The Burnout: A Novel
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Synopsis
“I devoured The Burnout in one greedy gulp. It’s funny, sad, relatable, and brilliantly done. Sophie Kinsella is the queen of romantic comedy.”—Jojo Moyes
She can do anything . . . just not everything.
Sasha has had it. She cannot bring herself to respond to another inane, “urgent” (but obviously not at all urgent) email or participate in the corporate employee joyfulness program. She hasn’t seen her friends in months. Sex? Seems like a lot of effort. Even cooking dinner takes far too much planning. Sasha has hit a wall.
Armed with good intentions to drink kale smoothies, try yoga, and find peace, she heads to the seaside resort she loved as a child. But it’s the off season, the hotel is in a dilapidated shambles, and she has to share the beach with the only other occupant: a grumpy guy named Finn, who seems as stressed as Sasha. How can she commune with nature when he’s sitting on her favorite rock, watching her? Nor can they agree on how best to alleviate their burnout (Sasha: manifesting, wild swimming; Finn: drinking whisky, getting pizza delivered to the beach).
When curious messages, seemingly addressed to Sasha and Finn, begin to appear on the beach, the two are forced to talk—about everything. How did they get so burned out? Can either of them remember something they used to love? (Answer: surfing!) And the question they try and fail to ignore: what does the energy between them—flaring even in the face of their bone-deep exhaustion—signify?
Release date: October 10, 2023
Publisher: The Dial Press
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The Burnout: A Novel
Sophie Kinsella
One
It’s not the emails that make me panic.
It’s not even the “chasing” emails. (Just wondering if you got my last email as I have had no reply?)
It’s the “chasing-the-chasing” emails. The ones with two red exclamation marks. The ones that are either super-pissed off—As I mentioned in my TWO previous emails—or else faux-concerned and sarcastic—I’m starting to wonder whether you have been trapped down a well or suffered some other calamity??
Those are the ones that make my chest spasm and my left eye start twitching. Especially when I realize I forgot to flag them. My life is governed by the flagged email, my life. But I forgot to flag the latest one and that was days ago and now my colleague sounds pretty pissed off, although he’s being nice: Seriously, is everything OK with you, Sasha? So now I feel even more guilty. He’s a nice guy. He’s reasonable. It’s not his fault I’m doing the work of three people and keep dropping all the plates.
I work for Zoose, the travel app that’s everywhere right now. You didn’t use Zoose? That’s our latest ad campaign, and it’s genuinely a good app. Wherever you want to go in the world, Zoose finds you instant itineraries, bargain tickets, and a great rewards program. I’m director of special promotions, covering fourteen territories. The fancy title lured me into the job, I’ll be honest. And the fact that Zoose is such a buzzy start-up. When I tell people about my job, they say, “Oh, that! I’ve seen it advertised on the tube!” Then they add, “Cool job!”
It is a cool job. On paper. Zoose is a young company, it’s growing fast, there’s a living wall of plants in our open-plan workspace, and free herbal tea. When I first started here, a couple of years ago, I did feel lucky. Every day I woke up and thought, Lucky me! But at some point that transitioned into waking up and thinking, Oh God, oh please, I can’t do this, how many emails have I got, how many meetings, what have I missed, how will I cope, what am I going to do?
I’m not sure when that was. Maybe six months ago? Seven? But it feels as if I’ve been in this state forever. Kind of in a tunnel, where the only thing I can do is keep going. Just keep going.
I write myself yet another Post-it reminder—FLAG EMAILS!!!—and stick it above my computer screen, next to APP??, which has been there for months.
My mum’s into apps. She’s got a Christmas-planning app and a holiday-planning app and a talking clock from her gadget catalog that reminds you to take your vitamins every 7:30 a.m. (It also reminds you to do pelvic-floor exercises every night and calls out “inspirational quotes” randomly throughout the day. I find it very weird and controlling, although I haven’t told her that.)
