The next morning Edie made copies of her printout for the board. Then she and Bethany followed Howell to the main conference room where the board — including Daddy Howell, Philip Sedgwick, and the two tall men whose black suits could have been tailored to cover shoulder holsters — were gathered. As Edie took her seat, Philip pointed an accusing finger at her. “What’s she doing here? She’s the one who got Kirk fired.”
Edie’s face heated. Philip was nasty but she was unprepared for that knife. Even his rusty armor fell away. He’d called it working behind the scenes but sometimes a person just stood up for what was right. And sometimes she just stood up for her friends.
“Gentlemen. Ladies.” Thankfully, Howell took the attention from her. He walked around the table, sliding packets in front of each person. “These are profit and loss reports for the year, as produced by our VP of Finance, Philip Sedgwick. As you can see, there’s apparent cause for alarm.”
Edie watched Philip carefully, but he showed no sign of being flustered at this announcement, although one of the board members flipped open his packet and gasped. He obviously hadn’t heard about the rumored loss of $10 million.
Capitalizing on the shocked silence, Howell sat across from Philip and rapped the glossy cherry finish in front of him. “Well, Sedgwick? Any explanation?”
“Me?” Philip waved over the report. “I’m not operations officer.”
“This report came out under your auspices. It must’ve been sitting on your desk well before today. Why didn’t you warn us of such a horrendous negative amount?”
Murmurs around the boardroom indicated agreement.
Philip shrugged. “That’s not my job. It’s yours.”
Howell slapped the table and leaned into Philip Sedgwick’s face. “But these aren’t the real numbers, are they?”
Instead of a stuttered confession, Philip smiled slowly, as if it was Howell who had walked into the trap. Philip said, “Of course they’re real. Why would you say they aren’t?”
Howell flinched.
“I didn’t want to alarm the board prematurely.” Philip stood. “But as you can see, there is indeed cause for alarm. Due to the incompetence of our top management.”
Howell said, “Kirk — ”
“Not just Kirk. The management team of CEO and COO. A significant loss, and they’re now trying to blame me.”
Next to Edie, Bethany turned white. Edie put a hand on her arm and tried to salvage the situation. “Your figures are wrong,” she said. “This loss is not what the accounting database shows.”
“Oh?” Philip raised a brow at her. “You’ve been mucking about in the data, Edie?”
Her blood boiled. He’d neatly pinned her into being in the wrong, again. Fury almost drove her to blurt she hadn’t changed anything. Honest, forthright — and implying she could have criminally altered the figures, exposing her throat to Philip, who was just waiting for her to blunder.
Bethany saved her. “Mr. Howell asked Ms. Rowan to extract the annual profit directly from the data.”
Philip’s grin turned feral. “Ladies and gentlemen, this only proves my point. Get rid of the cheating, lying deadwood. Remove Howell and his bedmates here.” He waved at Edie and Bethany.
Edie glared.
Philip smiled nastily. “I mean bedmate only in the political sense, of course. But this disgrace has gone on long enough. I move to wipe the slate clean. Get rid of these three, and hand over the reins of HHE to more … capable hands.” He opened his palms to the board.
There was a deathly silence. Edie’s heart hammered as she waited for someone, anyone, to speak out against Philip’s monstrous suggestion. The Feds sat like statues, but she could feel the weight of their stares.
Howell Senior feebly cleared his throat. “I don’t … but if that’s what the board wants.” He didn’t seem to be breathing well. “I move — ”
The door banged open. Heads turned.
Edie felt the fierce masculine presence, practically heard the raw, primitive call of the savage beast. When she looked up it was with a smile.
Everett strode into the room.
• • •
Philip whirled. “You were fired, Kirk. Get out.”
Everett ignored him. “Let me come to the point. I have discovered evidence of a crime against this company.”
The silent men in black turned toward him. They were listening.
“Your crime, Kirk.” Philip’s face was red with barely controlled fury. “With your conspirator Howell.”
Howell Senior held up one hand. “Sit, Sedgwick. Kirk. How did you get this new evidence? You left over a week ago.”
“I’ve had access to it all along. But it only made sense after I put it together with information Ms. Rowan gave me while we were stranded.”
“You see?” Philip slapped the table as he sat. “Kirk admits they’re co-conspirators.”
