
He Risked My Life to Make His Mistress Famous
Chapter 3
I sat in David's car across from the network building, my laptop balanced on my knees, the screen's blue glow illuminating my face in the darkness. The parking garage's concrete pillars created just enough shadow to hide us from security cameras.
"Are you sure about this?" David asked, his voice low despite the empty garage. "If they catch you accessing the server..."
"They stole my work," I said, my fingers hovering over the keyboard. "They fired me. They're planning to erase seven years of my life." I twisted my wedding ring—a nervous habit I couldn't shake. "I need to see exactly what they're doing."
David nodded, his expression grim. "The backdoor will stay open for twenty minutes. After that, it'll automatically close and erase all access logs."
"Twenty minutes should be enough," I murmured, entering the series of commands he'd given me.
The network's server interface appeared on my screen, a labyrinth of folders and files I knew intimately from years of uploading my own investigative pieces. I navigated directly to the chemical plant story—my story—and watched in real-time as the metadata transformed before my eyes.
"There," I whispered, pointing at the screen. "Look at that."
David leaned closer. "They're changing the timestamps."
"And more." My voice hardened as I expanded the file properties. "They're systematically replacing every instance of my name with Paige's."
On the screen, a progress bar showed the metadata rewrite at 67%. I watched as my digital fingerprints were methodically erased—every photograph I'd taken, every recording I'd made, every note I'd typed—all now attributed to Paige Armstrong.
"They're not even trying to be subtle about it," David said, disgust evident in his tone.
"They don't need to be," I replied, a cold clarity washing over me. "As far as the world knows, I'm just a disgruntled ex-employee having a breakdown."
I downloaded copies of the altered files, documenting the evidence of their fraud. But as I examined the content, I realized something crucial.
"This won't be enough," I said suddenly.
"What do you mean?"
I scrolled through the files, pointing out the gaps in the evidence. "What they have is compelling, but it's all circumstantial. The real smoking gun—the executives admitting to the cover-up on tape—isn't here."
"Because you kept it separate," David realized.
I nodded. "Exactly. But without those direct confessions, this could still be dismissed as interpretation or coincidence." I closed my laptop with a decisive click. "I need to go back."
"Back where?"
"To the plant." I met his concerned gaze steadily. "I need to get the executive ledgers and the phone recordings from their boardroom."
David's expression shifted from concern to alarm. "Miranda, that place nearly killed you last time."
"I know." I tucked the laptop into my bag. "But I need the ultimate proof—not just of the company's crimes, but of Preston and Paige's corruption too."
---
Three nights later, I crouched in the shadows outside the chemical plant's executive wing. The security system had been upgraded since my last visit—new cameras, new protocols—but I'd prepared for that.
My phone vibrated with a message from Marcus: "Security rotation in 5 minutes. East entrance clear."
I slipped through the door during the guard change, my heart hammering against my ribs. The executive floor was deserted at this hour, but the security panel beside the boardroom door glowed red—armed and active.
I pulled out the small device Marcus had given me—a prototype signal disruptor that would confuse the alarm system just long enough for me to bypass it. The red light flickered to green for exactly seventeen seconds—enough time to swipe the keycard I'd lifted from an executive's wallet during my previous undercover visit.
The boardroom smelled of leather and expensive cologne. I moved silently to the telephone console, attaching my specialized recorder to the junction box beneath it. While it worked, I turned to the executive computer terminal.
The encryption was formidable—military-grade protection for a civilian corporation. But I'd spent years studying these systems, learning their vulnerabilities. My fingers flew across the keyboard, executing the bypass sequence I'd developed specifically for this type of security.
Access granted.
I plugged in my secure drive and began downloading the encrypted ledgers—detailed records of every illegal transaction, every bribe paid to inspectors, every falsified report covering up the toxic dumping.
The progress bar crawled across the screen: 23%, 47%, 68%...
A noise in the hallway made me freeze. Voices approaching—two men in heated discussion about quarterly reports.
"—can't keep covering this up forever," one said.
"The board says otherwise," replied another. "Now shut up about it."
I glanced at the download status: 92%.
The door handle began to turn.
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