The hum of fluorescent lights seemed unusually loud in Jennifer’s office that morning. She leaned over her desk, eyes scanning the latest financial report, her brows furrowed as she traced each number with careful precision. Something was off. She couldn’t quite place it yet, but her instincts, honed from years running her father’s company, whispered danger.
Her phone buzzed again. Another message from Joseph: “Have you reviewed the last Division B audit? Some things are… curious.”
Jennifer clenched her jaw. She had promised herself she wouldn’t allow his presence to distract her. And yet, the message tugged at a thread in her mind that she couldn’t ignore. She set the phone aside and focused on the documents before her.
Chidera knocked lightly before entering, tablet in hand. “Ma’am, I double-checked the revised financial statements from last week. There’s an unusual discrepancy in Division B’s expense accounts.”
Jennifer gestured for him to sit. “Show me.”
He scrolled through the tablet, highlighting minor errors: misallocated funds, missing receipts, and subtle inconsistencies that a casual reviewer might easily miss. Jennifer leaned in, reading each line carefully.
“Hmm,” she murmured, tapping her pen against her notebook. “These are small mistakes… but they all point to the same department. Either someone’s extremely careless, or there’s intention behind this.”
Chidera’s expression was serious. “I’ve reviewed the last six months. It’s systematic. Not accidental.”
Jennifer nodded slowly, a chill creeping up her spine. She had expected challenges, but this was different. Subtle sabotage wasn’t uncommon in corporate settings, but the precision here suggested someone who knew the inner workings intimately.
She leaned back in her chair and ran a hand through her hair. “I need to trace these back to the source. Every transaction, every approval. Start from the last audit and work backward. No detail is too small.”
Chidera nodded, and Jennifer felt a small surge of pride. His diligence mirrored her own, though his youth often meant he lacked the seasoned instinct she had developed over years. Still, he was proving himself capable, and she made a mental note to keep him close during the investigation.
The office door opened quietly, and Joseph stepped in, hands tucked into his pockets, suit immaculate, expression unreadable. Jennifer felt that familiar tension curl in her chest, part irritation, part… something else she refused to name.
“Jennifer,” he greeted smoothly. “I thought I’d drop by. Heard you were digging into Division B’s finances.”
“Yes,” she said, keeping her tone professional. “There are anomalies. I’m investigating.”
He stepped closer, scanning the spreadsheets displayed on her monitor. “Interesting. Minor errors, but all pointing to one place. Someone’s being very careful.”
Jennifer studied him, noting the ease with which he moved through her office, the casual authority in his voice. “And you? How do you know this?”
He smiled faintly, just enough to unsettle her. “Let’s just say I have an eye for details most people overlook.”
Her stomach tightened. The words were harmless enough, but the subtext was there he knew more than he should. And she knew, somewhere deep down, that this wasn’t about helping her. He never did anything without reason.
As Joseph turned to leave, she caught him looking at her with that subtle intensity, the kind that lingered after he was gone. She forced herself to focus on the numbers again, but her mind raced, weighing possibilities, anticipating moves, calculating risks.
Minutes later, she discovered the first real sign of sabotage: a critical spreadsheet was missing. Her heart skipped a beat as she retraced her steps, fingers trembling slightly. She remembered saving it last night, reviewing every figure before leaving. And now gone.
Her pulse quickened. This wasn’t a random mistake. Someone was deliberately undermining her work.
Chidera looked over her shoulder. “Did you save a backup?”
“Yes,” she said, exhaling slowly. “But someone has access to all our systems. This wasn’t accidental.”
The rest of the morning blurred into a tense dance of investigation. Jennifer traced the digital footprints, noting unusual log-ins and minor changes that on the surface seemed innocuous. She assembled her trusted inner circle Chidera, two senior accountants, and her assistant and began a private strategy session.
“Everyone,” she said, voice steady but firm, “we are dealing with something deliberate. Someone is trying to manipulate our financials, and I intend to find out who.”
