THEN THE JANITOR HANDED YOU A USB THAT COULD BURY YOUR TRAITOR AND RESURRECT YOUR NAME

THEN THE JANITOR HANDED YOU A USB THAT COULD BURY YOUR TRAITOR AND RESURRECT YOUR NAME

Your shame rises first, hot and bitter.
Because you realize how many times you walked past this man without seeing him.
How many times you said “good evening” while your mind stayed on mergers and headlines.
You want to apologize, but you don’t know how to do it without making it about you.

Instead, you ask the only question that matters now.
“What do we do?” you whisper.

Luis’s expression doesn’t change, but his eyes sharpen.
“We don’t fight them like rich people fight,” he says.
“We fight them like janitors fight.”
He taps the desk lightly. “Slow. Quiet. With receipts.”

You spend the next hour building a plan in a closet that smells like bleach and rebellion.
Luis insists you do nothing from your phone, nothing from your corporate devices, nothing that pings your usual digital footprint.
You use his old laptop to create a new email, new cloud storage, and multiple backups.
You learn quickly that a man who cleans an office for twenty years is an expert at hiding things in plain sight.

When you try to call your head of security, Luis stops you.
“Don’t,” he says. “If Miranda owns the CFO seat, she owns people you think are loyal.”
You swallow the instinct to bulldoze through the problem, because bulldozing is what got you here.
Instead, you let Luis guide you like he’s steering a ship through fog.

Your first move is not revenge.
It’s survival.
You need your personal accounts unfrozen, a safe place to sleep, and a lawyer who isn’t on Miranda’s payroll.
Luis gives you a name: Marisol Chen, a former federal prosecutor who now takes white-collar cases that smell like injustice.

“She helped my nephew,” Luis says simply.
Your eyebrows lift.
Luis shrugs. “I told you. Invisible people have networks too.”

You meet Marisol in a twenty-four-hour diner in Queens, not a glossy office with floor-to-ceiling glass.
Luis sits beside you, quiet, watching the door.
Marisol arrives in a plain coat, hair pulled back, eyes like she’s already reading your lies and separating them from truth.
When you tell her your name, she doesn’t flinch or smile. She just says, “Show me.”

You slide the USB across the table like it’s contraband.
Marisol plugs it into a secure device and watches the first video without blinking.
Halfway through, she lifts her coffee and takes a slow sip, like she’s tasting certainty.
When it ends, she looks at you and says, “They didn’t just frame you. They tried to erase you.”

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