My sister-in-law kicked me out of my in-laws’ company half an hour later, I removed the entire database and left, the next day, in the middle of the chaos, they made me 99 calls: “The number dialed is not available”

My sister-in-law kicked me out of my in-laws’ company half an hour later, I removed the entire database and left, the next day, in the middle of the chaos, they made me 99 calls: “The number dialed is not available”

Levanté la vista hacia ella y asentí levemente, haciéndole una seña para que no preguntara más. No era que no confiara en ella, sino que a nuestro alrededor había demasiados oídos esperando captar cada palabra para ir a contárselo a Raquel.

Me senté y encendí el ordenador de la empresa por última vez. La pantalla se iluminó, mostrando la interfaz de gestión familiar. Antes de irme, revisé por última vez todos los datos propiedad de Hogar Morales. Los contratos de los clientes estaban intactos. Los pedidos, el inventario, las declaraciones de impuestos, las facturas electrónicas, los datos de deudas, los calendarios de entrega, todo estaba en su sitio en el servidor de la empresa. No toqué nada relacionado con la legalidad, porque entendía muy bien la diferencia entre irse con honor y convertirse en la culpable.

Pero lo que era mío era diferente. Abrí mi carpeta personal, donde guardaba las hojas de cálculo de análisis que durante años solo yo había creado, modificado y utilizado: la tabla de beneficios reales después de deducir los costes ocultos, el archivo de alerta de pérdidas por grupo de productos, el modelo de precios que ayudaba a la empresa a saber qué referencias comprar y cuáles descartar, la lista de verificación para detectar mercancías con etiquetas falsificadas, el script que conciliaba automáticamente el inventario y la lista de proveedores fiables que tanto me había costado filtrar entre cientos de contactos del mercado.

Esas cosas no estaban en la descripción de mi puesto de trabajo, no estaban en el servidor de la empresa y la familia de mi marido nunca me había pagado un céntimo extra por ellas. Miré la pantalla durante un buen rato y luego eliminé cada carpeta una por una, sin prisa, sin que me temblara la mano. Cada vez que pulsaba confirmar era como cortar un hilo más que me había atado a este lugar.

No estaba saboteando la empresa. Solo me llevaba lo que era mío. Raquel quería que me fuera con las manos vacías, pero olvidó que hay cosas que no están escritas en un contrato y aun así son el alma de toda la maquinaria.

Después cerré sesión en todas mis cuentas personales del ordenador: mi correo electrónico privado, mi almacenamiento en la nube, el software de notas, la aplicación de conciliación de datos cuya licencia había comprado yo misma. Todo fue desinstalado por completo. Saqué el USB de seguridad del puerto y lo guardé en mi bolso. Los cuadernos con los manuales de operaciones también los coloqué ordenadamente en una caja de cartón. En esas páginas estaban mis seis años de experiencia, los errores que casi hicieron que la empresa perdiera clientes y la forma de gestionar situaciones que para un extraño solo eran cifras frías.

Daniel, el técnico de sistemas, estaba a unos pasos con el rostro pálido. Era un chico de pocas palabras, pero ese día no pudo contenerse. Se acercó y preguntó en voz muy baja:

“¿De verdad te vas? Si te vas, ¿quién se encargará del panel de control de beneficios?”

I looked at Daniel. In his eyes there was a genuine concern, not a feigned curiosity. I replied calmly:

“Whoever signed my dismissal will know how to make it work.”

Daniel squeezed his lips and said nothing more. Perhaps he understood that, from that moment on, I would no longer be there to plug the holes that they were bent on digging.

At 11:30 I finished collecting my things. A small cardboard box was enough for six years in this place. I hugged her and left the work area along the hallway. Some employees greeted me with a very discreet head tilt. Some had red eyes, others wanted to say something, but they were contained. I didn’t blame them. Everyone needs a salary to live. Not everyone can stand up to a family that has both money and power in the company.

When I walked past the management office, Rachel was already at the door. She crossed her arms with her lips painted in a deep red and said loudly deliberately for the entire office to hear:

“If you leave, go completely. Don’t think that without you it will sink.”

I stopped and turned to look at her. I could have said a lot of things. Each inflated expense, every overpriced order, could have brought to light every name of its relatives who had been bleeding the company in silence. But I didn’t say anything. There are lessons that people only learn when they pay the price for themselves.

I just responded very gently:

“I hope so too.”

Rachel’s smile on her lips froze. His face was overshadowed, but I gave no further explanation. I hugged my box and headed straight to the elevator, leaving behind a mixture of curious glances, pity and restlessness.

When I got to the lobby, the phone in my bag started vibrating non-stop. The messages of Beatriz, of Daniel, of Laura of customer service appeared one after the other. I knew they cared about me and I also knew they were afraid of what was to come. But at that time I didn’t answer to anyone. I needed to disappear long enough for my husband’s family to see for themselves the price of ignorance, so that they would face alone the company they boasted of saying they didn’t need me.

Before I went out the door, I opened my phone settings and forwarded all calls to the status of unavailable. Then I turned off my phone and put it in my bag.

Outside, the midday sun was falling on the building’s windows. I stopped for a few seconds, looking at the Home Morales sign hanging on high. Six years of my youth were there, but from that moment on it was no longer my responsibility. If my husband’s family called me 99 times or 999, all they would hear would be a cold, distant phrase:

“The number you have dialed is not available at this time.”

When I left the Hogar Morales building, I didn’t go home directly. I walked down the street that I knew too. I passed by the cafeteria where years ago I sat with Javier to plan the first orders. I went through the copy shop where I printed so many budgets for the customers. The midday sun was hitting the asphalt so bright that I had to squint, but what made my eyes sting was not the sun, but the memories of the last six years that came back to me like an old movie.

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