubbed me the wrong way. Why was my senior vice president at the office at two in the morning, accompanied by night guards who usually patrolled the lower lobby?
“Wait!” I yelled, stepping between the guards and Annie. “Evelyn, how did you even know someone was in my private office? The silent alarm only alerts my personal security line.”
Evelyn’s eyes flickered, a micro-expression of panic crossing her polished face before she recovered her icy composure. “The IT department flagged the massive external transfer from the charity fund, William. I rushed up here to secure the premises. This girl is clearly a corporate spy masquerading as a cleaner. Guards, grab her!”
One guard lunged forward, grabbing Annie’s shoulder. Annie shrieked, swinging her arm wildly. Her phone slipped, skittering across the floor. Evelyn immediately dove for it, her manicured fingers scratching at the hardwood. But I was faster. I slid across the floor, my hand slamming over the phone just a millisecond before hers.
“William, give that to me! It’s evidence for the FBI!” Evelyn hissed, her voice losing its professional sheen, replaced by a raw, desperate edge. She grabbed my collar, trying to yank me up, her fingernails digging into my skin.
I pushed her off, scrambling to my feet. I looked down at the phone’s screen, which was still unlocked, displaying the photo Annie had taken. I zoomed in on the computer monitor captured in her picture. My eyes widened. The digital signature routing code on the bottom left wasn’t mine. It belonged to an administrative override key—a key that only two people in the entire conglomerate possessed. Myself, and Evelyn.
My blood turned to ice. “The transfer signature… it’s routed through the corporate vice-president override. Evelyn, I haven’t touched that override key in three years.”
The office fell deathly quiet. The guards hesitated, looking between me and Evelyn.
Evelyn’s face contorted into something ugly and malicious. The sophisticated executive vanished. “You think anyone will believe you, William? The public will see your name on a multi-million-dollar theft from sick children. You’re done. Hand over the phone, or things get very ugly, very fast.”
Before I could react, Evelyn nodded to the primary guard, a massive man named Miller. He didn’t hesitate. He slammed his fist into my jaw. The impact sent me crashing into my own mahogany desk, shattering a glass paperweight. Pain exploded in my head, and metallic-tasting blood filled my mouth.
“Get the phone!” Evelyn screamed.
Miller lunged at me, pinning me against the desk, his massive hands wrapping around my throat, choking the life out of me. I fought for air, my vision blurring, but I kept my right hand pinned underneath my body, shielding Annie’s phone.
Through the haze of suffocating panic, I saw a flash of blue janitorial fabric. Annie didn’t run away. Instead, she grabbed a heavy brass floor lamp and swung it with all her might. The lamp struck Miller squarely across the back of his head. He groaned, his grip loosening as he collapsed sideways onto the floor.
I gasped for air, coughing violently, pulling myself up. The second guard drew his taser, but he looked terrified, realizing this was no longer a simple security extraction—it was a full-blown criminal conspiracy.
“Stay back!” I croaked, holding up the phone, my left hand wiping blood from my lip. “Evelyn, you didn’t just steal from the company. You stole from children who need chemotherapy. You’re going to prison for the rest of your life.”
Evelyn reached into her designer trench coat, her hand wrapping around something small, metallic, and deadly. She didn’t look like a corporate executive anymore; she looked like a cornered animal ready to kill.
“I’m not going to prison, William,” she whispered, pulling out a compact black pistol. “You and this trash girl are leaving this office in body bags.”
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Part 3
The barrel of the pistol pointed directly at my chest, steady and unblinking. The second guard immediately backed away, raising his hands in retreat. He wanted no part in a double homicide. Annie stood beside me, her breath hitching, but she didn’t run. She stood her ground, her fingers still gripped around the brass lamp.
“You’re insane, Evelyn,” I said, trying to keep my voice calm, though my heart was hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. “You can’t shoot both of us and think you’ll walk away. This building is covered in cameras. The police will know.”
“The cameras on this floor have been on a looped feed for the past twenty minutes,” Evelyn replied, her voice chillingly detached. “As far as the world is concerned, a desperate thief broke into your office, stole the charity funds, and when you caught her, a violent struggle ensued. You killed each other. I just arrived too late to save my beloved boss.”
