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Proof

Author: Mike
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-05-17 04:01:00

10:03 PM Elma’s apartment*

The laptop screen cast a pale blue light across Elma’s face. She hadn’t blinked in minutes. The email on the screen didn’t change. It couldn’t. But part of her kept waiting for it to vanish, for this to be a mistake, for Joseph to somehow be innocent.

He wasn’t.

The email was timestamped 3 days before her interview.

Subject: Problem.

Body: She’s applying to admin. Make sure she never gets past HR. If she does, use the harassment policy. I’ll handle the rest.

It was signed J H.

Joseph Hayes.

Elma’s hands trembled on the keyboard. This was it. Proof. Not just her word against his. Actual evidence that he planned to ruin her before she even walked into Hayes Corp. Three days before she’d even stepped into the lobby. Three days before she’d worn the second-hand blazer and told herself she could start over here.

Nathan stood by the door, arms crossed, watching her. He hadn’t said much since he came in. Just that quiet, steady presence that made her feel less alone. He hadn’t touched her, hadn’t tried to fix it with words. He just stayed. And somehow that helped more than anything else.

Is it enough, she asked without looking up. Her voice sounded rough, like she hadn’t used it in hours.

Nathan stepped closer and leaned over the laptop. Legally, he said. It’s enough to start an internal investigation. To get you reinstated. To get Joseph suspended. Maybe more, if the board decides to act.

And to get me fired again if Catherine buries it, Elma said. She finally looked up at him. Her eyes were dry, but her face felt hot. She’d been holding her breath too long.

Nathan was quiet for a second. The hum of the laptop fan filled the space between them. Then he said, Not if we go higher.

Elma looked up at him. Higher than Catherine?

The board, Nathan said. My father still chairs it. He’s out of the country, but he returns in 48 hours. If we have this to him first, Catherine and Joseph can’t stop it. Once it’s in front of the board, it’s official. They can’t sweep it under the rug without a fight.

Elma closed the laptop slowly. The screen went dark, and her reflection stared back at her. Her mind was racing. Risk. Reward. Exposure. If this backfired, she wouldn’t just lose the job. She’d lose everything again. She’d be the girl who cried wolf. The girl who forged emails to get back at her uncle. No one would hire her after that.

You’re risking a lot for me, she said quietly. Why?

Nathan met her eyes. Because I know what Joseph is capable of, he said. And because you deserve a chance to fight back. I’ve seen him do this before. To other people. He just never got caught.

Elma nodded once. Okay. Then let’s do it.

---

*11:45 PM Destiny’s apartment*

Destiny opened the door before Elma knocked twice. She took one look at Elma’s face and stepped aside without asking questions. Her eyes narrowed when she saw the laptop in Elma’s hands.

You found it, she said. It wasn’t a question.

Elma walked in and set the laptop on the table. The apartment smelled like cheap noodles and detergent. Destiny’s place was small, but it was hers. No one could take it away.

I found it, Elma said. She sat down heavily, like her legs had finally decided they were done holding her up.

Destiny read the email twice, then swore under her breath. The rat. I knew he was dirty, but this… This is next level. This isn’t just family drama. This is corporate sabotage.

What do we do now, Destiny asked. Her voice was steady now. No jokes, no sarcasm. Just focus.

We wait for Nathan’s father, Elma said. And we don’t tell anyone. Not even Linda. If word gets out, they’ll delete everything. They’ll claim the email was fabricated. They’ll make it look like I hacked Joseph’s account.

Destiny nodded, serious now. I’ll guard this laptop like it’s my baby. You go home and sleep. You look like death. Like you’ve been dead for three days and someone forgot to tell you.

Elma almost laughed. I don’t sleep much anymore.

Then sleep now, Destiny said firmly. You’ll need it. You’re going to need your head clear for the next 48 hours. If we mess this up, there’s no second chance.

Elma hesitated, then nodded. She was exhausted. The kind of tired that sat in her bones. The kind that made her hands shake even when she wasn’t scared.

Before she left, she turned back. Destiny, thank you. For not asking why I’m worth this.

Destiny smiled, soft and fierce. Because you’re my friend, Elma. And friends don’t let friends get eaten by snakes. Now go. Sleep. I’ll text you if anything changes.

