There was a beautiful poetry about arriving fresh at work the following morning to an office full of groaning, baggy-eyed co-workers half of whom were almost cradling their head on their desks. The timing couldnβt have been better, either, given that awful photo that theyβd taken of me yesterday. I took far too much pleasure in making zero attempt to be considerate. Michelangelo nodded violently as I kicked my bottom drawer shut and sat down.
βGive me a break, Mini,β a voice droned from the other side of the partition. It sounded suspiciously like it was being mumbled through a forearm. βI have the worldβs worst hangover.β
And Iβm playing the worldβs smallest violin. βSorry,β I said, aware of just how un-sorry I sounded. I may have been grinning.
Being a global company meant that most of my important emails arrived overnight, and I had to spend a few minutes combing through them for anything of importance. It took more effort than usual today: some other poor sucker had drunk too much yesterday and passed out in a weird position on a bench. One of the reps had taken the lasso tool to the picture of him and pasted him into a series of settings, footy matches, Lady Gaga concerts, Centrelink office stairsβ¦ the list went on. The pictures were being circulated with serious subjects as headers so you opened them with no idea what you were about to see. My βdeleteβ key was certainly getting a workout.
There were actually some important emails in the mix, though. Frost was doing explorations in a couple of countries in Africa, and my best guess about the next assignment weβd all be on was to canvas for investors to establish mines there. I sat back in my chair and read through some of the PDFs, ignoring all the email notifications popping up from my own team. I wasnβt a big fan of marketing to investors β it was a really dry topic and I usually ended up using pretty much the same content and layout each time. On the other hand, it would mean scoring business trips to Botswana, and probably to New York again. That could be cool.
I had been trying to figure out the closest major airport to Botswana when hands drumming the petition behind me loudly made me jump. I swivelled towards the racket.
βHey, Marketing!β our executive marketing manager Jason boomed over the top of me. He was possibly the only person aside from the two CEOs who wasnβt known by a nickname, and thatβs because he was this imposing, extroverted man who everyone was a little afraid of. My usual interactions with him involved a combination of the following: him barking instructions at me on an airplane while hosties in the background were telling him to turn his mobile off, getting emails at 4am because heβd βjust had an idea about somethingβ and as a result I needed to change twenty pages of documents right now, and having him suddenly appear behind me out of nowhere to drop MRDs on my desk and casually suggest I clear my calendar for the next two weeks. The rumours were that he and the other co-CEO Sean Frost worked out together and Jasonβs biceps were so thick his shirt sleeves looked like they were about to tear open at the seams.
I must have been looking at them while he was thumping away at the partitions, because I made eye-contact with Sarah across the floor and she grinned at me. Two seconds later I got an email from her and the text read, βPretty sure youβre not his type…β. I snorted and replied, βWhat a coincidence, heβs not mine, either π.β Sarah raised her eyebrows at me, and I realized what I might have inadvertently implied in comparing myself to him. I didnβt get to correct that, though, because Jason started speaking.
βItβs that time of the month again,β Jason was calling. βAnd, no, I donβt mean where I get neurotic and start crying hysterically. Although you guys will be doing that pretty soon, judging by the number of contracts we need. Nope,β he leaned theatrically on the partition. βSales, management and of course, me, have picked teams for the next pitches and weβll be sending out an email in a sec with details. Some of you might be on more than one team. Sorry about that. Not really, though. If you have questions, Iβll be in my office for once.β He gave us an exaggeratedly macho wave, and then disappeared into said office.
I looked back over towards where Sarah was, but she had already been accosted by a couple of other reps. I watched them for a few seconds to figure out if they were just passing by, but from Sarahβs expression it was actually business. To her it was, anyway. The two men were watching her white blouse a little too closely, it was both disgusting and fascinating. She noticed it, too, and didnβt seem to care. She just tapped her pen on her glossy lips and read whatever document theyβd handed her.
