His suit was flawless.
His face was not.

A bead of sweat slid down his temple. His throat tightened, refusing to swallow. Around the polished conference table, lawyers sat stiff and silent, eyes fixed on the bankruptcy documents like a coffin waiting to be sealed.

Then a voice—soft, uncertain, but clear—cut through the room.

“Sir… please don’t sign that.”

Everyone turned.

Near the glass wall stood a homeless girl, no older than twelve. Her jacket was too thin for the season, her shoes worn down at the heels. Security had let her inside only because a storm was raging outside—and because she’d been quietly helping people open doors downstairs.

But now her eyes weren’t on the people.

They were locked on the papers.

“There’s a mistake,” she said. “A big one.”

The lead attorney snapped, already rising from his seat. “This is a private meeting. She needs to leave.”

Marcus Hale lifted his hand.

“Wait.”

For the first time in weeks, someone in the room didn’t sound afraid.

Marcus studied her. “What kind of mistake?”

She stepped closer, hesitating, then pointed to a line on the document.

“That clause transfers the entire debt from the Eastbay Port acquisition,” she said. “But only sixty percent was supposed to move in the first five years. The rest hasn’t matured yet.”

Silence crashed down.

Marcus looked again.

Clause 17C.

He’d read it dozens of times. So had the lawyers.

But suddenly, his pulse raced.

“Stop,” Marcus said quietly. “Review this clause again. Right now.”

The attorneys exchanged irritated looks, but they obeyed.

Minutes passed.

Then one of them swallowed hard.

“…She’s right.”

The room shifted.

“That portion of the debt shouldn’t legally be counted yet,” the attorney admitted. “Our liability has been overstated.”

Marcus’s lungs finally remembered how to work.

“Find her,” he said sharply. “Bring her back.”

Her Name Was Lina Okafor
Lina had been homeless since she was fourteen, after her mother died and rent swallowed what little stability they had left. She slept in subway stations and church shelters, collecting cans by day.

But numbers had always made sense to her.

Her mother had once been an accountant.

“Numbers don’t lie,” she used to say. “People do.”

Lina had studied accounting in school—long enough to recognize patterns, long enough to know when something didn’t belong.

That day, she hadn’t meant to look at the papers.

But one line didn’t fit.

And she couldn’t unsee it.