He Asked For His Company Phone Back—Then The Banker Turned The Screen Toward Him-yumihong

Mark’s hand stayed suspended over the glass table, two inches from the company phone.

For the first time all night, the boardroom had no moving parts. The projector still hummed. Rain still dragged itself down the dark windows. The little brass clock kept ticking toward 8:00 p.m., but every person in that room watched my brother’s fingers curl slowly away from the device he had used to hollow out our company.

Ellen did not repeat herself.

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She only slid a receipt form across the table with the same calm motion she used when passing settlement paperwork.

“Your company phone, Mr. Hale.”

Mark looked at the banker first, as if Richard Boyd might step in and remind everyone that brothers fought, paperwork got messy, and nobody needed to make a scene. Richard adjusted his gold cufflink and stared at the wall screen instead.

The screen showed the 2:13 a.m. keycard log.

Below it sat a frozen image from the hallway camera: Mark in a baseball cap, shoulders hunched, holding the brass spare key I had given him after Mom’s funeral. He had told me then, “You shouldn’t carry everything alone.”

I had believed him.

Grace placed the evidence-sleeved key beside the phone form. The plastic made a tiny scrape against the glass.

Mark’s mouth twitched.

“Daniel,” he said quietly, “this is getting theatrical.”

I uncapped the pen and signed the receipt witness line.

His jaw shifted.

“You’re making a mistake.”

Ellen opened the gray folder another inch. Inside were printed copies of wire transfers, vendor records, and a signed letter from Northbridge Bank’s fraud division. The paper edges were perfectly squared. That bothered Mark more than a mess would have. Mark liked chaos when he controlled it. He hated order that did not belong to him.

Grace stepped closer to the screen.

“At 2:16 a.m., the administrator account downloaded payroll backups,” she said. “At 2:19, the same device accessed the emergency reserve ledger. At 2:23, a new vendor profile was created under Marlowe Development Group.”

Mark laughed once through his nose.

Grace tapped the tablet.

The screen changed.

Marlowe Development Group’s registration appeared under his wife’s maiden name.

The banker’s face folded inward. Not shock. Calculation.

Mark reached for his water glass, missed it, and touched the table instead. His expensive watch clicked against the glass. The watch I had bought him. The watch he had worn when he told employees we were all family.

“You had Grace spying on me?” he asked.

Grace’s eyes did not move.

“No,” she said. “You gave me administrator permissions in March because you didn’t want to learn the new system.”

The shrimp platter sat untouched near the center of the table. The ice beneath it had started to melt, leaving a shallow silver puddle under the lemon wedges. The room smelled colder now, metal and coffee and wet wool from Mark’s overcoat hanging behind him.

Ellen turned one page.

“We are also requesting your laptop, access card, office keys, and any personal devices used to conduct company business.”

Mark’s polite mask cracked at the left corner.

“This is my brother’s company.”

I slid page nine back toward him.

“No,” I said. “It was our company until you used my trust as collateral.”

No one filled the silence after that.

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