Apparently, May is National Crime Writing Month. The following story is one of my contributions
to that genre of fiction.
BACK-UP
Brandy
took her time ending her day’s work in the office so she could be the last to
leave. She didn’t want anyone to know
what she was going to do, especially if she was making a big mistake.
Through
the window, she saw the construction crews arrive and knew they were parking
their company trucks in the back yard. The
men walked through the back shop and came to the front office. Twenty three men all said good night to her
as they handed in their time sheets and left.
Their day ended half an hour before the office closed.
Jim,
the owner, was already gone. She just
had to wait for Marianne to leave.
Marianne was reception. Brandy
was accounting. They were the only two
in the office who worked nine to five.
Everyone else worked seven till three, so they could communicate more
easily with contractors and suppliers back east in different time zones.
Brandy
shuffled some invoices on her desk and scrolled through reports on her computer
to make it seem like she was still working in her own office. She could hear Marianne rinse out the coffee
pot and put away the coffee mugs, and then shut down her own computer and
printer, getting ready to leave.
Finally
alone in the office, Brandy took out a brand new USB flash drive and inserted
it into her computer. Earlier she had
made her usual daily back-up of company accounting records and put it in her
office drawer. It was her insurance in
case the computer died. Now though, she made
her own extra back-up of all the accounting data that was on the hard drive. In addition, she went into the email account
and copied all the emails sent and received in the past six months, and then
copied all the bids made for jobs. She
would take it all with her when she left.
As the extra back-up completed and she removed the flash drive, she
heard footsteps out in the shop. They
were the sound of hard work boots on cement.
And it sounded like more than one pair.
She quickly put the flash drive in her pocket, just as someone opened
the door into the main office.
Mark
Sutton stopped suddenly when he saw Brandy.
The younger Ryan Phelps did too.
They were both project supervisors for Dynamic Construction. Mark jangled a large ring of keys in his
hand. “How come you’re still here?” he demanded,
as if she had no right to be in the office.
The construction industry was still a man’s world. Women were not wanted, accepted or respected. They were usually treated like servants.
She
looked straight at him and noticed his eyes shift away. “I was just finishing up some paperwork and
waiting for everyone to leave so I could lock up and set the alarm,” she told
him, turning off her computer and standing up.
The two men were clad in jeans and sports jackets, with safety vests
over top, and wearing hard hats as well.
“You two just back from the job site?
Did the latest order of materials arrive? Is it secured?” she asked. “I didn’t think you’d be coming back to the
office, especially on a long weekend.”
Ryan
shuffled his feet and moved back a step, refusing to look at her. Mark raised his head and looked at her
defiantly. “No, the material didn’t show
up. Maybe first thing Tuesday. We have some paperwork of our own to take
care of,” he said, turning around and heading for his own office with Ryan
close behind him. “If all the time
sheets are in, you can leave, Brandy.
I’ll do the locking up.” He
ordered her around as if payroll was her only duty and she was an underling!
Her
irritation with the man simmered just under the surface. She took a deep breath to keep her voice
neutral, “Fine. Do you want to set the
alarm on the warehouse, too, or would you like me to do that before I
leave? With the high tariffs on steel
and aluminum from out of country suppliers these days, we don’t want any of our
materials to go missing now, do we?” she countered.
“I’ll
lock the warehouse. No problem. You can leave to start your weekend,” Mark barked,
as he entered his own office with Ryan on his heels. He shut the door before Brandy could reply.
She
picked up her purse and slung it over her left shoulder, as she surveyed her
office to make sure all was in order before she turned out the light and headed
for the door, with her left hand fingering the flash drive in her pocket.
Sitting
in her car with the motor running and the air conditioner on full tilt to cool
things down, Brandy pulled out her cell phone and called her boss. He didn’t answer, so she left a message. “Jim, this is Brandy, five-thirty p.m.
Friday. Mark says the materials never
made it to the job site today. Thought
you should know.”
