My Sister Framed Me At Work, Then The Client Opened My USB Log-myhoa

The first thing I saw after Steven Bennett fired me was the cardboard box waiting on my desk.

Somebody had folded the flaps open, set it beside my keyboard, and placed my company badge inside as if my career were already dead before I walked out of his office.

Through the glass wall behind me, my sister Victoria stood by the water cooler with an empty paper cup and a full smile.

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Steven was still talking, but his words had become the kind of noise people make when they want betrayal to sound like policy.

He said the evidence was substantial.

He said client details had been sent from my email to competing firms.

He said Bennett and Associates could not risk giving me access to sensitive accounts while the partners reviewed the damage.

I asked to see the full report, and he rested his palm over the folder like it might run away if I looked too closely.

“Given the sensitivity, we have to move quickly,” he said.

That was how eight years ended, not with a hearing, not with a chance to answer, but with a closed folder and a security guard waiting beside my desk.

I looked past Steven at Victoria, and she lifted her cup in a tiny toast.

My younger sister had joined Bennett and Associates three years after I did, and from her first week she had treated my client list like a family inheritance I was unfairly keeping from her.

Steven stood when I did, and for one second I thought I saw doubt cross his face.

“Alexandra,” he said, “for what it is worth, I never expected this from you.”

“Neither did I,” I said.

I did not mean the leak.

I meant him.

Victoria met me outside his office before Mike from security could reach me.

Her heels clicked beside mine in perfect rhythm, a little parade for the people pretending not to watch.

“Goodbye, sis,” she said loudly enough for the associates near the copy station to hear.

Then she lowered her voice and added, “Karma’s a witch, isn’t it?”

I turned toward her, and the confusion on her face was almost worth the day I was having.

“You were always the clever one,” I said.

For the first time that afternoon, she stopped smiling.

Mike waited by my desk with the stiff posture of a man forced to participate in something he did not believe.

The box held my badge, but everything else was still mine to remove.

My family photo went in first, the one from last Christmas where Victoria had her arm around me and our parents looked proud of both daughters for once.

Then my law school paperweight, two client thank-you notes, a pair of reading glasses, and the coffee mug my first client had given me.

The mug said TRUST THE PROCESS in chipped blue letters.

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