Elma left with a lighter chest than she’d had in weeks. She didn’t sleep much, but for the first time, she didn’t dream of Joseph’s face.

---

*48 hours later. 9 AM. Hayes Corp. Floor 50.*

The boardroom on floor 50 was different from the one on floor 25. Bigger. Quieter. No glass. Just dark wood and a long table that felt like it belonged in a courtroom. The air smelled of polish and old money. Portraits of past CEOs lined the walls, all of them staring down at the table like they were judging everyone in the room.

Elma sat at the far end, hands folded, heart pounding. She’d worn the same blazer. It was the only one she had that fit the room. Her palms were damp against the wood.

Across from her sat Nathan’s father, Richard Hayes. Silver hair, sharp suit, eyes that missed nothing. He’d flown in overnight just for this. He looked tired, but his posture said he wasn’t here to waste time.

Catherine sat to his right. Joseph to his left. Both of them looked calm. Too calm. Like they’d already decided how this would end.

Nathan sat beside Elma. Not as a doctor now, but as a board member’s son and a witness. He didn’t look at her much. He didn’t need to. His presence was enough.

Richard Hayes cleared his throat. The sound was quiet, but it cut through the room.

Miss Okonkwo, he said. You asked for this meeting. You said you had evidence against Joseph Hayes.

Elma opened the laptop and turned it toward him. Her hands didn’t shake this time.

This email was sent from Joseph’s company account, she said. Three days before I was hired. It tells Catherine to block me from HR and to use the harassment policy if I got in.

Richard read it slowly. The room was silent enough to hear the air conditioning. No one coughed. No one shifted. Everyone was waiting.

When he finished, he looked up.

Joseph, he said. Care to explain?

Joseph leaned back in his chair, smiling like this was all a misunderstanding. Father, she forged that. She’s been trying to ruin me since I caught her stealing from my office. You know what she’s like. Desperate people do desperate things.

Elma’s blood boiled. That’s a lie.

Prove it, Joseph said. You have no witnesses. No chain of custody. Anyone could have sent that email. It’s easy to fake metadata these days.

Catherine jumped in. Father, even if the email is real, it shows poor judgment, not a crime. Miss Okonkwo violated policy by meeting Nathan after hours. We suspended her for that. The policy is clear.

Richard looked at Nathan. Son, is this true?

Nathan nodded. It’s true they met. But it was because Joseph threatened her in the garage. I have security footage of that too. Timestamped. Unedited.

The room shifted. A few of the older board members exchanged looks.

Richard set the laptop down carefully.

This is serious, he said. If Joseph sent this email, it’s abuse of power. If Elma forged it, it’s fraud.

He looked at Elma.

Miss Okonkwo, do you understand what happens if you’re lying?

Elma met his gaze. Yes, sir. I do. I’m willing to take a forensic audit on my laptop, my email, everything. Check the timestamps. Check the IPs.

And Joseph, Richard said. Do you understand what happens if you are?

Joseph’s smile faltered for the first time. Just a fraction. But Elma saw it.

Richard stood up.

Investigation begins now. IT will verify the email metadata. Security will release the garage footage. Miss Okonkwo, your suspension is lifted effective immediately. You will return to work tomorrow.

Joseph stood up fast. Father, you can’t—

I can, Richard said, voice cold. And I will. This company doesn’t run on fear. Not while I’m chairing the board.

Catherine opened her mouth, then closed it. For once, she had nothing.

Meeting adjourned, Richard said.

Elma stood up on legs that felt like jelly. She didn’t look at Joseph or Catherine as she walked out. She didn’t need to. The weight on her chest was lighter than it had been in months.

Nathan caught up with her in the hallway.

You did it, he said quietly.

Elma exhaled for the first time in days.

No, she said. We did it.

Nathan smiled, just a small one.

Not yet, he said. But we’re close.

---

*Back on floor 12, Linda was waiting.*

She saw Elma walk in without the suspension letter and her eyes lit up.

You’re back, Linda whispered. Like she couldn’t say it louder in case it wasn’t real.

Elma nodded.

Linda pulled her into a quick hug. I told them you didn’t quit. I told them they made a mistake.

Elma hugged her back, surprised. Thanks, Linda.

Before Linda could say more, Catherine’s voice cut through the floor.

