"Shame, though—everyone online already believes us. You called the cops, so what? Your name's already garbage."

"Oh, and we already found out where you work. We'll be stopping by in a couple days, have a nice little chat with your boss. See if they really want an employee who stages accidents to shake people down."

I slapped his hand away and screamed.

"Get out! Get the hell away from me!"

Rodney's face went dark. He grabbed my wrist.

"We were being nice to you and you spit in our faces? You want us to throw you in the car right now?"

I thrashed, but I wasn't strong enough. It was useless.

My wrist ached where he squeezed it.

People around us were still filming. Still watching.

Nobody spoke. Nobody helped.

In that moment every shred of humiliation and rage surged up inside me—then sank all at once.

I stopped struggling. Just stared at the three of them.

Then at the ring of phones pointed at my face.

Rodney flinched under my gaze and let go.

He swore under his breath but didn't step forward again.

I said nothing. Turned around and walked home, one step at a time.

Shut the door. Threw all three locks.

I leaned against the door. No tears. No shaking.

The grief and the panic from before had pulled back like a tide going out.

I walked to my computer and sat down.

From memory, I typed out the ID information they'd given the police that day.

Then I started searching. What turned up was more than I'd bargained for.

Ervin Hansen. Sales director. Married eight years. Son, age six. 1.2 million on the mortgage.

His wife's social media accounts, her contact info—I saved every bit of it.

Plus evidence he'd been billing personal entertainment as company expenses and faking reimbursements for years.

Rodney Chavez. Sales manager. Married five years. Daughter, age three. Wife pregnant with their second.

His wife's family address. His drunk-driving violation record. I found all of it.

Roger Perry. Technical director. Married six years. Twin boys, age four.

Evidence he'd been taking side jobs on the sly and leaking company technical data. I found every last piece.

Everything they cared about most was laid out in front of me.

The sharpest knife in my hand.

I compiled it all into one clean document.

The full video of them harassing me, the evidence of their lies twisting the story online, the screenshots of every sexually degrading rumor they'd spread—all attached.