Chapter 39 Taking Care of Sarah
Taking Care of Sarah
Harper stared at her laptop screen, cursor blinking in the empty email draft. She’d opened it three times in the past week and closed it without typing a word.
In the week since the articles went live, she’d been busy tying up loose ends at work—transferring leads, closing story pitches, officially winding everything down before she went on leave. But one name kept nagging at her conscience: Sarah Chen.
Harper exhaled, resting her elbows on the table. She’d faced down corrupt politicians, billionaire CEOs, and palace aides with diplomatic immunity. But this—writing to Sarah—felt different. More personal. More loaded.
What did you say to someone who’d set her life on fire for your story? Who’d done the right thing, and gotten burned for it?
Her fingers hovered over the keyboard. Then, finally, she typed:
Harper: Sarah, it’s Harper from The Chronicle. I’ve been thinking about you and hoping you’re doing well. Would you like to meet for coffee? I’d love to catch up.
She hit send before she could talk herself out of it.
The reply came an hour later.
Sarah: I’d like that very much.
The café in Bloomsbury was quiet on a Wednesday afternoon, just a few students with laptops and an elderly man reading a newspaper.
Harper arrived early and chose a corner table, checking her phone nervously.
She’d interviewed CEOs and politicians without breaking a sweat, but somehow this felt more important.
Sarah appeared in the doorway, scanning the room before spotting Harper. She looked tired—professionally dressed but with the slightly worn expression of someone who’d been job hunting without success.
“Harper,” Sarah said, approaching with a cautious smile.
“Sarah, thank you for coming.” Harper stood to embrace her, noting how thin she’d gotten. “Coffee? Tea? My treat.”
“Coffee would be lovely.”
Harper returned with two cups and settled across from her. Sarah wrapped her hands around the mug as if drawing warmth from it.
“I should have reached out sooner,” Harper began. “I’ve been thinking about you constantly, but I didn’t know… I wasn’t sure if you’d want to hear from me.”
Sarah looked surprised. “Why wouldn’t I want to hear from you?”
“Because my investigation cost you your job,” Harper said bluntly. “I asked you to trust me, to give me information that would expose corruption, and now you’re unemployed because of it.”
“Harper, stop.” Sarah’s voice was firm. “I gave you that information because it was the right thing to do. Charles Hawthorne was stealing from people who desperately needed help. I couldn’t stand by and watch that happen.”
“But you lost everything—”
“I lost a job. Working for a corrupt organization.” Sarah’s eyes flashed with conviction. “Do you know what I would have lost if I’d stayed silent? My ability to sleep at night. My self-respect. The knowledge that I helped prevent more people from being hurt.”
Harper felt her throat tighten. “How are you managing? Financially, I mean?”
Sarah’s expression softened. “It’s been… challenging. The Foundation just fired me. Officially for ‘restructuring,’ but we both know why. I’ve started looking for jobs, but…” She shrugged. “It’s a pretty bad market right now.”
Harper leaned forward. “Sarah, I want to help. Not out of guilt, but because you deserve better than struggling after doing something so brave.”
“I don’t need pity—”
“Just hear me out.” Harper pulled out her phone. “I have a friend, Ethan Klein. He’s in tech, but he networks with sustainable investment funds. One of his contacts runs a fund focused on ethical development projects.”
Sarah raised an eyebrow. “Okay…”
“His name is Jonathan, and he’s looking for a Head of Financial Controls and Compliance. The salary is significantly better than the Foundation, the work is exactly your expertise, and he specifically wants someone who’s demonstrated they’ll do the right thing even when it’s costly.”
“This is for real?” Sarah asked, voice barely above a whisper.
“Very real. Jonathan built his fund by turning down investments that didn’t meet his ethical standards.
He once rejected a billion-dollar Qatari investment over human rights concerns.
” Harper smiled. “He’s not making pity hires, Sarah.
He needs someone with your skills and your principles.
Ethan told him about what you’ve done and he’s keen to meet you, if you’re interested. ”
Sarah was quiet for a long moment, tears forming in her eyes. “I’ve been starting to wonder if I made a mistake. If I should have kept quiet, kept my job…”
“Did you make a mistake?” Harper asked gently.
“No,” Sarah said immediately. “Charles was hurting people. Real people who needed help. Children who needed medical care, communities that needed clean water. I couldn’t live with staying silent.”
“Then you have your answer.” Harper reached across the table to squeeze Sarah’s hand. “And you have an opportunity to keep helping people, but in a position where your ethics are an asset, not a liability.”
Sarah smiled—the first genuine smile Harper had seen from her. “Harper, I don’t know how to thank you.”
“You don’t need to,” Harper said. “Good people shouldn’t have to suffer for doing the right thing. Not if I can help it.”
As they parted ways outside the café, Sarah turned back to Harper.
“You know what Charles used to say? That everyone had a price. That given enough pressure or enough money, anyone would compromise their principles.”
“And?”
“He was wrong,” Sarah said simply. “Some things can’t be bought. And some people won’t be silenced.”
Harper watched her walk away, shoulders straighter than when she’d arrived, and felt something settle in her chest. Justice wasn’t just about punishment—it was also about making sure the brave were rewarded.
She pulled out her phone and texted Ethan.
Harper: Talked to Sarah. She’s perfect for Jonathan’s job. Thank you for your help finding something.
The response came immediately.
Ethan: Good people deserve good things. Besides, someone has to help you keep the world’s conscience in working order.
Harper smiled as she headed home, thinking about Sarah’s new beginning and the way good people had a habit of landing on their feet when other good people were looking out for them.
It was exactly the kind of ending Charles Hawthorne would never have understood—and exactly the kind of world Harper wanted to help build through her reporting.