Anyway, I’m sure she’s right—if I could just find the right app, my life would fall into place. But there are too many to choose from and, my God, they all need so much input. I have a bullet journal, which came with colored felt tips. You’re supposed to write out all your tasks, color-code them, and tick them off. But who has time for that? Who has time to select a turquoise pen and write, Answer those thirty-four furious emails in your inbox and then find an appropriate sad-face sticker? I’ve got precisely one entry in my bullet journal, which I made a year ago. It reads, Task: work. And it’s never ticked off.
I glance at the clock
and feel a nasty lurch. How is it 11:27 already? I need to get on. Get on, Sasha.
Dear Rob, I’m so sorry I have not yet got back to you on this, please accept my apologies. I must type those words, what, twenty times a day? We are looking at April 12 now, and I will be sure to advise you of any change. Meanwhile, on the subject of the rollout (Netherlands), the decision was made that—
“Sasha!” I’m so preoccupied that when a familiar strident voice breaks into my thoughts, I jump right off my office chair. “Got a sec?”
My whole body stiffens. A sec? A sec? No. I do not have a sec. I’m sweating through my shirt. My fingers are on fire. I have a million other urgent emails after this one, I need to get on, I do not have a sec….
But Joanne, our empowerment and well-being officer, is heading toward me. Joanne is in her forties, maybe ten years older than me, although she often says “Women of our age” in meetings, with a glance at me. She’s dressed in her usual athleisure trousers and expensive, understated T-shirt and has a disapproving look in her eye that I recognize all too well. I’ve messed up. But how? Hastily, I grope in my mind for crimes I might have committed, but I can’t think of any. With a sigh, I stop typing and turn my chair toward her a smidge. Just enough to be polite.
“Sasha,” she says briskly, flicking back her straightened hair. “I’m a little disappointed with your level of engagement in our employee-joyfulness program.”
Shit. Joyfulness. I knew I’d forgotten something. I thought I’d written myself a Post-it—JOYFULNESS! —but maybe it fell off my computer? I shift my gaze and, sure enough, there are two Post-its stuck to the radiator: JOYFULNESS! and GAS BILL.
“Sorry,” I say, trying to sound ingratiating and humble. “I’m really sorry, Joanne. Sorry.”
Sometimes if you say “Sorry” enough times to Joanne, she moves on. But not today. She leans against my desk and my stomach clenches. I’m in for the full lecture.
“Asher has also noticed your lack of participation, Sasha.” She eyes me more closely. “As you know, Asher is particularly committed to the joyfulness of employees.”
Asher is head of marketing and therefore my boss. He’s also the brother of Lev, the founder of Zoose, the famous one. Lev is the one who came up with the idea. He was arriving at an airport when the notion came to him, and he sat in a café in the terminal all day, missing six flights
to Luxembourg while he sketched out the first concepts for Zoose. That’s the story, anyway. I’ve seen him tell it on a TED Talk.
Lev is wiry and charismatic and charming and asks everyone questions all the time. Whenever he’s in the office, he walks around, a distinctive figure with his wild hair, asking people, “Why this?,” “Why that?,” “What are you doing?,” “Why not try it this way?” During my interview, he asked me about my coat and my university tutors and what I thought of motorway service stations. It was random and fun and inspiring.
But I never see him now—I only see Asher, who could be from a different planet than Lev. Asher has this thin layer of polished charm, which bowls you over at first. But then you realize he’s really self-important and prickly about Lev’s fame and very sensitive to anything he sees as criticism. Which is pretty much any response apart from “That’s a groundbreaking idea, Asher, you’re a genius!”
(In every meeting, whatever stupid thing he says, Joanne exclaims, “That’s a groundbreaking idea, Asher, you’re a genius!”)
Anyway. So you have to be careful around Asher and equally careful around Joanne, who is Asher’s old friend from uni and strides around like his henchwoman, looking for heretics.
“I fully support Asher’s joyfulness program,” I say hastily, trying to sound sincere. “I attended the Zoom lecture by Dr. Sussman yesterday. It was inspirational.”