Someone groaned across from me. βYouβve got to be kidding me,β he said aloud. βIβm on investment in Canada again.β
I glanced over at him; he was leaning up to his computer screen with a frown on his face. At the same time I realized everyone else was doing the same thing, my computer chimed and a new email alert appeared. I figured it was the email Jason had been talking about. Leaning up to the screen myself, I scrolled down the list of names for each project.
My name wasnβt anywhere.
I must have missed it. I opened the search field and typed βLeeβ, and it retuned no results. I sat back for a second, my stomach dropping. Up until that point, I hadnβt given much thought to my exchange with Diane Frost yesterday. Right now, though, thatβs all I could think about. Fuck, had my colour scheme in that brochure really been that bad? Iβd heard of people whoβd failed to perform being transferred out of marketing into admin, but Iβd never had anyone criticize my work before. Sure, management sometimes wanted me to change a few things, but it was never serious. I couldnβt lose my job, I couldnβt. I was my job. I took a deep breath to try and steady myself. Chill, Min, just chill. They probably just accidentally didnβt assign you, Iβm sure itβs happened before. There are a lot of reps here, they probably just missed you. Despite trying to reassure myself there was probably a boring explanation for why my name wasnβt there, I had a bad feeling.
While I was busy stressing the fuck out, my chair spun around. It was Sarahβs arm on the spine on it. βCan I borrow you for a second?β she asked with urgency, and then ushered me over away from the floor before halting in front of me. βWow, Min,β she said, glancing back towards everyone to make sure no one could hear us. βWho else knows?β
I gaped down at her, my heart still pounding from the email. Did she know something I didnβt? βWho else knows what?β
She leaned in a little. βYou know, that thing with Jasonβ¦β
I had hardly spoken to Jason in at least three weeks, I was pretty certain that nothing had happened between us that would get me in trouble. Especially not something that Sarah would know about before I did. Just in case, though, I tried frantically to rehash my last few contacts with him to figure out if Iβd done something wrong. βWhat thing? What did you hear?β
She just looked blankly at me for a second as if she had no idea what I was talking about. βMin, you sent me an email like five minutes ago.β
Sent an email likeβ¦ oh! Oh. That email where I might accidentally have implied I was gay by comparing myself with Jason. She thought Iβd just come out to her? That was it? I was so relieved I laughed. It was about four hundred times better than what I thought I was going to hear: about some awful transgression Iβd made that had resulted in me being ejected from Marketing. βGod!β I said. βNo. No, no. Iβm notβ¦ Iβm sure I told you about Henry, didnβt I? Wow, I thought you were going to tell me something else!β
βWell, yeah, I knew you two were together, butβ¦β She didnβt finish that sentence, shaking her head and laughing along with me. βJeez, Min, I was likeβam I the last one to know about this? You said it so casually. Whoops.β She took a deep breath. βSorry for freaking you out. Anyway, which project did you get?β
I stopped laughing and winced, remembering what Iβd been worrying about. βThatβs actually what I thought you were going to ask me about. My name isnβt on the project list.β
Sarahβs brow dipped. βLike, not at all?β I shook my head, and she blew a gust of air out through her lips. βWell, there are thirty of us. Maybe itβs an accident.β
βMaybe,β I said, doubting it. βWhich project did you get?β
She rolled her eyes. βTwo, unfortunately. Iβm doing web analytics and social media for private consumers again. I need to stop doing a good job with that.β I remembered a year or two ago Sarah, who had previously been a Facebook evangelist, announcing that marketing had put her off Facebook forever. I never saw her online anymore. βAlso Iβm on another project that doesnβt have specs yet. Itβs called βPinkβ, though, so it might just been one of Jasonβs really unfunny jokes.β
I had opened my mouth to make a snide comment about that, but before I did we were interrupted. βHey, Mini!β someone shouted across the floor. We both looked out towards the voice. A rep from my workstation was holding his phone with the handset pressed across his shoulder. βPhone!β
I looked back at Sarah. She gestured towards the rep, her elaborate bracelets jingling. βMaybe thereβs your answer?β
I swallowed. βItβs been nice knowing you,β I said darkly.
