Blamed for Millions: My Office Betrayal / Chapter 7: Audit Crisis and Passing the Baton
Blamed for Millions: My Office Betrayal

Blamed for Millions: My Office Betrayal

Author: Robert Jackson


Chapter 7: Audit Crisis and Passing the Baton

But na Zainab from HR first chop am, not Sade.

Zainab own fast, sharp, like Lagos danfo.

Early morning, Marketing Director, face strong, call Musa, Zainab, and other managers enter oga office.

Everybody dey wonder—na who offend oga today?

Turns out one European client come do factory audit.

Oga dem come from Germany, dey carry big file, dey snap picture like police.

The labour dispatch company wey Musa bring, collabo with one technical school principal, scam students come work for factory as ‘interns.’

Dem even dey print ID card with Biro, as Amaka gist me later.

Each student even pay 200 naira for internship.

Na so poverty dey bite people for town. My heart pain me.

Normally, we dey pay third-party temps 40,000–50,000 per month. Who know say these people shameless reach, chop the wage, still collect money from the children.

Some of the children dey stay for uncompleted building, dey eat eba without soup. E pain me well.

During audit, auditor jam these students, suspect say na child labour. After interviews, dem find out some technical students never even reach 16—na pure child labour.

Na police dem suppose call that day. Auditor face change.

Worse, dem never pay them.

Children dey cry, dey complain to HR. Amaka dey console one girl for reception.

Auditor vex, stop the audit immediately. That night, European supply chain director send official email suspend all cooperation, demand Sales Director explain.

The email land, everybody dey shake. Oga no fit sleep, phone dey ring like fire alarm.

Child labour and wage wahala na big offence. ‘Suspension’ mean our own don finish.

If e enter government level, na EFCC or NAPTIP fit land for company.

Auditor even talk say he go report us to local government and to industry people for Europe.

European people no dey joke with pikin matter.

Sales Director vex, no fit talk.

E head dey hot, e just dey wipe sweat. Him tie don loose.

He tell Musa and Zainab, “My flight to Europe na tomorrow. You two go explain to them.”

He point finger, voice loud. E no get time for slow talk.

Musa jump, “Director Bolaji, na HR dey handle wage and employee check. I no know anything.”

He fold hand, shift seat. E no wan carry wahala.

Zainab shock. “Musa, that one no fair. We dey pay labour company every month, and I ask for interns’ ID info. I tell you to follow up, abi I no talk?”

She dey near tears. She dey struggle for air, voice dey break.

“Musa, na your work to verify employees. You no do am well, true or false?”

She dey tap table, dey wait answer.

Zainab wan argue, but oga, face like thunder, cut in, “Enough! Find way explain to client.”

He stand up, slam table. Everybody jump small.

Director Bolaji join, “Yes, solve am first.”

He adjust glasses, face dey serious.

In the end, oga call all management for meeting to brainstorm.

The meeting last reach midnight. Some people sleep for office.

After hours, we settle on this:

First, na third-party labour company chop the interns’ money.

Dem arrange report, write am like say na pure accident.

Second, the audit just happen as HR dey verify intern IDs—na transition period, pure coincidence.

Everybody dey form innocent, dey act like person wey police catch for Agege.

Director Bolaji curse as he go pack for client meeting.

He no even carry jacket. E just carry file and vex.

Oga glare at Zainab. “You still fit be HR Manager? If we lose this client, pack your load go.”

E point door, Zainab just dey shake head.

With that, he chase everybody.

We file out. Sade dey whisper, 'E don red.'

I see Zainab, face just dead—no be the same person wey dey ask Old Bayo for meeting how much chop money I dey collect.

Her mouth dey dry, she no fit look person for face.

As we dey waka go, she pull me aside.

She hold my hand, dey squeeze.

“This labour dispatch company na wahala. The one you dey use before better pass. I fit start dey find work. Na that Musa cause all this. I tell am this company no pure, he no gree.”

She dey nearly cry. I feel for her.

I no talk much—just console her small, then go back my office.

I tell her, 'No worry, better day go come.' But my mind no sure.

After all, I know say dem don call me Ifedike Half-a-Hundred-Million tire for back.

People fit forget my good, but dem no go forget that nickname quick.

This chapter is VIP-only. Activate membership to continue.

