Feeling completely burned out, I decided to take a long weekend by officially requesting leave for Thursday and Friday. Although I had plenty of vacation hours available, my boss reacted aggressively. He warned me that HR would punish me for not being a “team player” and claimed they were already looking for reasons to get rid of employees. Despite feeling intimidated, I followed company policy and took the time off.
The entire weekend was filled with anxiety. I was convinced I would return to work and face disciplinary action or even lose my job. When I arrived on Monday and saw a meeting request from the HR director waiting in my inbox, my fears only grew stronger. Expecting the worst, I walked into the meeting prepared to defend myself.
Instead, HR revealed something shocking. While reviewing attendance records connected to my leave request, they discovered multiple vacation approvals that appeared to have been submitted under my name over the previous two years. A closer investigation of the email metadata showed that I had never sent those requests at all. The approvals had actually been created by my boss.
The audit uncovered a long-running scheme in which my boss had used the names of several employees to approve fake leave for himself, allowing him to take hundreds of hours of unauthorized vacation while hiding the evidence. My legitimate leave request exposed inconsistencies in the records and triggered the investigation that brought everything to light. By the end of the week, HR thanked me for following company procedures, and the person leaving the office with a cardboard box was my boss—not me.