The Zoom lecture by Dr. Sussman (Downward can be upward! A journey to personal fulfillment) was compulsory for all employees. It was two hours long and was mostly Dr. Sussman talking about her divorce and subsequent sexual awakening in a commune in Croydon. I have no idea what it was supposed to teach us, but at least because it was on Zoom, I managed to get some work done at the same time.
“I’m talking about the online aspirations mood board, Sasha,” says Joanne, folding her toned arms like a scary gym teacher who’s about to make you do twenty press-ups. (Is she about to make me do twenty press-ups?) “You haven’t logged in for ten days, we notice. Do you have no aspirations?”
Oh God. The online bloody aspirations mood board. I completely forgot about that.
“Sorry,” I say. “I’ll get to it.”
“Asher is a very caring head of department,” Joanne says, her eyes still narrowed. “He’s keen that each employee takes time to reflect on their goals and note their everyday joyful moments. Are you making notes of your everyday joyful moments?”
I’m dumbstruck. An everyday joyful moment? What would one of those look like?
“This is for your own empowerment, Sasha,” continues Joanne. “We at Zoose care about you.” She makes it sound like an accusation. “But you have to care about yourself too.”
Out of the corner of my eye, I can see that six more urgent emails have arrived in my inbox while we’ve been talking. I feel nausea rising as I see all
the red exclamation marks. How am I supposed to have time to reflect? How can I feel joyful when I’m constantly gripped by panic? How am I supposed to write down my aspirations when my only aspiration is stay on top of life and I’m failing at that?
“Actually, Joanne…” I take a deep breath. “What’s most bothering me is, when are Seamus and Chloe going to be replaced? I asked that on the aspirations board, but no one answered.”
This is the biggest issue. This is the killer. We just don’t have enough staff. Chloe was a maternity cover who lasted a week, and Seamus stayed for a month, had a flaming row with Asher, and walked out. As a result, everyone is overloaded, and there’s still no news on any replacements.
“Sasha,” says Joanne condescendingly, “I’m afraid you’ve rather misunderstood the function of the aspirations mood board. It isn’t about technical HR matters; it’s for personal goals and dreams.”
“Well, it’s my personal goal and dream to have enough colleagues to do the work!” I retort. “We’re all snowed under, and I’ve spoken to Asher so many times, but he just won’t give me a straight answer, you know what he’s—”
I cut myself off dead before I can say anything negative about Asher that she’ll report back to him and I’ll have to retract in a cringy meeting.
“Are you twitching?” says Joanne, peering at me.
“No. What? Twitching?” I put a hand to my face. “Maybe.”
She’s blanked my actual question, I notice. How is it some people can do that? I can’t help glancing at my monitor—and Rob Wilson has just emailed yet again, this time with four exclamation marks.
“Joanne, I have to get on,” I say in desperation. “But thanks for the empowerment. I feel so much more…powered.”
I need to do something, I think frantically, as she finally walks away and I resume typing. I need to do something. This job isn’t what it was supposed to be. Nothing like. I was so excited when I got it, two years ago. Director of special promotions at Zoose! I started off at a sprint, giving it my all, thinking I was on a solid path toward an exciting horizon. But the path isn’t solid anymore. It’s mud. Deep, gloopy mud.
I press send, breathe out, and rub my face. I need a coffee. I stand up, stretch my arms, and wander over to the window for a breather. The office is silent and intent; half of my team are working from home today. Lina’s in but she’s typing furiously at her nearby workstation, her headphones clamped over her ears and a murderous scowl
on her face. No wonder Joanne left her well alone.
Do I leave? Change jobs? But, oh God, it takes so much energy to change jobs. You have to read recruitment ads and talk to headhunters and decide on a career strategy. You have to dig out your CV and remember what you’ve achieved and choose outfits for interviews, then somehow secretly fit the interviews into your working day. You have to sound sparkly and dynamic while a scary panel quizzes you. Smile brightly when they keep you waiting for forty minutes, while simultaneously stressing out about how behind you’re getting with your actual job.
