She Became Her Own Janitor And Heard The Betrayal Out Loud At Work-Tep

If someone had told me a year earlier that I would be scrubbing the executive bathrooms at my own company under a fake name, I would have laughed because the picture was too ridiculous to hold in my mind.

I had spent too many years trying to be visible.

Visible to investors.

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Visible to clients.

Visible to the employees who carried my last name on their badges because my father and I had put it there.

Then one Tuesday afternoon, I was standing in a navy cleaning uniform beside a gray mop bucket, wearing a temporary badge that said ELLEN, and nobody looked at me twice.

The hallway smelled like lemon disinfectant, old carpet, and coffee that had burned too long in the break room.

The air-conditioning was so cold it slid under my sleeves, and the mop handle had rubbed a raw line into my palm.

I kept my head down because that was what people expected from a woman they believed was there to clean up after them.

It was strange how quickly a room erased me once I stopped dressing like the person in charge.

I was not Ellen.

I was Cassandra Wills, president of WillsTech Solutions.

The same Wills on the lobby wall.

The same Wills on the contracts, the payroll records, the vendor checks, and the framed photograph of my father shaking hands with our first major client.

The same Wills everyone suddenly seemed comfortable betraying.

It began with numbers.

They did not scream at first.

They whispered.

A margin dipped where it should have climbed.

A contract I had approved failed to appear in the final pipeline.

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