Brandy
sensed there was something nefarious going on, but she didn’t know what,
exactly. She was going to spend the
weekend doing an audit of accounting, and checking emails to see if she could
figure it out. The company was going
into a lot of serious debt, and even though bidding on jobs had escalated to
take care of increased tariffs on materials, they were still going under
financially. She had worked for Dynamic
for ten years and did the accounting, so she had better damn well figure it out
or she’d be out of a job, too! Divorced
and living on her own, and supporting a son at university, she couldn’t afford
to be out of work for even one week.
Feeling
in need of a cold drink and food for nourishment, she put her car in gear and started
to leave for home. She pulled onto the
roadway that led out of the industrial park where the office was located. Most industrial sites had shut down at
three-thirty, so there was hardly any traffic, except for one large semi
pulling a trailer. As she slowly moved
further down the road, she watched in the rear view mirror as the semi pulled
into Dynamic’s yard and up to the warehouse.
Brandy pulled a U-turn and went into the parking lot of the appliance
distribution center across the street.
They would stay open till nine for pick-ups, so there were still some
vehicles sitting in their lot. She parked
in between two SUVs that faced the road, and Dynamic Construction across the
street.
Brandy
pulled out her cell phone again and turned the camera on, ready to record
whatever was going to happen. None of
the accumulated material in the warehouse was slated for delivery anywhere
until the latter part of next week, when the general contractor would give them
the go-ahead to proceed with their specific work on site, in the carefully
co-ordinated timeline of any large construction project. They were to install steel beams and a steel
roof on a massive warehouse for the budding marijuana market that would become
legal in a few months’ time. The
material in their own warehouse had been purchased and stored long before the
tariffs came into effect. The newer,
more expensive steel, direct from the supplier, was to have been delivered to
the job site that day. No matter where
or when it was purchased, it was all precious cargo these days. The job site had their own security staff watching
everything, but Dynamic didn’t have security on their own premises.
As
Mark and Ryan came out of the office’s side door and walked to the warehouse,
Brandy started recording. The massive
roll-up door was lifted while the semi backed the trailer up to the loading
dock. She could hear one of their own noisy
forklifts being started and kept her phone recording as bundle after bundle of
steel panels were loaded onto the trailer.
In horror, she watched as they also loaded the forklift onto the
trailer. When the semi left with its
load, she snapped pictures of the tractor and its licence plate. Then for good measure she took a picture of
the driver as he went by her.
She
knew the job site was shut down for the weekend. With severe labour shortages in the trades
these days, there was no way overtime was going to be paid to keep working through
a long weekend. So where was the
material going? Had she just watched it
being stolen? The trucking name on the
tractor wasn’t one they had ever worked with before.
She
ducked down as Mark and Ryan left in quick succession, each driving a company
pick-up. Leaving the parking lot, she
just hoped she could gain some insight from the data she was going to look at
when she got home. Before reaching the
main highway, she pulled into the drive-thru at the lone fast food outlet in
the industrial park. She ordered a chicken
dinner and a root beer to take home as she didn’t think she would have time to
cook that night.
Later
at home, she wiped her greasy fingers from eating the chicken as she waited for
her own computer to boot up. When it was
ready, she inserted the flash drive and went into inventory to check the
amounts of materials ordered against materials received. She also checked materials ordered and
delivered directly to the job site. There
were major discrepancies in both areas.
Then she went into company emails and checked the figures for materials
ordered against amounts listed in bids for jobs. Those figures didn’t match up either. She also checked the emailed purchase orders
sent by job supervisors to suppliers, which gave job numbers and addresses for
deliveries. Then she checked the job
numbers with actual job site addresses.
After
several hours of back and forth between email and accounting data, she had the
gist of what was going on. Materials had
been ordered for their jobs, but not delivered to the job sites. Then the same materials were re-ordered and
sent to the job. There were no credits
from suppliers, so the original orders had not been returned. The company was paying for double the
material needed for the last five jobs they had done since the price of steel
had skyrocketed. The stolen material
could be sold cheaper to a competitor who could then under-bid them. Unfortunately, Jim thought the company didn’t
need extra staff to do job-costing, where job expenses were compared to
original estimates. He had just assumed
all his employees were honest, since he paid well and gave yearly bonuses.
