Boss called me to his office with human resources. «Mark, after 17 years, we’re eliminating your position…
Interesting. I checked my personal email to find a message from Steven, marked urgent. Jake, they’re saying you sent some crazy email about financial fraud.
Phillips called an emergency meeting. Everyone’s talking. They’re pulling your access to everything, even historical stuff we need to do our jobs.
What’s going on? Poor kid. Caught in the crossfire. I sent a brief reply.
Don’t get involved, Steven. Just watch. At 3 p.m., my home phone rang.
A number I hadn’t used for business in years. I picked up but said nothing. Jake? It’s Brian Wilcox.
His voice was steady, controlled. We should talk about your concerns. I think there’s been a misunderstanding.
Is that what you call it? I asked. Look, transition periods are always difficult. If you have questions about company finances, there are proper channels.
Like the board? I interrupted. Silence, then. The board doesn’t need to be bothered with operational details.
Why don’t we meet tomorrow? Just you and me. We can clear this up. Sorry, I’m busy tomorrow, I said.
Besides, I think the board might actually be very interested in Apex Solutions Group. And your brother-in-law. The sharp intake of breath told me everything.
You’re making a serious mistake, he said finally. We can make this right. Generous severance.
References. Whatever you need. Goodbye, Brian, I said and hung up.
Within 10 minutes, Vanessa emailed again. Suddenly, my severance package had doubled with an attached agreement requiring my complete confidentiality regarding all company matters. They were scrambling now.
But they still thought they were dealing with a simple extortion attempt. They had no idea what was coming. Thursday morning brought clarity and confirmation.
I’d spent the night combing through years of data, connecting dots I’d previously overlooked. The Apex scheme wasn’t Brian’s first creative accounting project. Three years ago, shortly after he became CFO, another pattern emerged.
Consulting fees to a firm called Lakeside Business Solutions. Different name, same game. Inflated invoices for services partially or never rendered.
I traced the registration for Lakeside. This one led to Patricia Wilcox, Brian’s wife. The woman was apparently CEO of a company that had no website, no employees, and a virtual office address.
But the bigger revelation came when I dug into email archives. Daniel hadn’t just been aware of these arrangements, he’d helped facilitate them. In exchange, his department received budget increases while others faced cuts.
He’d been brought in specifically because the previous director had started asking questions about IT expenditures. Even Jason Phillips was connected. His consulting firm had been hired through an unusual process that bypassed normal procurement channels.
His real role wasn’t modernizing IT, it was eliminating the one person who might notice the financial patterns. Me. The scheme was elegant in its simplicity.
Create legitimate-seeming vendors, approve inflated payments, and split the difference. Since actual services were being provided, just at marked-up rates, auditors scanning for completely fraudulent charges would miss it. Over three years, they’d diverted nearly $4.3 million.
I gathered everything into a comprehensive report. Spreadsheets showing the pattern of increases. Business registrations linking the companies to Brian’s family.
Email exchanges showing Daniel’s knowledge and participation. Then I did something they wouldn’t expect. I contacted Robert Chen, a board member I’d worked with years ago during a security implementation.
He was semi-retired now, but still attended quarterly meetings. Jake Wilson, he said, answering on the second ring. Long time…