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OUT OF CURIOSITY, I UNCOVERED A DIRTY SCHEME BY THE COMPANY. THE FIRE ALARM SUDDENLY WENT OFF, EVERY DOOR IN THE BUILDING SLAMMED SHUT, AND I WAS TRAPPED WITH THE USB CONTAINING THE SECRET…


PART 1:

The ninth floor of Rheinbank Tower was always quiet on Saturday evenings. The desks were empty, the servers ran fast, and the fluorescent lights hummed, a sound David Achebe had grown used to over twelve years. He preferred it that way—on weekends, the building felt like his alone.

David was the only one here, as usual. The compliance department ran its deep queries when the trading systems were dormant, ensuring no disruptions. It was unglamorous work, left to someone like him, who didn’t mind the long, solitary hours.

Seated at his terminal, his sleeves rolled up, David checked the time. It was 19:42. He had been working on the quarterly audit for three hours.

The pattern started small, barely noticeable at first. David was reviewing disbursements from the Rheinfeld Stiftung, which funded educational programs across West Africa and Southeast Asia. Four hundred transactions each quarter, from eight thousand euros to several hundred thousand.

But something stood out. Identical transactions, €187,400, occurring exactly every fourteen days. Seven recipients: two in Luxembourg, three in the British Virgin Islands, two in Singapore. The organisations seemed legitimate on paper, but the filings were thin. The directors overlapped, and two Luxembourg entities shared the same registered agent.

David pulled the pattern back further: seventeen months, twenty-six cycles, €187,400 every two weeks. It was a deliberate, quiet system designed to stay below the internal review threshold. Someone inside the bank knew exactly where that limit was.

He calculated the total: €42,124,800. The number hit him hard. This wasn’t an error—it was a plan. And someone had orchestrated it, working carefully to avoid detection.

David saved the data and retrieved a USB drive from his drawer. It was department-issued, secure. He copied the full dataset, then slid the drive into his pocket. For a moment, he sat in the silence, staring at the glowing screen.

Then the fire alarm went off. But something was wrong.

This wasn’t the usual alarm. David had been through fire drills before. The usual high-low pulse was missing. This was a single, sustained tone, echoing through the building. Then a calm voice came through the PA system, announcing a gas leak and instructing everyone to stay on their floor until further notice.

David walked to the elevator. The indicator panels were dark. He pressed the call button. Nothing. The elevators were completely shut down.

He tried the south stairwell. The door didn’t move. It wasn’t locked—it was magnetically sealed. Someone had activated the lockdown function. But there was no active shooter.

He walked to the north stairwell. Same result. Silence behind the locked door.

David looked out the window. The street below was empty. No emergency vehicles. No signs of a gas leak. If this were real, there would have been a response by now. The street was eerily quiet.

He pulled the USB drive from his pocket again. They weren’t evacuating the building. They were containing it. And the timing was no accident—five minutes after he had copied the data. Someone knew exactly what he had found.

David looked at the emergency evacuation map. Both stairwells were locked. The elevators were down. The roof access was out of reach.

David had spent his career uncovering problems, documenting them meticulously. But this was no mistake. This was a trap. And now, he was trapped in it. Someone knew what he’d discovered—and they weren’t going to let him leave.
—–
David heard the footsteps before he saw the man.

The ninth floor of Rheinbank Tower was carpeted in a dull, grey fabric that swallowed sound. But the hallway connecting the elevator bank to the open-plan office had a strip of polished concrete, a recent addition during a renovation, where footsteps echoed clearly. The steady rhythm was deliberate, unhurried. Whoever it was knew exactly where they were going.

David stepped away from the emergency map, his fingers still brushing the USB drive in his pocket. He stood up but didn’t sit down. He waited.

The man came into view from the south corridor. He wore a Rheinbank security uniform — dark navy, logo on the chest, a radio clipped to his left shoulder, a keycard on a lanyard. His appearance was impeccable. The uniform looked too new, too pressed, the creases sharp and the boots too clean for someone who walked the floors daily.