And that’s just one job application. Then they turn you down and you have to start again. The prospect makes me want to curl up under the duvet. I can’t even seem to sort out my passport renewal right now. Let alone my life.
I lean against the glass, my gaze drifting downward. Our office is situated in a wide, functional street in north London, full of nasty 1980s office blocks and a disappointing shopping center and, totally randomly, a convent, right opposite. It’s a Victorian building and you wouldn’t know it’s a convent if it wasn’t for the nuns coming in and out. Modern nuns, who wear jeans with their veil and catch buses to God knows where. Homeless shelters probably, to do good work.
As I’m watching, a couple of nuns emerge, talking animatedly, and sit on the bench at the bus stop. I mean, look at them. They lead a completely different life to mine. Do nuns have emails? I bet they don’t. I bet they’re not even allowed to email. They don’t have to reply to 103 WhatsApps a night. They don’t have to apologize to angry people all day. They don’t have to fill in online aspirations mood boards. All their values are different.
Maybe I could lead a different life too. Get a different job, move flats, change everything up. It just requires impetus. I need impetus. A sign from the universe, maybe.
Sighing, I turn away and head to the coffee machine. Caffeine will have to get me through for now.
I walk out of the building at 6 p.m, breathing in the cold evening air in large gulps, as though I’ve been suffocating all day. Our company is located above a Pret A Manger, and I head there straightaway, as I do every night.
The thing about Pret A Manger is, you can buy all your meals there, not just lunch. This is allowed. And once you have that revelation, then life becomes manageable. Or at least more manageable.
I don’t know when cooking became so daunting. It kind of crept up on me. But now I just can’t face it. I cannot face buying some piece of…whatever…food, I guess, from the supermarket. And peeling it or whatever, cutting it up, getting out pans and looking for a recipe and then washing up afterward. Just the thought overwhelms me. How do people do that every night?
Whereas the falafel and halloumi wrap is a nice, warm, comforting supper, which goes well with a glass of wine, and then you just chuck the wrapper in the bin.
I collect my wrap, a choc bar, some kind of “healthy” drink in a can, and a bircher muesli—which is tomorrow’s breakfast—along with an apple. That’s my five a day. (OK, one a day, if you’re being pedantic.)
As I reach the till, I get out my credit card. And I’m expecting the usual silent electronic transaction, but when I touch my card on the reader, nothing happens. I look up and see the Pret guy smiling at me, his dark eyes warm and friendly.
“You buy the same thing every night,” he says. “Wrap, bircher muesli, apple, drink, choc bar. Same thing.”
“Yes,” I say, taken aback.
“Don’t you ever cook? Go to a restaurant?”
At once I stiffen. What is this, the food police?
“I usually have work to catch up on.” I smile tightly. “So.”
“I’m training to be a chef,” he replies easily. “I’m into food. Seems a shame to eat the same thing every day.”
“Well. It’s fine. I like it. Thanks.”
I glance meaningfully at the card reader, but he doesn’t seem in any hurry to process the transaction.
“You know what my perfect evening would be?” he says. “It would involve you, by the way.”
His voice is low and kind of seductive. His eyes haven’t left mine, this whole conversation. I blink back at him, disconcerted. What’s happening right now? Wait, is he hitting on me? Is he flirting with me?
Yes, he is. Shit!
OK. What do I do?
Do I want to flirt back? How do I flirt back? How does that go again? I try to reach inside myself for my flirting moves. For the light, fun version of Sasha Worth who would smile or say something witty. But I’ve lost it. I feel empty inside. I don’t have a line.
“We’d walk round Borough Market,” he continues, undaunted by my lack of response. “We’d buy vegetables, herbs, cheese. We’d go home, spend a few hours cooking, then eat a beautiful meal…and see where that took us. What do you think?”
His eyes are crinkling adorably. I know what he expects me to say. How do I tell him what I’m really thinking?
