
Betrayal to Business Reversal
Betrayal to Business Reversal Chapter 1
The phone rang at precisely 9:17 AM. I was in the middle of reviewing quarterly projections when the screen lit up with an unknown number. Something in me knew—before I even answered—that my world was about to shatter.
"Ms. Hudson?" The voice was clinical, detached. "This is Seattle General Hospital. I'm calling about your father, Robert Hudson."
My pen slipped from my fingers, clattering against the mahogany desk. "What happened?"
"I'm very sorry to inform you that he passed away thirty minutes ago. There were... complications with his heart condition."
The room tilted sideways. I gripped the edge of my desk, trying to steady myself as the words echoed in my head. My father—my rock, my biggest supporter—gone? Just like that?
"Ms. Hudson? Are you still there?"
"Yes," I managed, my voice sounding foreign to my own ears. "I'll be on the next flight to Seattle."
I don't remember hanging up. I don't remember grabbing my purse or rushing to my apartment to pack. But somehow, within forty-five minutes, I was standing at the airline counter, booking the first available seat to Seattle.
My hands trembled as I typed out a message to Zayne:
*Emergency. My father just died. I'm flying to Seattle for the funeral. Will need bereavement leave. Will call when I land.*
I hit send before boarding my flight, expecting—what? Sympathy? Support? Eight years together, and surely he would understand that I needed to mourn.
The funeral was a blur of gray skies and gentle rain—Seattle's familiar embrace. My uncle stood beside me, his hand steady on my shoulder as we lowered my father's casket into the ground. "He was proud of you, Briar," he whispered. "So damn proud."
I nodded, unable to speak past the lump in my throat.
My phone buzzed incessantly during the service. I silenced it once, twice, three times before finally turning it off completely. Whatever could wait would have to wait.
Afterward, at my aunt's house, surrounded by casseroles and whispered condolences, I finally checked my messages.
*Where are you? The Chen account is falling apart without you.*
*Call me immediately. This is unacceptable.*
*The board is asking questions. Get back here NOW.*
All from Marcus Chen, Head of HR.
Nothing from Zayne.
I called Marcus, explaining the situation as calmly as I could.
"I understand this is difficult," he said, his voice tight, "but we have obligations here. The quarterly deadline—"
"Is in three weeks," I interrupted. "I'll be back well before then."
"The company needs you now, Briar."
"And I need to bury my father," I replied, ending the call.
The next two days passed in a fog of grief and family memories. We sorted through my father's belongings, shared stories, and planned the memorial service. My phone continued its relentless buzzing—calls from unknown numbers, emails from the company server.
I ignored them all.
Three days after my father's death, I returned to New York. The city felt colder somehow, harder. I caught a taxi directly to the office, hoping to make up for lost time.
The moment I stepped off the elevator, something felt wrong. Conversations stopped as I passed. Eyes followed me with a mixture of pity and morbid curiosity.
On my desk sat a thick manila envelope with the company logo stamped across it. Inside was a formal notice:
*Employee: Briar Hudson*
*Violation: Unauthorized Absence During Critical Project Phase*
*Penalty: $200,000 fine deductible from annual bonus*
Attached was a meeting request from Zayne. *Today. 2 PM. Boardroom.*
I stared at the paper, disbelief washing over me in waves. Unauthorized absence? My father had died. I had texted Zayne immediately.
At precisely 2 PM, I walked into the boardroom. Zayne sat at the head of the table, his expression carved from stone.
"Sit down," he said, not bothering to look up from his tablet.
I remained standing. "I'd like an explanation for this fine."
"Your grief is not the company's problem, Briar." His eyes finally met mine, cold and unfamiliar. "We have a billion-dollar project hanging by a thread because you abandoned your post."
"I didn't abandon anything," I said, fighting to keep my voice steady. "My father died."
"And life goes on." He leaned back in his chair. "Which brings me to our next topic. Given your... emotional instability, the board and I have decided on a new role for you."
My stomach dropped as he slid a folder across the table.
"Effective immediately, you're being transferred to janitorial services."
I stared at him, certain I'd misheard. "What?"
"Your access to the executive floor is revoked. Your office belongings have been moved to the maintenance area." He stood, straightening his suit jacket. "And Briar? The cleaning staff starts at five AM. Don't be late."
As he walked past me toward the door, he paused, adding with a smile that never reached his eyes: "Oh, and your project? That's being handed over to Paloma. She's more than capable of handling it."
The door closed behind him with a soft click that sounded like the end of everything I thought I knew.
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