“I admit I have respect for Ms. Rowan’s abilities,” Everett said smoothly. “And so should you. You see, I thought the loss numbers were faked. Ms. Rowan’s information pointed out an alternative. Ms. Rowan, would you please show the board what you found?”
She’d given him an alternative? She didn’t know where Everett was going with this and nearly said so. Stopped herself. No, she trusted him. She passed around her printout.
“Thank you. Ms. Rowan’s numbers are taken directly from the general ledger. The bottom line shows a modest profit of $1 million. But Mr. Sedgwick’s numbers show a loss of $10 million.” He raised one brow at Philip. “Why is that, Mr. Sedgwick?”
Philip spluttered. “You can be sure that I’ll look into it!”
“Thank you. But I already have.”
“Delving into company files after you were fired? I’ll have you arrested.”
Whispers broke out, and the two Feds started to get to their feet.
“No, you won’t.” Everett didn’t even raise his voice to quell all action. “Ladies, gentlemen, please note the difference between Ms. Rowan’s total and Mr. Sedgwick’s. $11 million. That number is significant. Care to tell us why, Mr. Sedgwick?
“I can’t imagine.” Philip sneered. “Get it, imagine? Because that’s all this is, imagination.”
“Hardly.” Everett slapped another paper on the table, directly in front of Howell Senior. “This is the history for a certain property, purchased six months ago by Philip Sedgwick — for $5.6 million. Not his primary residence, by the way. Paid in full.”
“So I bought a second house.” Philip glared at Everett. “You have no proof of anything wrong.”
“No.” Everett strolled around the perimeter of the room, loose-limbed, superbly unconcerned. “But Petra Sedgwick does. Six months ago, that same amount — $5.6 million — went missing from her accounts. She’s sole owner of a very lucrative international boutique that designs and sells children’s clothes, and an heiress besides. She ordered a full audit and her accountant discovered that in addition to the $5.6 million, $150,000 had been siphoned off monthly for the last three years. The total amount missing — $11 million. Strangely, before Petra could dig any farther and find the perpetrator, the money … reappeared.”
“So you have nothing,” Philip said. “Nothing but coincidence and innuendo.”
“On the contrary. When I heard about Petra’s missing money, I suggested to her that she instead hire an investigations firm to dig into Mr. Sedgwick’s movements and finances for the last three years.”
“Foul!” Philip’s fisted his hands on the table as his nonchalance slipped. “Our family’s money is none of your concern.”
“Family money? Please. Don’t you mean your wife’s money? She’s the billionaire, with an ironclad prenup. Her detectives discovered that Mr. Sedgwick has an illegitimate child. He’s been paying support for the past three years and recently bought that house, in which to install his mistress and their child.”
“You liar.” Philip’s face went an alarming shade of red.
Everett spun. “Am I?” He strode to the table and stabbed Philip’s report. “The loss was meant to seem faked. But it’s real. Because you embezzled $11 million from HHE to pay off the money you stole from you wife. Not very smart of you, stealing it in one chunk. Then you diverted blame onto management here, in a power play to grab the reins for yourself.”
“Liar!”
“Names, Philip?” Everett gently shook his head. “Mr. Howell. I don’t belong to this board anymore, so I can only suggest you restrict Mr. Sedgwick’s access while you get a full audit of the books. Thank you for your time.” He turned to go.
“One moment, Kirk.” Howell Senior was blinking rapidly. “How did you figure this out?”
“Ms. Rowan told me a few weeks ago about a scandal at Sedgwick’s previous company. Where there’s smoke, there’s usually fire. I dug into public records and found one house in Philip and Petra’s name. Then I found the second house in Sedgwick’s name only, and I called Petra. When I told her what I had found, she was more than happy to supply her details. By the way, Sedgwick, you’ll be hearing from her lawyers soon.”
With that, Everett spun and swept out, Edie’s Tarzan and shining knight all in one.
• • •
Faces around the table turned to Philip, expressions dark.
“I assure you, ladies and gentlemen … ” Philip’s voice cracked. He coughed, tried again. “This is a mistake.”
Howell Junior’s smile gleamed in his narrow face. “Oh, it’s a mistake, all right. Yours. Did you really think you’d be able to step into the presidency of HHE with your sly rumors and backstabbing?” Howell used his words like a knife. “I’ve heard some rumors of my own, Sedgwick. Care to comment on who your mistress is? Remember how you got an employee pregnant at your last company, and then fired her? Did you know she sued the company and nearly bankrupted them?”
