’She suffered all of this. For .’ he sighed, feeling pained inside...
He turned away from the counter, walked quietly to the front door, and let himself out without making a sound. He didn’t want her to know he’d heard. She would be mortified. She would apologize. She would make him promise not to worry about it.
He stood in the dim hallway outside her apartnt for a long mont, staring at the peeling paint on the opposite wall, and made a decision.
His sister’s company was a subsidiary of the Wanhai Group.
Which ant it was, for all practical purposes, his company. He held forty percent of the parent corporation’s shares. He sat at the sa table as the chairman. The general manager of the Steel Street Shopping Center had introduced himself as Stan’s subordinate.
And sowhere inside that corporate structure, a mid-level manager at a branch office was working his sister to the bone, stealing her credit, denying her overti pay, and making her cry alone in her bedroom on a Sunday night.
Stan pulled out his phone. Opened his contacts. Found Grayson Davies’s number.
He didn’t call. Not yet. It was late, and what he had planned required a clear head and a precise approach. This wasn’t sothing he wanted to handle with a midnight phone call and raw emotion.
Tomorrow.
Tomorrow, he would visit his sister’s company. He would walk through those doors as the single largest shareholder of the Wanhai Group. And the man who had spent years making his sister’s life a quiet hell was going to discover, in vivid, unforgettable detail, exactly who her brother had beco.
Stan pocketed his phone, descended the narrow stairwell, and walked back to his car in the dark.
The Huracán’s engine rumbled to life. The city stretched out before him, indifferent and glittering.
He drove ho in silence, his expression unreadable, his mind already assembling the shape of what tomorrow would look like. Since his sister was refusing a direct help, he’ll help her the best way a good brother like him can... Teach that stupid manager a lesson he’ll never forget...
’Nobody makes my sister cry.’
’Nobody.’ ...
Sacha left for work at six the next morning, the way she always did, quietly, without complaint, in the gray half-light before dawn.
Stan was already awake.
He’d barely slept. The sound of her crying had followed him ho through the dark streets and into his apartnt, where it had settled into the silence of his bedroom and refused to leave. Every ti he closed his eyes, he heard it again, the muffled, shaking sobs of a woman who had spent years breaking herself in half so her little brother could eat.
He lay in bed for a while that early morning, staring at the ceiling, letting the plan in his mind crystallize.
Then he got up, showered, dressed, and made two phone calls.
The first was to a fried chicken restaurant near Sacha’s office. He ordered a full al, fried chicken, rice, a side of soup, and arranged for it to be ready for pickup by eleven.
The second was to the Wanhai Group’s executive line.
....
Sacha arrived at her desk at half past six and stopped.
The surface was buried.
Stacks of docunts, thick manila folders, loose-leaf reports, unsigned forms, were piled so high they obscured her monitor. The heap looked less like a workload and more like a barricade. A deliberate, physical wall of paper designed to crush whatever remained of her spirit.
"Why are there so many?" The question left her mouth before she could stop it.
A heavy, unhurried voice answered from across the office.
"Those are all assigned to you. They need to be completed today."
Manager Zeke was leaning against the doorfra of his private office, a heavyset man in his late forties, thick-necked, small-eyed, wearing the particular expression of soone who enjoyed watching other people struggle the way so people enjoy watching television.
Sacha’s jaw tightened.
"Why ? Why not distribute them across the team?"
"Everyone else is busy."
Sacha looked around the office.
Her colleagues’ desks were empty. Spotless. Not a single folder. Not a single loose page. Several of them were scrolling their phones. One was doing a crossword puzzle.
"This is Busy? Busy?!"
"Stop arguing." Manager Zeke pushed himself off the doorfra and turned to leave. "Everything on that desk. Finished. Today."
He disappeared into his office. The door clicked shut behind him.
Sacha sank into her chair, drew a slow, shaking breath, and pressed the heels of her hands against her eyes until the urge to cry passed.
This wasn’t new. None of it was new.
Manager Zeke had been doing this for years, systematically, thodically, with the patient cruelty of a man who had identified soone who wouldn’t fight back and had built his entire managent style around exploiting that weakness. He piled her with work. He denied her promotions. He claid credit for her output. He scheduled her for overti six days a week while the rest of the team left at five.
The reason was simple. Sacha was good at her job, better than Zeke, better than most of the people above her, and Zeke knew it. Her competence was a mirror that made his diocrity visible, and he’d decided, long ago, that the easiest way to solve that problem was to bury her so deep in busywork that she’d never have the ti or energy to outshine him.
And she’d endured it. All of it. Because quitting ant losing the salary that kept Stan in school, and keeping Stan in school was the one thing in her life she refused to surrender.
She picked up the first folder and opened it. .... By half past eleven, the office had emptied around her. Colleagues drifted off to lunch in pairs and small groups, laughing, checking their phones, shrugging on jackets. The sounds of departure, chairs pushed back, keyboards going silent, doors opening and closing, created a kind of tide that washed through the office and left Sacha sitting alone at her desk like a rock at low water.
She didn’t eat. She hadn’t brought lunch, there hadn’t been ti to prepare anything that morning, and she didn’t dare leave her desk. The stack of folders was still only half-finished, and Zeke had made his expectations clear.
She drank so water. She kept working.
User Comments
0 comments from readers