She laughed. βI bet itβs just a mistake,β she said, touching my arm amicably like she usually did to everyone. Because I had been distracted, though, I wasnβt ready to try and feign being cool about it. She noticed my unease and quickly put it back down by her side, making me feel so awkward. I could have kicked myself. She didnβt mention it, and I didnβt mention it, but I just felt like Iβd failed a test.
I had to say something quickly so we could pretend it hadnβt happened. βI hope itβs a mistake.β
Thankfully, she just let the whole arm thing slide. βIβm sure thatβs it. But, hey, if itβs not and you are in trouble, me and some of the girls from Risk are going for drinks at Harbour View tonight,β she offered. I knew the girls she was talking about; they were basically a catalogue of fully-clothed Victoriaβs Secret models whoβd been friends since university, and Sarah fit right in with them. My hesitancy must have shown on my face, because she added, βI swear, Min, one of these days Iβm going to get you to come with us. You canβt work twenty-four seven.β
βIs that a double-dare?β I asked as jokingly as I could with a really forced smile, not really wanting to explain what it felt like tacking along with a group of people who knew each other really well. Iβd rather let them assume it was purely because I was a workaholic. Four years since I moved to Sydney and I still felt like the new exchange student sometimes.
We said our goodbyes and I went over to the rep who was sighing heavily and impatiently fidgeting. βTook you long enough,β he said, passing me the handset of his phone over the partition and sitting back in front of his emails. He muttered something about women and talking.
I resisted the urge to make a dry comment on the extreme importance of catching up on the latest celebrity goss, just putting the phone to my ear. βHello, Min speaking.β I glanced over towards Sarahβs desk, sheβd sat down and was chatting with the rep that sat opposite her.
βMin Lee?β I didnβt recognize the voice, but I made an affirmative noise anyway. βIf youβre free, Diane Frost would like to see you for a moment in her office.β
That made me pay attention to the phone; my stomach dropped as soon as I heard that name. Diane Frost wanted to see me in her office? Fuck, my brochures, they were that bad.
I looked up at her office, but all I could see was that bun and a perfectly coiffured hairline peeking over her monitor as she worked. She didnβt look angry, just busy. That didnβt stop me from being able to feel my pulse thumping in my neck, though. I looked around to see if anyone else was listening in; they werenβt. βIβll be right there,β I said, passing the handset back to the rep that it belonged to. Then, I panicked.
The voice ended up belonging to Dianeβs personal assistant. She must have been new because I hadnβt seen her around, and she already looked like she was ready to have a nervous breakdown. Her desk was covered in manila folders. She stopped what she was doing with them to smile professionally and indicate the door to Dianeβs office, which was open. βGo right ahead, sheβs waiting for you.β
Behind the girl were floor-to-ceiling windows which had a spectacular view of Sydney, all the way down to the road thirty-six stories below. I stared bleakly out of them as I walked past. Jumping out of them was probably out of the question. Pity, because it was preferable to having to tell Mum that Iβd lost my job.
I donβt think Iβd ever been actually inside Dianeβs office before. It had the same big and airy feeling as my apartment, with the same lack of furniture. In this case, the only furniture was bookshelves along the wall and a mahogany desk with matching leather chairs in the centre. There was the same amazing skyline outside, but I couldnβt pay any attention to it because Diane was seated in front of it and I was too scared of what she was about to tell me.
She glanced up from the screen as I entered. βMin,β she said, gesturing at the leather chairs facing her desk. βTake a seat, please.β
Shit, she sounded really cold. I couldnβt tell if she looked cold, though, because I didnβt want to come across like I was staring. I just smiled and sat across from her, pretending to be unfazed about the CEO wanting to see me. The muscles in my legs were shaking. I donβt think she could tell, though.
She was looking between the screen of her computer and a manila folder in front of her. With some horror I realized it was my personnel file; I recognized the terrible photo taken of me when I was twenty and a new intern. I stared at it. What was a CEO doing with my personnel file?