“Greedy bitch,” Philip spat. “She wasn’t satisfied with that money. Her baby’s father had to pay her too.”
Edie gasped, putting it together. “Philip … Aurora … you?”
“You can’t prove anything.” Philip’s eyes gored Howell. “No one can ever prove who the father was. The Rowan woman stampeded over the tracks.”
Edie paled.
Philip turned a smile, shark-like, on her. “Oh, yes, my dear, you were very effective in distracting management. They were so busy trying to deal with your self-righteous mayhem, they never had time to discover who was really to blame. But it wasn’t me.” He winked.
Edie wished she could disappear into the floor.
“And then you were hired here, where you could screw things up for Everett Kirk, that smug bastard. Which you did, so well.” He laughed.
“You got me hired here, Philip.” Edie blinked stinging eyes. “You did it.”
“Years of waiting, but you were the thorn that finally felled the mighty Everett Kirk. Then it was only a matter of sweeping aside Junior.” Philip smirked. “But it wasn’t me that did it.”
“That’s enough, Sedgwick,” Howell said. “It was you and we’ll find proof. Or they will.” He nodded at the men in black suits. “In the meantime I invite you to leave. Now.”
The men rose and came around the table to stand, one on each side of Philip, waiting.
“You’re history, Howell.” Philip surged to his feet. “I’m the clever one. I’ve got all the right things, the right wife, the right home, the right — hey!”
Howell Junior leaped to his feet, steamed around the table, grabbed Philip by the arm and hustled him out the door. The Feds followed. As they walked out of the boardroom, Philip tried to wriggle back in but Junior slammed the door in Philip’s face. Then he turned and slapped his hands together in a satisfied done.
“Bravo, Houghton,” Howell Senior said. “Ladies and gentlemen, come to order. We need to discuss the damage that traitor has done.”
Edie slipped out of her chair, out of the conference room.
She was horrified. Philip had gotten her a job here, not because she was a wonderful manager.
But because she was a total jerk.
Eyes burning, she turned the opposite direction from the retreating tall backs in black herding an unbowed Philip, and returned to her cubicle. There, she reached for the desk phone, but stopped herself. This was personal. Instead, she dug her cell phone from her purse.
She called Everett. Maybe he hadn’t left the building yet. Maybe he was waiting for her somewhere. Maybe …
He picked up, and before she could say a word shouted, “Edith Ellen Rowan, what the hell did you think you were doing?”
“Rats, Everett. What the rats did I think I was doing. And hello to you too.” She was inordinately comforted just hearing his voice.
“What the iguana did you think you were doing, I don’t care! Why didn’t you leave Philip Sedgwick to me? Dammit, Edie, that’s why I quit when I did. I was trying to protect you.”
He’d been trying to protect her? Edie blinked scratchy eyes. “I didn’t do much. Howell did most of it. How did you know the backstabber was Philip?”
“Please.” The old arrogance was back in full force. “Once I’d left the cesspool of corporate politics and cleared my head it was simple enough to figure out. COO is next in line for the presidency, certainly, but right after that is VP of Finance. Howell’s nasty, but he’s a vulture. He’d only prey on me after I was dead. Sedgwick is the praying mantis.”
“They’re female,” Edie said.
A beat. “Praying mantises are female?”
“The cannibalistic ones are.”
“Edie, it was just an analogy. And not the point. The point was, I was trying to keep you from being implicated in this mess.” His voice hardened. “But there you were, in the center of all the trouble yet again.”
Her body drained of blood. “Everett, I’m sorry.”
“Sorry won’t turn back time, Edie.”
There was an awful silence.
She cleared her throat. “But Everett … now that Philip’s gone … ” She had called Everett for a reason, a reason she’d barely dared to think. Now after hearing his hard tone, it took all her courage to say it. “You could come back. You could be president again — ”
“No. I am never coming back to HHE.”
Her heart broke. She didn’t blame him for not wanting to work there anymore, but she’d hoped … but no. He didn’t want to return for her, either. “Oh. Of course.” Shoulders slumping, she hung up.
Then she typed out a short letter of resignation. There was nothing here for her anymore either. Leaving the letter on Howell’s desk, she gathered her few things and left HHE forever.