So I stepped aside from the doorway and looked down the hall.
“Come in,” I said.
That was when the man behind me walked in.
Navy blazer. State ID. Leather case in hand.
Gerald Vance, senior compliance inspector for the Illinois Board of Independent Education.
He took one look at the open laptop on my island, the scattered files, the cabinets Bianca had clearly forced open, and then at the glowing security logs on the wall monitor.
His expression shifted—first pale, then furious.
He turned toward them and shouted, “Lock the doors.”
My mother blinked. “What?”
He didn’t even acknowledge her.
“Nobody moves,” he barked. “You’re going to prison.”
And in that instant, everything changed.
Because my sister thought she had trashed my apartment.
She had actually broken into a regulated records site during an active state audit.
Three days earlier, I had agreed to host the inspection in my penthouse office because my downtown suite was under renovation, and the Board insisted on reviewing original compliance backups in person.
Normally, I would never allow confidential student records into my home. But Marrow Learning Group handled private tutoring placements, specialized assessments, and state-funded scholarship records for dozens of families across Illinois. My servers were encrypted, my document room secured, and the inspection was supposed to be routine—sampling records, checking audit trails, confirming compliance.
Routine.
Until my mother gave Bianca access.
As Gerald moved through the space, his eyes tracked everything—the entry logs, open drawers, my desk, the still-active compliance terminal. On the screen, right where Bianca had been clicking blindly, was the audit dashboard: scholarship identifiers, accommodation reports, restricted student data tied to minors.
That’s why he shouted.
Not because a lamp was broken.