In the high stakes world that Cecilia inhabited, she viewed excuses as nothing more than inefficiencies, while raw emotions were categorized as dangerous, unnecessary distractions. Personal problems, she insisted, had no place within the walls of a professional office. That was precisely why the persistent absence of her maintenance worker unsettled her far more than she felt it should have.
For nearly four years, a quiet man named Samuel Hedges had cleaned her corporate suites before the sun rose, scrubbing floors, dusting glass partitions, and fixing minor malfunctions before the rest of the staff arrived. He remained invisible in that specific way that reliable people often do, and for the entirety of their professional association, that invisibility had suited Cecilia perfectly. Then, he began missing his shifts.
It was not frequent at first, but it established a pattern that Cecilia found impossible to ignore or justify. Three days in a single month were unaccounted for, and each time, the explanation remained identical, delivered with humble formality through her office administrator. “It is a family emergency, Ms. Hawthorne,” the administrator would say.
Cecilia stood before her oversized mirror that morning, carefully fastening a platinum cufflink while examining her own reflection with narrowed, critical eyes. “It is rather curious, don’t you think?” she said aloud, her voice sounding calm yet sharp enough to cut through the stillness of the room. “Four years of absolute silence, and suddenly, he has a family that requires constant, dramatic emergencies.”
Across the sprawling room, her operations coordinator, a poised young woman named Melanie Foster hesitated before responding, her fingers hovering over her tablet. “He has always been incredibly dependable, Cecilia,” Melanie said carefully. “His quality of work has never dipped even slightly, and he specifically asked for unpaid leave, not for any kind of compensation or leniency.”
Cecilia waved a dismissive, elegant hand, already reaching for her smartphone to pull up his employment file. “Dependability evaporates the very moment that discipline is abandoned,” she replied coldly. “I need you to send me his home address immediately.”