βHow long have you been with us, Min?β
The fact she was asking that question made me really nervous, since I was sure my file had dates in it. βNearly five years,β I said. βA year in Melbourne and then four here.β
She nodded. She wasnβt even listening to my answer. βIn marketing the whole time?β Again, she didnβt look at me as I answered her. It was unnerving. βMmm,β she said, flipping through some papers. βThereβs a note here that youβre not to deal with our HR manager,β she observed. βThe word on the street is that youβre in a relationship with him.β
Shit, is that what this was about?
It knocked the wind out of me; I hadnβt even considered that might be an issue. βThatβs right,β I said, trying to prevent my voice from wavering. I mostly succeeded. βI know itβs against policy, butββ My brain went at a million miles an hour and I managed to not fumble with my words. βIf itβs a problem, Iβm sure we can work out a solution.β
She did the slightest of facial shrugs. βItβs not a problem in itself,β she said. βUnless it becomes a problem for business, that is. It certainly wouldnβt be the first relationship at Frost.β She sat back in her deep office chair, resting her elbows on the arms of it and lacing her fingers. She spent a few very tense seconds watching me. βMin, I have a question for you and I want you to answer me honestly.β There was only one correct response to that, so I nodded. βYour career plan says that youβre interested in management.β She gestured out towards the floor. βBeing a manager at Frost isnβt a walk in the park, Min. You know the kind of commitment we expect from leaders here. My cohort has a family,β she couldnβt have chosen a more unattractive word to refer to her brother, the co-CEO, βbut he doesnβt spend much time with them. Are you prepared to make that sort of sacrifice? Of course, we have the statutory maternity leave arrangements for staff. However, itβs very difficult for a company to replace managers for short periods of time without some interrupt to business.β
Right, donβt get pregnant, got it. βAre you asking me if Iβm prepared to make sacrifices for the sake of promotion?β I couldnβt imagine what sort of sacrifice theyβd ask me to make, I basically did nothing else other than work, anyway. Having any sort of life was a distant memory. When she nodded, I said automatically. βOf course Iβm prepared.β I felt as if I were regurgitating textbook lines fed to me by my career counsellor. βThatβs why I moved from Melbourne to Sydney. Iβm prepared to do whatever I need to in order to build my career.β
Diane smiled slightly, and I think I saw a measure of approval. βGood,β she said. βGood. β As she pulled a stack of printed photos out from underneath my personal file she added, βThere are no management positions free at present. But I do like to have candidates in mind when there are.β She slid the photos across the desk and I took them. Curious, I looked down at them. They were macro shots of pink and champagne diamonds, in several variations and cuts. While I was leafing through them, she asked, βDo you know what they are?β
These? They were a house. A big house, and early retirement. They were the most expensive and rarest diamonds in the world. βArgyle diamonds,β I answered immediately. βFrom the Kimberley.β
She let that sit for a moment, and then her smile lengthened. βIβm about to tell you something confidential: Frost has just purchased the rights to mine a pipe of these in Western Australia,β she said. βItβs a small project but potentially an extremely valuable one, and of special interest to me. Iβm looking to put together a group of people who can keep their mouths shut to work on it.β I didnβt miss her glancing out towards the floor. βThat particular attribute is something that is surprisingly difficult to come by.β
I knew what she meant. In any other circumstance I might have laughed at such a diplomatically worded way of calling the marketing department a rumour-mill, but this didnβt seem to be the appropriate time. I put the pictures back on the table.
βAre you interested? It pitches in three weeks and Iβm not exaggerating when I say thereβs a lot to do and I donβt want too many people on it.β
Was she kidding? The less people, the better. βYes,β I said without hesitation.
βGreat.β She closed my personnel file and whatever she was looking at on the screen. βI havenβt picked the composition of the team, yet. Jason or I will let you know.β
Since the conversation was clearly over, I stood. Hospitably, she stood as well and gestured towards the door. βThank you for coming so promptly,β she said, the epitome of professional. I supposed this was βniceβ as nice went for her, but she was terrifying. That woman is a billionaire, I thought as I turned to leave, glancing down at her sparkling watch. It was surreal to be standing a metre away from someone who could practically buy Australia.
