Chapter 2: The Woman Who Remembered
I found missing payroll before payday.
I caught supplier fraud.
I negotiated shipping contracts after storms destroyed half our routes.
I stayed late during audits, answered emails from hospital rooms, and once drove through snow to deliver compliance documents because a lender threatened to freeze our credit line.
But Martin had married the CEO’s daughter six months earlier and arrived with consultant buzzwords, shiny shoes, and a secret agenda.
He was not just “refreshing talent.”
He was intentionally bleeding our cash reserves so he could force a hostile sale to our most ruthless competitor, a move that would leave four thousand workers jobless by Christmas.
He knew how to make presentation slides.
And he knew how to smile while removing people who remembered too much.
“You’re taking this well,” he said.
I knelt down, pulled my silver pen out of the trash, wiped it clean, and lifted my eyes. Continue Reading ⬇️