The team exchanged glances. Even in a room filled with competent professionals, tension thickened the air. Corporate sabotage wasn’t just a breach of trust it threatened the entire company, the livelihoods of employees, and the legacy Jennifer had fought to maintain.
Joseph’s words echoed in her mind: “Not everything is as it seems.”
The afternoon passed in a flurry of calls, audits, and cross-referencing. Jennifer barely had time to eat, sipping lukewarm coffee as she followed the trail of anomalies. Each revelation tightened the knot in her stomach. Whoever was behind this knew her company intimately. Whoever it was, they were playing a dangerous game and she intended to win.
As evening approached, she finally isolated a suspicious pattern. A series of approvals had been routed through one senior accountant repeatedly, but each transaction bore a subtle alteration. It was clever almost invisible but the signs were there for those who knew what to look for.
Jennifer’s hands trembled slightly as she considered confronting the employee. She hesitated. Corporate politics could be treacherous. She needed proof undeniable proof before she made any move.
Chidera’s voice broke her thoughts. “Ma’am, I’ve noticed something else. This pattern… it mirrors a similar discrepancy I found in an old audit. Same department, same method. Someone has been doing this for months.”
Jennifer felt a cold chill. This wasn’t just about one mistake or one week’s oversight. Someone had been undermining her company for months, carefully, systematically, and she hadn’t noticed until now.
Her phone buzzed. She glanced down to see a message from Joseph: “Good work today. Keep an eye on the details some things hide in plain sight.”
Her pulse quickened. He wasn’t giving advice; he was reminding her that he was watching, subtly, always observing.
The sun dipped lower, casting the office in golden light, shadows stretching across the walls. Jennifer leaned back in her chair, exhaustion pressing against her. The weight of responsibility, secrecy, and corporate betrayal pressed down like a physical force.
Then she noticed it a single row in the spreadsheet, overlooked by all, a small but critical miscalculation that could jeopardize an entire project if left unchecked.
Jennifer froze. She recognized the formula immediately. It was deliberate, a signature of someone meticulous, someone who knew the system inside and out. And she realized, with a rising sense of dread, that this person wasn’t a junior employee. They were someone trusted someone close.
Her mind raced through possibilities. Could it be a senior executive? Someone in accounting? Or… could it be someone she hadn’t suspected at all?
Her phone buzzed again this time a text from Ifeanyi, innocent and unaware: “Dinner tonight? You’ve been busy all day. Don’t forget.”
She stared at the message, torn between personal life and the growing storm at work. If she left, even for a few hours, she risked losing control over a situation that was spiraling. Yet, the temptation to escape the relentless pressure, if only for a moment, was almost unbearable.
Jennifer’s eyes scanned the office once more, settling on Chidera. He was immersed in the tablet, oblivious to the tension in the room. She couldn’t shake the feeling that he saw more than he let on, that his quiet intelligence masked a deeper awareness.
Her pulse thudded in her chest as she realized she was already thinking like the saboteur, analyzing every number, every decision, every interaction. It was exhausting, exhilarating, and terrifying all at once.
As night fell over Lagos, she finally stood, stretching stiff limbs, and exhaled deeply. She knew one thing: whoever was behind this, they had underestimated her. And she would not be outmaneuvered.
Her phone buzzed one final time before she left for the evening. This time, a short message from an unknown number: “Look closer. Some details aren’t what they seem.”
Jennifer froze, heart racing. Someone was deliberately testing her, taunting her, or warning her. The office, once familiar and controlled, now felt like a labyrinth of hidden intentions and unseen eyes.
She gathered her things, resolved to stay vigilant. The day had started with spreadsheets, training, and minor corporate oversight. It ended with suspicion, tension, and the quiet, creeping realization that she wasn’t just fighting for her company she was fighting against someone who knew her every move.
Jennifer stepped out into the Lagos night, the city alive with lights and noise, unaware of who was watching, and whether her next move would lead her closer to answers or into the trap already set.





