The Forgotten Device ID That Turned a Fake Demotion Into a Corporate Crime Scene-thuyhien

His glass of water stayed suspended between his chest and his mouth, the rim trembling just enough to send one clear drop down the side.

General Counsel Vivian Cole did not hurry.

She was sixty-one, small, gray-haired, and famous in the company for speaking so softly that people leaned forward before she cut them apart. Her black heels made two dry clicks on the conference room floor. In her left hand was a blue legal folder. In her right hand was the access log Daniel had not known existed.

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“Everyone keep your devices on the table,” she said.

Elaine’s laptop made a small plastic sound as she pushed it away from herself.

Daniel lowered his glass.

“Vivian, this is an HR matter.”

“No,” Vivian said. “It became a Legal matter at 11:56 p.m. Friday.”

The air conditioner blew colder across my neck. Burned coffee sat in the corner pot, thick and bitter. Behind the glass wall, my three coworkers stopped pretending not to watch. One of them, Andre from finance, had his hand over his mouth.

Daniel adjusted his cuff.

“I don’t know what Maya told you, but she has been under strain.”

Vivian placed the blue folder on the table and opened it with one finger.

“She didn’t tell me anything.”

That was the first crack.

Not in his face. Daniel’s face stayed polite.

The crack showed in his hand.

His thumb rubbed hard over the side of his wedding ring, once, twice, until the skin beneath it went red.

Vivian looked at me.

“Maya, place the USB drive beside the folder, please.”

I did.

The black plastic touched the table with a tiny click. The red string around it looked almost childish against all that glass and chrome, like a shoelace tied to a bomb.

Elaine swallowed.

“What exactly is on it?”

“The mirror capture,” Vivian said. “And the approval chain.”

Daniel gave a short laugh, the kind meant to tell a room it had misunderstood something beneath him.

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