She Accepted My Promotion Under My Name — Then HR Opened The Badge Logs-thuyhien

The ballroom stayed perfectly still after the CEO said my name.

Not Marissa’s.

Mine.

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“Claire Donovan,” he repeated, slower this time, his fingers tightening around the edge of the podium. “Could you please come forward with your identification?”

My sister stood three steps from the stage with the glass award plaque already pressed against her stomach. The engraved plate caught the projector light, throwing a thin white line across her blazer sleeve.

My blazer sleeve.

The one with the tiny tear near the cuff.

For fourteen months, she had worn my work. My calendar. My team jokes. My lunch table. My clients. My name.

Now the room waited for the body attached to that name to move.

I picked up my folder and walked forward.

The carpet was thick enough to swallow footsteps, but I could still hear the tremor in Marissa’s breathing when I passed her. Her perfume was the same one she had borrowed from my bathroom the Christmas before everything started. Vanilla, amber, too sweet when the air was already packed with burnt coffee and nervous sweat.

She reached for my wrist.

I looked down at her hand.

She let go.

The CEO, Daniel Price, did not smile when I reached the podium. His face had gone the color of printer paper. Beside him, the general counsel held his phone with both hands, reading the message I had sent from my seat.

Three attachments.

One badge report.

One payroll alteration record.

One notarized investigator summary.

The room did not know what any of it meant yet, but corporate rooms have a smell when danger enters. Coffee cools. Perfume sharpens. People stop chewing.

“Claire,” Daniel said, no longer using his stage voice. “May I see your ID?”

I opened my wallet and placed my driver’s license on the podium.

Then I placed my company badge beside it.

The badge was old. The corner was scratched from three years of being clipped to my laptop bag. My photo showed me with shorter hair and a tired smile from the week after the Denver rollout.

Daniel looked at it.

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