As soon as I was out of earshot of the office, I exhaled audibly and put a hand on the wall to steady myself.
Wow.
Well, I guess being considered for a promotion and invited to staff a secret project was a little different from losing my job and my life as I knew it. Just, wow. I grinned. Those idiots on my old team would go nuts if I got a promotion. As completely ungrateful as it sounds given how much money I was being paid, it felt so good to finally have my years of dedication acknowledged with something other than an enormous paycheque. Diane even saying she would consider me felt hugely important.
When I walked past the workstations of my hungover team, I felt completely superior. There were seven or eight new drunk guy emails in my inbox. I wondered if the rep making them all knew that it was crap like this that interfered with his career progression. I was tempted to reply to that effect, but as usual I didnβt.
Before I dealt with them I checked my phone; I wanted to tell Henry about the conversation Iβd just had with Diane, but I knew that was out. Diane had said the project was confidential and that she wanted someone who could keep quiet about it. I suppose that meant I needed to celebrate quietly to myself. I laughed internally. Now thereβs an evening unlike every single other one. A bottle of red and a hundred rounds of Free for All. Iβd never done that before ever…
Sarah had bcc:ed me in an email to her friends in Risk about when they were meeting up. I clicked on it, remembering that weird touching thing and feeling stupid all over again. I needed a day or two to overcome it, and the last thing I wanted to do tonight was be surrounded by gorgeous, perfectly relaxed women talking about Sex in the City or whatever its replacement was these days. I personally had a hard time imagining what people who didnβt play video games did in their spare time, but it was probably boring. Not wanting to ignore her, though, I typed out some excuse and sent it.
By the afternoon, Iβd archived my material from my previous project, gathered Michelangelo and a sad-looking bamboo plant of dubious health and was ready to go sit with my new project team, whoever they were. The office was basically empty because everyone else was already in project meetings, probably arguing over who did what and establishing the pecking order. I literally had nothing I needed to do, so I spun slow circles in my chair and planned my evening. There were actually a couple of new games out that Iβd been meaning to buy and play β maybe Iβd grab those on the way home.
It was four-thirty a lot sooner than Iβd expected it to be, and I packed up early for once and went to brave the lift. It didnβt fail me: I discovered my stockings were navy instead of black. I then spent the rest of the ride wondering if Diane had noticed and judged me.
Outside, it was still sunny and that made me worry more about the black skirt with navy stockings. Well, Iβd be home soon and then I could just take everything off, burn it in a ritual fire and then put on something comfortable. I was waiting at the traffic lights trying to decide which game I was going to play first when I heard a girlβs voice say, βLook, thatβs definitely her.β After some frantic whispering, another voice agreed, βOh my, God, youβre right, it is! I canβt do this. Okay, I can. I can.β
I twisted a little to glance over my shoulder. There were two girls in Cloverfield Ladiesβ College uniforms hunched over a mobile and looking directly at me. I quickly looked forward again, and for some reason my heart was pounding. They both giggled, and that made it worse. It didnβt matter that I was twenty-five and that I hadnβt been in high school for seven years, those girls were the type of girls who used to make surfboard jokes about my body and call me βtelegraph poleβ behind my back. I really didnβt need this, not after Iβd finally gotten some good news, and not from school kids. I fluttered the pedestrian crossing button a few more times. Come on, lightsβ¦
βMin Lee? Itβs you, right?β One of the girls called out while the other one was hysterically giggling. When I heard my name, the blood practically drained from my face. How the hell did they know who I was? I stared in front of me, deciding to try and ignore them. Maybe theyβd stop.
Some older woman had been standing beside me at the lights. She threw a glance behind us to see what the fuss was about and then peered up at me, too. Iβd never wanted to just fade into invisibility any more than I did at that moment.