Brandy
went back into the purchase orders and checked the destinations for materials
that had not arrived at job sites. She
jotted down the address given and saw it was the same location each time, and
the purchase orders had been authorized by Mark. On a notepad, she wrote down the delivery
address used for all the material the company never received. Checking maps on her computer, she saw it was
located in another industrial park on the other side of town. She printed the map and saved a copy on the
flash drive. Then she transferred the
video and pictures she had taken from her phone to her computer and then to the
flash drive. She also did another
back-up of everything from the flash drive to her own computer.
Feeling
overwhelmed, she sat back and thought about how to handle this. Should she call the police? Was that her decision to make? All the evidence on paper pointed to Mark,
but Ryan was also involved, and he was the owner’s son. Should she just tell Jim and let him handle
it? Or would he want to shoot the
messenger if she implicated his son?
Brandy didn’t want to lose her job, but she sure as hell didn’t want to
aid and abet either, now that she knew what was happening. As a boss, Jim had been good to her over the
years. She had a higher than average
salary, pension, medical and benefits, and six weeks of vacation every
year. Did she really want to rock the
boat and perhaps lose her job? But she
was a bookkeeper. She always made the
accounts balance to the penny. She
couldn’t let this slide and watch the company go under. It was clear to her that her own honour and
integrity as accountant were at stake here.
As
she teetered back and forth between honesty and duplicity, her cell phone
crowed like a rooster and she jumped. She
didn’t recognize the number. “Hello,
this is Brandy,” she answered.
“Yes,
this is dispatch with Trident Trucking.
Call answering at Dynamic Construction gave me your number in case of
emergency. Our driver was supposed to
pick up a load of steel roofing at your warehouse tonight but when he got
there, the whole place was in flames. He
called 911, but you might want to check it out yourself.”
Brandy
was stunned. She shook her head. Then she tried calling Jim again. She only got voice mail. “Jim, this is Brandy and it’s 9:00 p.m.
Friday. Trident Trucking just called to
say they saw and reported fire at our office and warehouse. I’m on my way over there.”
She
grabbed a jacket and a bottle of water, as well as the flash drive and her cell
phone as she rushed out the door.
Approaching the industrial park, she could see flames lighting up the
darkening August sky. Her heart raced as
she got closer. Access to the office and
warehouse was denied. Police cars blocked
the entrance. She pulled into the
parking lot she had hid in earlier.
Getting out of her car, she heard the wail of an ambulance as it raced
down the road and stopped by the police cars.
She heard onlookers talking. They
said someone had perished inside the office.
Brandy felt faint and leaned against her car. She took deep breaths, trying to understand
what had happened.
A
fancy SUV she recognized as Jim’s screeched to a halt on the roadway, beside
the police cars. Brandy watched as he jumped
out and tried running toward the office.
“Ryan! Ryan! Where are you?” he screamed, as two police
officers gave chase and stopped him. “My
son’s in there!” he screamed in anguish, collapsing as they held him back.
Brandy
moved onto the roadway to get a better look at the crazy scene backlit by
flames. There were three fire
trucks. Firemen were moving around with
their hoses, trying to battle the blaze.
But close to the office, she could see a company pick-up, the red one
that Ryan drove. Firemen were trying to
keep the flames away from it, so it wouldn’t explode.
She
walked over to the two police cars by the entrance. The policemen were bringing Jim back to the
roadway. As he spotted her he tried
standing on his own. “My God,
Brandy. What’s happened? Ryan said he had to meet Mark here to go over
some contract extras for the job. That
was an hour ago. If Ryan’s inside, where
the hell is Mark?” he bawled, resorting to anger instead of sobbing. But he still looked at her with haunted eyes.
Brandy
glanced from Jim to the officer, who was steadying him. She couldn’t waver now. Turning slightly from Jim to the officer, she
pulled the flash drive out of her pocket and said, “I think I have some
information you want.”
She
was suddenly very grateful it had been her habit to make a back-up copy of
company records. At that moment, the
extra copy she had made now felt like the most important thing she had ever
done in her whole life.
_______________________
By Lisa A. Hatton
Nice ending!
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed this Lisa. You are a gifted writer!
ReplyDelete