Okonkwo. My office. Now.

Elma let go of Linda and walked over. Her steps were steady now.

Catherine’s office was colder than before. The blinds were drawn. The air felt stale.

You think you won, Catherine said as soon as the door closed.

Elma stood straight. I think the truth won.

Catherine stepped closer. This isn’t over. You’ll make one mistake. One slip. And I’ll be there to end you. I’ve ended people for less.

Elma didn’t flinch. She’d heard worse from Joseph.

Let me give you some advice, Catherine said, voice low. People like you don’t last in places like this. You don’t belong here. You never did.

Elma met her eyes. Maybe not. But I’m here now.

Catherine’s jaw tightened. Get out.

Elma walked out and closed the door behind her.

Back at desk 47, the flickering light was still flickering. But it didn’t feel as dark anymore.

She had proof. She had backup. And for the first time, Joseph and Catherine looked scared.

Elma sat down, opened her drawer, and got to work.

The war wasn’t over.

But now, she was fighting back.

---

Word count: ∼1512. Want me to keep this pacing for Chapter 8, or slow it down for more tension?

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  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   SUB-LEVEL3_

    “Sirens.” Richard was already moving. “NFCC took James out the front. That’s not them.” Nathan was at the window. 41 floors up. “Service entrance. Black van. No plates.” Elma’s phone buzzed. Unknown number. `Sub-Level 3. 60 seconds. -W` “W,” Nathan said. “The woman with small feet.” Destiny’s voice came through Richard’s phone. He’d patched her in. “I’m 2 blocks out. I lost her in the stairwell. She went down.” “Down,” Elma said. “Sub-Level 3.” Richard handed her the keycard. “Your father’s biometrics. Not mine. Not Nathan’s.” He looked at the board. “If she doesn’t open it, no one does. If she does... she controls the vote.” Elma didn’t wait. She ran. Nathan right behind her. “Elevators are locked down.” “Stairs,” Elma said. They moved. *40... 39... 38...* Floor numbers blurred past. Marian grabbed Richard’s arm. “She’s not a soldier.” “No,” Richard said. “She’s Mr. Okonkwo’s daughter. That’s better.” *20... 15... 10...* *Sub-Level 2.* The sta

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   The Tower

    6:02pm. Hayes Corp Tower, 41st floor. Glass. Steel. Silence. The boardroom was full. Twelve chairs. Twelve faces. All of them looking at the door. At the head of the table: Joseph. No, James. Suit tailored. Hair slicked back. No orange. No cuffs. He looked like he belonged there. Because he did. “Mr. Hayes,” the chairwoman said. Her voice shook. “You said you had the majority shares.”“I do,” James said. He smiled. “And I have the heir.”The doors opened. Elma walked in first. Nathan behind her. One step back. Doctor. Bodyguard. Heir. Every head turned. Elma didn’t look at James. She looked at the table. “Miss Okonkwo,” the chairwoman stood. “We were told you were... missing.”“I was,” Elma said. “Held. Threatened. My aunt’s assets frozen. My name used to commit fraud.” She dropped a folder on the table. Bank transfers. Photos. The guard’s confession. All from the USB. “James Hayes. Faked his death 9 years ago. Married my aunt under a false name. Used her to access Ha

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   The nokia

    The footprints didn’t go far. Destiny followed them to the tree line. Stopped. “She didn’t come back out.” “Or she did,” Nathan said. He was crouched by the window, checking the frame. “And she’s still here.” Marian sat on the floor, the note crushed in her fist. “Joseph’s wife. Your aunt.” She looked up at Elma. “I married him. I let him into this family.”Elma didn’t look at her. She was staring at the Nokia. Dead. Black screen. But it was warm. “It’s been on,” she said. “Recently.”Nathan moved next to her. Doctor first, heir second. “Let me see.” He took it. Turned it over. The back cover came off easy. Too easy. Inside: No SIM card. No battery. Instead: a smaller USB chip. And a folded note. `Batteries are for people who wait. -J`“Charging port,” Nathan said. He pulled a power bank from his medical kit. Always carried one. Doctor habit. “Hayes Corp standard. We used these for field staff.” He plugged it in. The Nokia screen flickered. *1%... 2%...* Destiny stood by