βMiss Lee!β the other girl called out again, leaning heavily on my surname like it was four or five syllables. Her voice sounded muffled as if she had a hand over her mouth.
βIβm going to fucking kill you, Courtney. Oh, my God. Okay. Min!β
The opposing lights were still green, and those kids calling out to me was starting to make everyone stare. There were even people on the other side of the road watching. I just wanted it all to be over, so I turned around. βCan I help you, girls?β I asked, trying to mimic Dianeβs impassionate tone. If they were going to make fun of me, they should just fucking get it over with so I could go home.
They both looked at me, at each other and then giggled. One of them β the one who had been calling out to me first, I think β had very long, very straight brown hair but was otherwise pretty average. Her friend looked like something straight off the cover of an Enid Blyton, book, though. She was tiny with her blonde hair in big rolling curls and already had the kind of hourglass figure that men would probably fight to the death for. Just in case anyone hadnβt noticed it, her plaid skirt was scandalously short and her shirt was a size too small. She pushed her friend in the head, straightened her tie, and then marched up to me.
I looked down at her, aware that people all around us were practically reaching for popcorn.
βYou really arenβt a guy,β she said, looking me up and down and making me feel self-conscious and worry about my stockings again. She was so tiny she didnβt even reach my collarbones. She noticed that, too. βAnd, whoa, youβre, like, tall.β
Shit, really? I was wondering why I found it so easy to reach everything. I didnβt really want to get into a fight with them by being smart, though, so I just kept my mouth shut. It wasnβt hard, because every moment, I kept waiting for them to drop the impressed act and just dissolve into giggles and make fun of me. I wondered what incredibly un-intelligent insult these girls would come up with. The Lee-ning Tower of Sydney used to be a favourite at my school.
βCourtneyβ was still looking between me and the screen of her mobile. βShe does look like that painting. Like, really.β
Well, there was only one letter difference between βmanβ and βMinβ, something no one at my school had figured out despite the fact Iβd been a hardcore tomboy back then. Perhaps these girls would, even if I was careful to not be like that anymore. I felt like my mismatched stockings were a dead giveaway about how much I hated wearing them.
βItβs me,β the blonde said as she gestured to herself, not teasing me and not noticing my stockings, βHazumichan95. By the way, if youβre wondering, I really regret that username. Like, especially right now.β
Comfortingly, I did recognize that username from Deviant Art. βOh, youβre the girl who hadββ I was about to say βfriendship troubleβ, but then I realized that the person she was having issues with was probably that other girl who was with her. I didnβt get a chance to figure out how to finish that sentence.
βIβm not Hazumi, though, obviously, Iβm Bree.β She gestured at her friend. βAnd thatβs Courtney. But donβt worry, she doesnβt use Deviant Art so you donβt have to figure out who she is because you wonβt know her.β The way she spoke, it seemed like she was trying to force out as many words as possible in the shortest period of time. Or like sheβd gotten stuck into the red cordial.
She β Bree? β grabbed my hand and shook it. βMin,β I said automatically, before I realized how ridiculous that was because they both clearly knew who I was. At least that made sense now, though, because my username was MinLeee. The one with two βeβs was already taken. What it didnβt explain was how they sorted through the four and a half million people in Sydney and ended up on the corner outside Frost Headquarters. βHow did you find me?β
Courtney laughed shortly. βBree spent two and a half hours on Google,β she said loudly, pretending to cough at the beginning and end of her comment.
Bree twisted around. βOh, my God, Courtney, Iβm going to tell my brother you have crabs if you donβt shut up.β
Did she just⦠I looked hurriedly around at all the people watching us. A couple of them were smothering their own laughter. I wondered if I looked as mortified as I felt.
