
Rise from Ashes of Humiliation
Rise from Ashes of Humiliation Chapter 1
I'd been looking forward to the company retreat as a chance to relax and maybe—just maybe—get David to notice me. Not as a colleague, but as someone he might want to ask out for coffee. The thought made my cheeks warm as I closed the door to my cabin, believing I was finally alone.
The retreat center was rustic but charming, with individual cabins scattered among pine trees. Mine was at the edge of the property, which I'd initially been grateful for. The privacy seemed like a blessing after a day of forced team-building exercises and awkward small talk.
I peeled off my sweaty hiking clothes, standing briefly in just my underwear before reaching for a fresh outfit. The cool air felt good against my skin after the long hike our department had completed. I never heard the soft click outside my window.
Monday morning arrived with the usual chaos of ringing phones and the smell of burnt coffee from the break room. I settled at my desk, sorting through weekend emails, when the first ping from the company chat made my computer screen flash.
Then another. And another.
Jessica from Accounting walked past my desk, giving me a look I couldn't quite decipher—part shock, part disgust. Two more colleagues followed, whispering and glancing my way.
I clicked on the company group chat and felt my world collapse.
There they were. Photos of me in my underwear in the cabin, clearly taken through the window without my knowledge. But the message above them read as if I had sent them myself: "For anyone interested...especially you, David ;)"
My stomach lurched violently. The room began to spin as blood rushed to my face. I hadn't sent these. I would never. But there they were, with my name attached, sent to every single person in the company.
"Wow, Sherry, didn't think you were that desperate," someone muttered as they walked by.
I couldn't breathe. My fingers trembled as I tried to type a message explaining this wasn't me, but before I could, another message appeared in the chat:
"Sherry, please see me in my office immediately. – Mr. Harrison"
The walk to his office was the longest of my life. Every step felt like walking through quicksand, every pair of eyes burning into me. Whispers followed like shadows.
"I always thought she was the quiet type..."
"So pathetic..."
"Did you see how she specifically tagged David?"
I caught a glimpse of David himself, huddled with Cindy by the water cooler. He wasn't meeting my eyes, but there was the ghost of a smirk on his face as Cindy whispered something in his ear. Something cold and terrible settled in my stomach. Had he...?
Mr. Harrison didn't offer me a seat when I entered his office. He stood behind his desk, the photos printed out and laid face-down before him, as if he couldn't bear to look at them.
"Ms. Campbell, I've been with this company for fifteen years," he began, his voice clipped. "Never in my time here have I seen such inappropriate behavior from an employee."
"Sir, I didn't send those photos," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "Someone must have hacked my account or—"
"Please," he cut me off, holding up his hand. "The IT department has confirmed the messages came from your login, from your computer. The evidence is quite clear."
"But I would never—"
"Ms. Campbell." His voice hardened. "This isn't just about the photos. It's about creating a hostile work environment. Several of your colleagues have already complained about feeling uncomfortable."
Tears burned behind my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. "Sir, please. I'm being set up. Someone took those photos without my knowledge at the retreat. I was alone in my cabin, changing—"
"That's enough!" He slammed his hand on the desk. "I don't want to hear excuses. What I need from you is a formal written apology to the entire office for this inappropriate conduct. I expect it on my desk by the end of the day."
I stood there, frozen in disbelief. He wasn't even going to investigate? "An apology? For being violated?"
"For sending inappropriate content through company channels," he corrected, not meeting my eyes. "This is your only warning, Ms. Campbell. Another incident like this will result in immediate termination."
As I left his office, legs shaking, I saw Cindy standing nearby with a group of colleagues. When our eyes met, she didn't even try to hide her satisfied smile.
"I told everyone she's been throwing herself at the guys in the office for months," she said loudly enough for me to hear. "Remember the Christmas party? How she kept following David around?"
The group laughed, and I felt something inside me shrivel and die. I had admired David from afar, yes, but I'd never been inappropriate. I'd simply hoped...
Now I understood. The photos, the set-up, the rumors—this was orchestrated. And as I returned to my desk, finding it covered in crude sticky notes and printouts of my photos with vulgar comments scrawled across them, I realized just how thoroughly I'd been destroyed.
My phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number: "Like what we did with your pics? Should've kept your eyes off David. He was never going to look at someone like you anyway. – C"
Rise from Ashes of Humiliation of Contents
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