You may also like

HR Set Me Up to Steal My Millions
HR Set Me Up to Steal My Millions
4.7
After hustling for years to become the top sales earner, Ifeanyi's reward is a wicked HR plot to strip him of his hard-won commissions. Betrayed by his boss and forced to hand over his clients to a rookie, he's pushed to the wall—either resign for nothing or fight for every kobo he bled for. In Lagos, if you let them use your head, you go lose everything—will Ifeanyi outsmart their dirty game, or will the office politics swallow him whole?
Demoted for Rest: HR’s Nephew Stole My Seat
Demoted for Rest: HR’s Nephew Stole My Seat
4.8
After sacrificing my health with endless overtime, HR used my approved leave as excuse to disgrace me—demoting me so her own nephew, a clueless intern, could take my supervisor role. My sweat and loyalty became their stepping stone, while they tried to shut me up with small money. In this Lagos office, connection pass hard work—now, I must fight to reclaim my dignity or lose everything I’ve built.
He Forced Me to Sign an IOU—Now I Hold His Fate
He Forced Me to Sign an IOU—Now I Hold His Fate
4.8
When my shameless colleague made me sign an IOU over bukka pepper soup compensation, he thought he could bully me forever—even as my mother lay sick and layoffs loomed. But what he didn’t know: I hold the layoff list, and I’ve uncovered his darkest office secret. In this Lagos office, who laughs last truly laughs best.
Betrayed by My Bride, Played by Her Lover
Betrayed by My Bride, Played by Her Lover
4.9
After five years of loyalty, I discovered my fiancée’s secret affair with her married supervisor—complete with a hidden pregnancy and abortion she never confessed. As her family rushes our wedding, she smiles in my face while plotting behind my back, using me as her cover. Now, with evidence in hand, I must decide: expose their lies and shatter both families, or swallow the pain and keep living a lie?
The CEO Used Me, Then Dumped Me
The CEO Used Me, Then Dumped Me
4.9
Tunde gave everything to build his boss’s dream, only to be betrayed when success came knocking. After promises of big money and family security, he’s blindsided and replaced by blood ties. With his pride and future on the line, Tunde must fight to protect his name and reclaim his dignity in a world where trust is a dangerous game.
My Boss Stole My Bonus Money
My Boss Stole My Bonus Money
4.9
Kunle, the star salesman, hustles hard only to see his bonus stolen by office politics and a manager's family connection. Betrayed and frustrated, he battles shameless HR and faces down his bosses with Lagos street wisdom, risking everything to reclaim what’s his. In a city where respect is strategy and only the bold survive, Kunle must choose between dignity and his daily bread.
I Drained My Wicked Boss’s Fortune
I Drained My Wicked Boss’s Fortune
4.8
After years of suffering and humiliation, I emptied my cruel boss’s company account, leaving his proud family in ruins. They forced me to kneel and swallow pain—never knowing I held the real power to destroy everything they owned. Let them taste the bitterness of poverty, because today, the goat has bitten back.
Accused of Betrayal on IVF Day
Accused of Betrayal on IVF Day
4.6
On the morning of their IVF surgery, the doctor storms out to accuse him of sleeping with his wife—destroying months of hope and shaming him in public. But he knows the truth: since the treatments began, he and Morayo haven’t touched. Now, with the eggs gone and suspicion thick as harmattan fog, he must uncover the real secret behind his wife’s pain, or risk losing everything he’s fought for.
Crown Prince Gave My Shares to His Side Chick
Crown Prince Gave My Shares to His Side Chick
4.8
When Amarachi catches her cold-hearted fiancé, Crown Prince Kamsiyochukwu, flaunting his influencer 'canary' and gifting her the family shares meant for his real bride, the whole internet drags Amarachi as the villain. Betrayed by love, disgraced in public, and blamed by her own family, Amarachi must choose: beg for crumbs, or walk away and risk losing everything her mother suffered for. In Lagos, love is war—and only the bold survive.
Betrayal Inside Palm Grove
Betrayal Inside Palm Grove
4.9
Okafor, trusted fish farmer and supplier, faces brutal betrayal when his years of loyalty to Palm Grove Restaurant are crushed by the boss’s arrogant son. As his premium yellow croaker is rejected and his reputation threatened, Okafor must fight to protect his name and business before Lagos gossip destroys everything. In this city, loyalty is currency—but betrayal is everywhere.
He Caught Me Cheating in the Game
He Caught Me Cheating in the Game
4.8
I lied to my online boyfriend, pretending to be his loyal supporter—only to sneak into a promotion match with four Naija top players. But when he exposed our couple tag in front of the whole server, my secret life crashed, and his messages came hot like Lagos traffic. Now, my heartbreak is trending, my sister is using my account for revenge, and the whole country is watching as my ex and my family collide live on stream—who will lose face first?
Fired By My Oga, Set Up By His Son
Fired By My Oga, Set Up By His Son
4.9
Ebuka, a loyal company man, faces betrayal from his longtime boss and the boss’s ambitious son, losing his job and dignity overnight. As he’s pushed out and set up, Ebuka must fight for survival and justice in a Lagos world where loyalty means nothing and only the sharpest survive. His next move will decide whether he becomes another corporate casualty or turns the tables for a shocking last laugh.