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   Move

    “Keys,” Nathan said. No one argued. Destiny was already at the door, pistol low. She checked the peephole. Empty porch. Empty street. The officers were gone from the gate. “Where are they?” she said. Nathan’s radio crackled. Static. Then nothing. “They’re not answering.” Elma’s stomach dropped. “Joseph—”“Don’t say his name,” Destiny snapped. She threw the door open. Two officers lay on the grass by the gate. Breathing. Unconscious. No blood. No signs of a fight. Just down. “Gas,” Nathan said. He’d seen it before. “Tasteless. Fast.” He kicked the gate. It swung open. The car was still there. Nathan’s SUV. Untouched. “Move,” he ordered. They ran. Marian in the middle. Elma behind her. Destiny covering the rear. Elma didn’t look at the house. She didn’t look at the broken window. She didn’t look at the black box on the floor. She just ran. *In the car:* Nathan floored it. Tires screamed on the gravel. Destiny was in the passenger seat, eyes on the mirrors. “We’re clean

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   The record

    Elma didn’t breathe. Her hand was still on the door handle. Cold metal under her palm. *Three taps.* *No one there.* *Just her name on an envelope.*Destiny was already moving. She stepped in front of Elma, one hand out. “Step back.”Marian was on her feet now. No blanket. No hiding. “What is it?”Elma didn’t answer. She couldn’t. She just held up the photo. Marian saw it. Age 17. Asleep. Vulnerable. And on the back: `I’ve been watching you longer than you think. -J`Marian made a sound. Not a gasp. Not a cry. Like the air got punched out of her. “He... he was there?”Destiny took the envelope from Elma. Checked inside. Empty. No prints she could see. No other paper. Just the photo and the threat. She shut the door. Locked it again. Click. Click. Click. “Phones,” Destiny said. Her voice was flat. Cop voice. “All of them. Now.”Nathan was still on his call outside. She opened the door a crack. “Nathan. Inside. Now.”He came fast. Saw the photo in Destiny’s hand. His jaw set. “

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   The prison call

    The phone kept ringing. Elma stared at it. `Enugu Custodial Centre` That’s all the screen said. No name. Just the prison. Marian was asleep on the couch, breathing soft. Destiny had her head tipped back in the chair, mouth open a little. Everyone was safe. For now. The phone rang again. Elma’s thumb hovered over `Decline`. If she answered, Joseph won. If she didn’t, he’d find another way to reach her. The third ring. She answered. “Hello?” Her voice was steady. She didn’t know how. Click. Silence. Then a voice. Not Joseph’s. Official. Tired. “This is Sergeant Uche, Enugu Custodial Centre. We have an inmate requesting to speak with Elma Okonkwo. He says it’s urgent family business. Do you consent to the call?” Elma’s stomach dropped. “He’s in custody. He can’t just—” “He can request,” Sergeant Uche said. “You can refuse. But he will keep requesting. We’re required to ask you each time.” Elma looked at Marian. At Destiny. “No,” she said. “I don’t consent.” “U

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   Monday Morning

    8:40 AM Elma walked into the office and the floor didn’t tilt. For three months, crossing this threshold had felt like stepping onto a battlefield. Shoulders braced for impact. Stomach coiled around the next tracker alert. Eyes scanning for Nathan’s door, for Linda’s frantic wave, for the red f

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   Saturday Late Evening

    11:02 PMThe second Elma ended the call with Nathan, silence hit the apartment like a physical weight. Not the peaceful kind. The kind that made her ears ring. For three months, this living room had been a war room. Laptop glow painting the walls blue at 2 AM. Tracker notifications chiming ever

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   Saturday Evening

    7:40 PM Elma was home. Not the home she’d grown up in, with peeling paint and her mother’s rosary hanging by the door. Not the home she’d shared with Ikenna, where every corner still smelled like his betrayal. This home was quiet. Expensive. Hers. No laptop open. No audit reports bleeding re

  • Thrown Out, Claimed By The CEO.   After The Audit

    8:05 AM, Floor 50The Port Harcourt audit ended on Thursday with no findings.Elma stared at the final line of Mrs. Okafor’s email until the words stopped swimming. _No material weaknesses identified. No management letter points. Overall assessment: Strong._She read it again. Then a third time.No

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