“Good evening,” the man greeted, his German precise, but with a noticeable South African accent. “You’re the compliance officer? Working late?”

“Weekend audit,” David replied. “I’m on the schedule.”

“Of course.” The man smiled, a polite, empty gesture. “I’m Krüger, weekend security rotation. I don’t think we’ve met.”

“We haven’t.”

Krüger looked around, casually assessing the floor like someone cataloguing exits. “You heard the announcement? Gas leak in the mechanical systems. We’re asking everyone to stay put while we confirm ventilation status.”

David narrowed his eyes. “How many people are in the building?”

“A few,” Krüger replied. He didn’t specify how many.

“The stairwell doors are magnetically locked,” David said.

Krüger didn’t flinch. “Standard procedure for a gas leak. Stairwells are ventilation shafts, so we lock them to prevent the gas from spreading. The fire service will confirm when it’s safe to open them.”

David didn’t respond immediately. It was a reasonable explanation, but it didn’t add up. He’d read the building’s safety protocols, and gas leaks required stairwells to remain open for evacuation. Stairwells were locked only in cases of active shooter situations.

He didn’t say anything.

Krüger stayed near the entrance, his posture still, his hand close to his radio. He stood like a man prepared to be there for a long time. “Need anything?” he asked. “Water? There’s a kitchen on this floor.”

“I’m fine.”

“It shouldn’t take long. The fire service usually arrives fast.”

David sat back at his desk, turning his attention to the screen. Krüger didn’t move. He stood in the corridor, his presence a silent wall between David and the south stairwell.

David thought about the USB drive in his pocket — about the €42 million, the seventeen months of careful transactions, the seven shell companies. And then about Krüger, who seemed too well-informed, too well-positioned, standing between him and the only exit on this side of the building.

He didn’t look at Krüger again. He pretended to review a file on his monitor, his mind racing. The north stairwell was still an option. It was on the other side of the floor, but it might be his only way out.

David waited eleven minutes. Long enough for Krüger to settle into a rhythm, to get comfortable with his stillness. Then, he stood up, grabbed his empty coffee mug, and walked toward the kitchen.

“Getting water,” he said, as though it were casual.

Krüger nodded, not moving.

The kitchen was a few paces away, hidden from Krüger’s sight. David filled the mug at the sink, drank it quickly, and set it down. He didn’t return to his desk. Instead, he passed the kitchen, the supply closet, and the dark conference rooms, heading toward the north corridor.

The north stairwell door was unlocked.

David pushed the bar. No resistance. It swung open with ease, revealing the concrete stairwell beyond. Emergency lighting flickered on, casting faint shadows down the stairs. He let the door close again and stood still.

The south stairwell was locked. Krüger was positioned in front of it. The north stairwell, however, was open, waiting. This wasn’t an oversight. Someone had locked one stairwell and left the other open for a reason.

David turned and walked away from the corridor. He didn’t head for the main hallway where Krüger stood. Instead, he walked down the hallway to the south fire escape — an emergency exit accessible through the utility corridor behind the server closet.

The fire escape door was locked, but not with the magnetic lock. It had an old deadbolt, the kind that had been installed when the building was first built. He looked at the fire axe mounted beside the door, behind a glass panel. He smashed the glass with his elbow, the sound sharp and unsettling in the quiet corridor. He waited. No footsteps. Krüger was still around two corners away.

David grabbed the axe, aimed it at the deadbolt, and struck three times. The metal bent and broke under the third strike. The door creaked open.

man escape building

He stepped into the fire escape stairwell. Narrow, dimly lit, and built for emergencies, the stairwell was unkempt, with no signs of recent use. The emergency lights cast an eerie orange glow as David moved down the stairs. Ninth floor. Eighth. The sound of his footsteps echoed against the concrete walls.

When he reached the seventh floor, the lights flickered and then went out.

Total darkness. No warning. Not even the faint glow of emergency bulbs. The silence was suffocating. David stood still, his hand gripping the railing, the fire axe still in his grasp.

Someone knew he had taken the fire escape. They knew he wasn’t in the north stairwell. And now, they had turned off the lights.