Bree turned back to me. She still had my hand. I looked pointedly at it, but she didnβt notice. βThis is so awesome!β she announced, smiling brightly up at me while I struggled with the urge to just spin on my heels and run away. This particular girl seemed like the sort to give chase, and even with my long legs I didnβt like my chances of outrunning her. I was wearing stilettos. βI love your art, you have no idea. Itβs amazing. Itβs so incredibly awesome to finally be meeting you!β
βThanks,β I said vaguely. βListenβ¦β Iβm really freaked out that you Googled me, you and your friend are too full-on, I feel extremely uncomfortable and wish everyone would stop looking at us, your curls are perfectly symmetrical how do you even do that I can never get mine that round…
βI have to go,β was what I eventually settled on. Serendipitously, the pedestrian crossing went green. I went to walk across it, but she didnβt let go of my hand.
βCome on,β Bree said. βCourtney owes me ten bucks because she said Iβd never be able to find you. Iβll get you a coffee!β
It was approaching five in the afternoon. Not that had ever stopped me from slamming energy drinks before, but it at least sounded like an acceptable excuse. βThanks, but itβs a bit late for coffee,β I said, and tried to pull away again before the lights went red.
Courtney was laughing away in the background. βShe clearly thinks youβre a scary stalker, Bree,β she told her friend as if I wasnβt even there. βWhich you are, by the way. They should lock you up.β
Bree snorted. βPlease,β she said over her shoulder, still holding my hand between hers. βIβm not a scary stalker. Itβs not like I built some shrine to her that I kill animals on and have a wall covered in photos that I masturbate to every night or something.β
What onβ¦ I didnβt actually think Iβd heard her right the first time. Her sentence echoed in my head and it was only when several sets of people standing around us started to nervously laugh from the shock that I realized she had actually said it. I couldnβt laugh, though, I actually felt sick. I didnβt want to be there. Iβd found something more humiliating than having people make fun of how I looked.
When I tried this time, I managed to finally get my hand free. Iβm not sure what I actually said, but it was probably something apologetic about being in a rush as I spun and ran out in front of traffic. Fortunately nothing hit me, and the flow of cars prevented either of them from following. Once Iβd rounded the corner, I actually broke into a light jog and nearly did my ankles in my heels. I couldnβt get home fast enough. Some part of me was actually, legitimately afraid they would follow me.
Once I was upstairs and I had the door shut behind me, I exhaled and leant against it. I listened for footsteps in the hallway, and then had a moment of clarity where I wondered how ridiculous I was being. Min, theyβre schoolgirls. Like, little schoolgirls, and theyβre obviously completely harmless. Youβre not even at school anymore, youβre a grown woman.
What was I afraid they would do if they had followed me, anyway? Embarrass me to death in the privacy of my own home? Oh, the humanity.
Fuck, though, I felt about sixteen again. I took my mobile out of my bag and had been about to actually call Henry when I noticed it was only five. Heβd still be in meetings, probably. I texted him instead. βReally weird, I had a couple of schoolkids look me up on Google because of my art and pounce on me as I left workβ¦β Even as I was typing it, I felt stupid. This was not a big deal. I sent it anyway.
It must have been a pretty boring meeting, because Henry had replied even before Iβd made it to the bathroom. βHah, fans! Not surprising, your stuff is fantastic. Bet they were completely awestruck by the great Min Lee xoxo.β
I read his text a couple of times, standing there in the doorway to my bedroom with the phone. I was being ridiculous. That Bree: sheβd been messaging me for at least a few months and she had asked for advice on some pretty personal topics. It shouldnβt be surprising she was being so familiar. She was really intense in real life, though. Fuck, I was exhausted after two minutes. Give me the internet any day. It took me ages to get into the shower, because I needed to go through every message sheβd sent me. None of them were creepy, they were just ordinary, sociable messages. In some of them she was upset, in some she was happyβ¦ they painted a picture of an ordinary if extremely enthusiastic teenager. Not the scary monster I was acting like she was. Seriously, what the hell, Min?
After my shower, I ended up facing my almost-empty pantry with a controller in my hand, still berating myself over those damn schoolgirls. I couldnβt even comfort eat because in there was only a can of Homebrand spaghetti, a couple of packs of instant noodles and an ancient, half-finished jar of pickles that dated back to 2009. Vinegar preserved things for years, right? The date on the jar reminded me I needed to go shopping for food at some point this year. I couldnβt always have room service.