It was a horrifyingly perfect plan. She had orchestrated everything, from the automatic activation of my computer to the timed loop on the security footage. She had expected to frame me, but finding Annie here gave her the perfect scapegoat to wrap it up in a bloody bow.
“Why?” I asked, stretching for time, subtly moving my foot to find balance. “The Children’s Hope Foundation? You knew that money was meant for pediatric surgeries. Families depend on those grants to keep their kids alive!”
“Don’t be so self-righteous, William!” she snapped, her eyes flashing with a manic intensity. “You sit on your billionaire throne playing the saint, while I do all the actual work to keep this conglomerate running! I deserved that money. I’ve funneled it into an offshore account in the Caymans, and by tomorrow morning, I’ll be on a private flight to a country with no extradition. Now, hand over the phone.”
She took a step closer, cocking the hammer of the gun. The metallic click echoed like a death knell in the silent office.
I knew I had only one shot. I looked at Annie, giving her a microscopic nod. She caught it.
With a sudden surge of adrenaline, I kicked the shattered glass paperweight on the floor directly at Evelyn’s face. She flinched, instinctively blinking and shifting her aim. That split second was all I needed. I lunged forward, tackling her waist-first. We crashed hard into the wall, her gun discharging with a deafening bang. The bullet shattered a structural pillar above our heads, raining plaster dust down on us.
Evelyn screamed, clawing at my eyes, her nails tearing skin. She was fighting with the feral strength of someone facing a lifetime behind bars. We grappled on the floor, rolling over the debris. She managed to turn the gun back toward my torso. I grabbed her wrist, pushing it away with every ounce of strength I had left, my muscles screaming in agony.
“Annie! The phone! Call the police!” I roared, wrestling to keep the weapon pointed at the ceiling.
Instead of running for the door, Annie acted with incredible bravery. She didn’t just call the police; she used her phone to start a live-stream broadcast directly to the company’s internal crisis network and the public local news tip-line, which she had open from her research on charity events.
“We are live right now from William Hartwell’s office!” Annie shouted into her phone, holding it high to capture the struggle. “Evelyn Vance, the Chief Operating Officer, is trying to murder us after stealing forty-five million dollars from the Children’s Hope Foundation! Look at her! The police have been notified, but thousands of people are watching you right now, Evelyn!”
Hearing the word ‘live-stream,’ Evelyn froze for a fraction of a second, her eyes darting to Annie’s phone screen, which was rapidly filling with viewer comments and alerts. That momentary distraction cost her everything. I twisted her wrist sharply. She cried out in pain, and the pistol slipped from her fingers, clattering away into the darkness under the couch.
I immediately pinned her arms behind her back, using my own tie to bind her wrists securely. She collapsed onto the floor, sobbing hysterically, her grand scheme dissolving into utter ruin.
Within ten minutes, the real police—alerted by the live stream and Annie’s direct 911 call—burst into the room, accompanied by federal agents who had been monitoring the suspicious offshore transfer. Evelyn and her accomplice guards were led away in handcuffs, their faces covered to hide from the flashing lights of the arriving media crews.
The aftermath was a whirlwind. The forty-five million dollars was frozen and successfully restored to the Children’s Hope Foundation before a single dollar could be permanently lost. The media hailed Annie as a national hero, the brave young woman who risked her life to protect the vulnerable.
A month later, after the dust had settled and the corporate transition was complete, I drove out to a modest neighborhood in Brooklyn. I walked up the steps of a small, neat apartment and knocked on the door. Marla, fully recovered from her fever, opened it, her eyes wide with surprise. Behind her stood Annie, smiling warmly.
I didn’t come as a billionaire boss; I came as a grateful man. I presented Annie with a full academic scholarship to any university of her choice, along with a permanent trust fund to ensure her family would never face financial hardship again. More importantly, I asked her to join the board of directors for the Children’s Hope Foundation as our youth chairperson.
Today, if you walk into my executive office on the 40th floor, you won’t see expensive artwork or flashy trophies on my desk. Instead, right next to my computer, sits a framed photograph. It’s a slightly blurry picture of a monitor screen, taken on a stormy night by a brave young girl. It serves as my daily reminder: truth, honor, and justice do not belong to those with the highest titles or the largest bank accounts. They are carried in the hearts of ordinary people who find the extraordinary courage to do what is right.
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