David listened to the building around him, the faint hum of distant machinery, the soft creak of cooling concrete, and the complete silence of the stairwell. The only thing he could hear was his own breathing.

The walls were closing in.

He moved his hand along the wall, felt the cold concrete beneath his fingers, and took one cautious step forward, determined to keep moving despite the sudden dark. He wasn’t going to stop now. He had to find out who was behind this — who had turned the building into a cage.
—–

In the pitch dark, David stood still, his hand pressed against the cold concrete wall, the taste of dust lingering in his mouth. He paused, letting his mind work through the situation.
The building was locked down. A guard had been stationed on his floor. One stairwell was left open, while the other was blocked, ensuring he’d make the wrong choice. All of this was to trap him—or more specifically, to trap what he was carrying—inside the building.
But holding him inside was only part of the challenge. The USB drive he carried was a duplicate. The original data was still stored on Rheinbank’s servers, and the query he’d run was logged in their system—timestamped, traceable, and linked to his credentials. They could erase the server records and clear his query logs. They could wipe the transaction history. It was likely happening right now. But the copy in his pocket—that was the one they couldn’t access remotely.
Unless they stopped him from transmitting it.
David stood on the seventh-floor landing, thinking about his phone. He had tried it the moment the alarm sounded—no signal. That wasn’t unusual for a stairwell made of reinforced concrete, but even on the ninth floor, near the windows, there was still no signal. The building’s wifi was down. The cellular signal was being blocked—likely by a jammer. It was illegal but effective, the kind of tool people who laundered forty-two million euros through a charitable foundation would see as a necessary investment.
They didn’t need to catch him. They didn’t need to take the USB drive from him. They only needed to keep him trapped until they had scrubbed the servers clean and made sure the drive in his pocket was the last copy. Once that was done, he’d be just another man in a building with a piece of plastic. And buildings could be searched, plastic could be found. But none of it would matter if the data never reached the outside world.
What he needed was a hardwired connection.
He knew this building well. Twelve years of weekend shifts, twelve years spent walking these floors when they were empty. The fifth floor housed the IT infrastructure—server rooms, network operations, the backup systems running on independent power. Rheinbank’s disaster recovery plan ensured that the servers would survive anything short of structural collapse.
Independent power. Hardwired connections. A physical Ethernet line that connected to the outside world via fiber optics buried beneath the street—a connection that no jammer could interfere with because it wasn’t wireless.
David descended two more floors in the dark, counting the steps—fourteen per flight. He had counted them once during a fire drill, out of the obsessive nature that made him good at his job. Seventh floor, fourteen steps, landing, turn, fourteen steps, sixth floor. Then the fifth.
He found the door by touch. The handle was unlocked—the fire escape doors on the lower floors didn’t have magnetic locks. The server room was at the end of the east corridor, behind a door requiring a keycard.
David had a keycard. Compliance officers had access to all floors because they needed to audit the entire system. He swiped the card, and the light turned green.
The server room was cool, dark, and humming with the sound of machines. Rack-mounted servers lined the walls, their status lights flickering green and amber in the darkness—the only lights still on, powered by the independent backup circuit. He located the network patch panel by the glow of the server LEDs. A row of Ethernet ports, each a physical connection to the outside.
He took out his phone, then the USB drive. He connected his phone to the Ethernet port using a cable from the patch panel—a standard RJ45 to USB-C adapter, the kind the IT department kept in a drawer beneath the panel. He knew it was there because he’d seen it during a server room audit in March.
The connection held. His phone detected the network—not through wifi, but via the wired connection running through the building’s fiber line, bypassing whatever jammer was blocking the wireless signal.
He opened his email, attached the files, and typed in three addresses: BaFin, Germany’s financial regulatory authority; a compliance attorney in London with whom he had worked on a previous audit; and a journalist at Handelsblatt whose coverage of Deutsche Bank he had followed for years.
He hit send.
The progress bar crawled slowly—the files were large, and the connection through the adapter was slow. He stood in the dark, watching the percentage tick up: 40, 55, 70, 88.
Sent.
He sent it again to all three, driven by a compliance officer’s instinct for redundancy. Then, he slipped the phone into one pocket and the USB drive into another. He stood there, in the hum of the servers, and exhaled, feeling for the first time in an hour like he could breathe again.
The data was out. Whatever happened next in this building, the data was out.