What I did have a lot of was red wine, which was also the perfect method to start cultivating some serious amnesia. Wineglass and controller in hand, I settled down on the couch. Iβd forgotten to buy those games I was after, but otherwise this was the evening Iβd been expecting.
Time to try and relax, I thought, pouring myself a very generous glass of red. So I had a fan, so what. That was normal, right? My art was comparatively good on website, so it shouldnβt really be that much of a surprise. And sheβd probably Googled me because sheβd only found out just yesterday that I was a woman; meeting an adult man as a schoolgirl was probably a big no-no. I took a big mouthful of wine. Fuck, I hoped that girl wouldnβt try to accost me in the middle of the street again. Actually, I should probably send her a message to let her know that I wouldnβt be okay with it.
I opened Deviant Art, trying to figure out how I was going to phrase that sort of request without coming off sounding like a complete bitch, but sheβd beat me to it. There was already a message from Hazumichan95. I tapped it, a sinking feeling settling in my stomach. βomg so amazing to meet u!!! sorry I was a bit starstruck!!! π π π π wow I cant believe it u have been my art hero for like a whole year nearly. definitely worth the train trip into the city. btw that awesome pic of u on the balcony is my screensaverβ
I sighed. Well, fuck. I couldnβt tell her to go away now, could I?
Since I had Deviant Art up, I opened the painting again. There were a few more comments so I thought Iβd scroll through them. Down near the bottom, I spotted another one from her. βbtw guys min lee is a totally amazing artist. she seriously looks exactly like this irl just check out her photo. how do people even make stuff like this omg i wish i was this talented at like anything!!β There were a whole row of exclamation marks like the key had gotten stuck down.
This was the girl that freaked you out, Min. I shook my head at myself; she wasnβt a creepy stalker, or even any sort of stalker. She was just being nice, and I was just being a fucking hermit who needed to spend less time with a screen and more time with actual humans. I read her comment again. It was nice, but it was wrong. I didnβt look exactly like that βirlβ. If I did, I wouldnβt have to wear uncomfortable crap that I hated and I wouldnβt look so weird when I stood next to other women like Sarah. There was no point in getting upset about that, though, because being miserable about it wouldnβt change anything. It was just a painting.
I threw my phone on the other side of the couch and looked back at my half-empty wineglass. I was supposed to be celebrating that fantastic conversation Iβd had with Diane Frost and instead I was stressing myself out over stupid crap again. Really, if Iβd felt like a painful evening, Sarah had invited me to go and be her charity case with those beautiful friends. I could get all the pain I wanted hanging around them and pretending to enjoy myself.
I topped up my glass and then switched on my PlayStation. Fuck all this crap, I wanted to relax and celebrate. Why couldnβt the world just pause for one second and let me be happy that, after years of solid dedication to my job, the billionaire co-CEO of my corp told me she wanted to make me a manager?
Well, I hoped mass murder and copious amounts of alcohol would shut my head up. It did usually do the trick.
I actually didnβt think Iβd been drinking that much. However, when I woke up at three a.m. on the couch with no idea about what happened for the last several hours, I had to concede that maybe the whole bottle might have been a bad idea. Especially on an empty stomach. I drank about the same amount of water and then hauled myself off to bed.
As a result of my celebrating, I missed my alarm and gave myself twenty less minutes to do my hair and makeup. I had such a headache and was in such a rush when I opened my front door that I nearly tripped over something that had been placed in front of it. I stopped myself just in time.
It was a takeaway coffee cup with a little shortbread biscuit in the shape of a star on the plastic lid. Henry was known to do things like this, so I smiled and bent down to retrieve it. My boyfriend was the nicest man on the planet, I swear. After Iβd picked it up, though, I noticed someone had scribbled in Texta on the side of it. I held it up in front of my face to read.
β7am isnβt too late for coffee, is it?? π π β



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