A Fired Compliance Officer’s Badge Exposed OmniCore’s Secret-eirian

“Hand Over Your Badge, You’re Done,” The Security Chief Said. I Handed It To Him. “Turn It Over.” He Did. On The Back Was A Silver Sticker: ‘DOJ Asset – Do Not Detain.’ He Dropped The Badge As If It Burned Him.

The little red light on the card reader was the first honest thing OmniCore Solutions had shown me that morning.

It blinked once, bright and red, and refused me the way guilty people refuse eye contact.

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I stood in the lobby with my badge in one hand and my purse in the other, listening to the old air conditioner rattle above the glass doors.

That metal cough had been there for three years.

Walter Brandt, director of operations, always said there was no room in the budget to fix it.

He had room for executive retreats in Cabo.

He had room for two new espresso machines on the tenth floor.

He had room for a strategic wellness consultant who charged more per hour than my divorce lawyer.

But he never had room for the things that kept the building from sounding like it was trying to die.

The lobby smelled like burnt coffee, lemon disinfectant, warm printer plastic, and old carpet glue.

I could see myself in the glass.

Forty-five years old.

Gray eyes.

Hair pinned back.

Navy cardigan.

Sensible shoes.

A woman designed by life to be underestimated.

That had been useful once.

For twelve years, I had worked in compliance at OmniCore.

I did not build the products.

I did not sell the contracts.

I did not get invited to the champagne lunches when Walter closed another public-sector vendor agreement and called it growth.

I checked the forms after the celebrations ended.

I made sure the certifications matched the invoices.

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