—–

He made his way down the final five floors in the dark, and by the time he reached the ground floor, the building had started to shift around him.

The fire escape dropped him into a maintenance corridor behind the lobby—a concrete hallway lined with electrical panels and other maintenance systems, the kind of space that tenants never get to see. Emergency lights glowed here, different from the ones he had descended through—these were on a separate circuit, independent of the upper floors. Dim orange bulbs in wire cages. It was enough light to see by.

He walked the length of the corridor to its end and pushed through a fire door into the lobby.

The lobby of Rheinbank Tower was framed by glass—tall, double-height glass walls on three sides, a polished stone floor, and a reception desk made of pale granite. At night, it was typically dark, illuminated only by the blue glow of security monitors and the sodium streetlights filtering through the windows. But now it was lit—bright, but not from inside. Red and blue lights. Vehicles.

The fire department had arrived.

Two fire trucks were stationed on the Taunusanlage, their lights flashing across the lobby glass in slow red waves. Firefighters in full gear moved along the sidewalk outside. A police car was parked askew at the curb. David could see a fire officer speaking into a radio by the building’s main entrance.

The building’s automated fire alarm system had functioned as designed. Regardless of the false information the security team had announced over the PA—whatever Krüger had said about gas leaks and safe evacuation routes—the building had detected the fire escape door being forced on the ninth floor, or the glass panel being broken, or the electromagnetic locks being triggered on doors that shouldn’t have been locked. The building had summoned help on its own.

David scanned the lobby. The security desk was empty. The monitors behind it displayed feeds from every floor—vacant hallways, empty stairwells, and the ninth floor where his coffee mug still rested on the kitchen counter. No Krüger. No second guard. No one.

They were gone. The moment real emergency services arrived—or the moment the data had been sent, or perhaps both—the false team had vanished. They had been quick. The lobby showed no signs of occupation: no coffee cups, no logbook entries, no evidence anyone had been behind that desk tonight except the real weekend guard, who David now suspected had been sent home early with a convincing excuse.

He walked to the front entrance. The glass doors were unlocked—the lobby operated on a timer, and the doors automatically unlocked when the fire alarm triggered, as required by fire code. The architects who built this place in the 1980s had understood that doors should open when the building is on fire.

The real doors opened. The false ones had been locked.

He pushed through the glass doors and into the crisp Frankfurt night. The air was fresh, a sharp contrast to the stale concrete of the stairwell. The sky to the east, above the river, was beginning to lighten—not yet dawn, but that deep blue just before the first light, the color that signals the night is nearly over.

A firefighter approached him. “Sir—were you in the building?”

“Yes,” David replied. “Ninth floor. I’m a Rheinbank employee.” He pulled out his ID badge and showed it.

“Were you alone?”

David glanced back at the tower. Every floor was dark except for the fifth, where the server room’s backup power kept the status lights blinking—a faint grid of green and amber visible behind the glass, barely noticeable. One floor lit up, revealing the evidence of what he’d done. The rest of the building stood empty and dark, as though nothing had ever happened.

“I was alone,” he said.

He stood there on the Taunusanlage, his phone in his left pocket and the USB drive in his right, watching the fire crew enter the building. The emails had been sent, each one three times. Nine copies of forty-two million euros worth of evidence, sitting in inboxes across three countries, time-stamped and untouchable.

The sky kept lightening. The city was beginning to stir—the first tram of the morning crossed the Friedensbrücke, its windows glowing yellow against the fading blue. The building stood behind him, glass and concrete, seventeen stories of architecture that someone had tried to weaponize, but in the end, it worked exactly as it was meant to.

David Achebe shoved his hands into his pockets and walked toward the river.

End.

 

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