“Honestly?” I say, playing
for time.
“Honestly.” His smile broadens infectiously. “Be as honest as it gets. I’m not scared.”
“The truth is, it sounds kind of exhausting,” I say bluntly. “All that cooking. Chopping. Clearing up. Potato peelings everywhere, you know? And some always fall on the floor and you have to sweep them up—” I break off. “It’s not really for me.”
I can tell he’s taken aback by my answer, but he recovers almost at once. “We could skip the cooking,” he suggests.
“So, what, straight to sex?”
“Well.” He laughs, his eyes glinting. “Maybe move in that direction.”
Oh God, he seems a really nice guy. I need to be completely frank.
“OK, so the issue with sex is, I’m not really interested in it at the moment. I can see how you would be into it,” I add politely. “But for me, not so much. Thanks for the approach, though.”
I hear a gasp behind me and turn to see a woman in a purple coat staring at me.
“Are you nuts!” she exclaims. “I’ll come,” she adds huskily. “I’ll come and cook with you. And the rest. Anytime you like. Say the word.”
“I’ll come!” chimes in a good-looking man standing in the other queue. “You’re bi, right?” he adds to the Pret guy, who looks freaked out and ignores both of them.
“You’re not into sex?” the Pret guy says, eyeing me curiously. “You’re religious?”
“No, just gone off it. I broke up with someone a year ago and…” I shrug. “Dunno. I find the whole notion unappealing.”
“You find the whole notion of sex unappealing?” He gives a loud, incredulous laugh. “No. I don’t believe that.”
I feel a flash of annoyance, because who is this stranger to tell me what I might or might not find appealing?
“It’s true!” I retort, more vehemently than I intended. “What’s so great about sex? I mean, when you think about it, what is sex? It’s…it’s…” I cast wildly around. “It’s genitals rubbing together. I mean, really? That’s supposed to be enjoyable? Genitals rubbing together?”
The entire shop is silent, and I realize that about twenty people are staring at me.
OK, I’m going to need to find a different Pret.
“I think I’ll pay now,” I say, my face blazing hot. “Thanks.”
The Pret guy is silent as he takes my payment, fills my bag, and hands it to me. Then he meets my eye again.
“That’s just sad,” he says. “Someone like you. It’s sad.”
His words hit a sensitive place deep inside me. Someone like me. Who is that? I used
to be someone who could flirt, have sex, have fun, enjoy life. Whoever I am right now, it’s not me. But I don’t seem able to be anyone else.
“Yup.” I nod. “It is.”
Usually I take my Pret supper back up to my desk, but I’m feeling so deflated by now, I decide to go straight home. As soon as I get inside my flat, I sink down on a chair, still in my coat, and close my eyes. Every night, I arrive back here and feel like I’ve just run a marathon, dragging an elephant behind me. At length I open my eyes and find myself surveying the array of dead plants on the windowsill that I’ve been intending to chuck out for about six months.
I will one day. I really will. Just…not right this second.
Eventually, I manage to shrug off my coat, pour myself a glass of wine, and settle on the sofa with my Pret bag at my feet. My phone is flashing with WhatsApp messages, and I log on to see that my old uni friends are chatting about some new plan where we all hold dinner parties in turn with movie themes, wouldn’t that be fun?
There is no way I’m having anyone round for a dinner party. I’d be too embarrassed. My flat is a shambles. Everywhere I look I see the evidence of some task I’ve been intending to do, from the unopened tester paint pots to the exercise bands I was going to use to the dead plants to the magazines I haven’t read. It was Mum who gave me the subscription to Women’s Health. Mum, who works at an estate agency and does Pilates and has a full face of makeup on before 7 a.m. every day.
She makes me feel like a complete failure. How does she do it? By my age she was married and making lasagna every night for Dad. I have one job. One flat. No children. But still life feels impossible.
The WhatsApp group has now moved on to the subject of the latest box set, and I feel like I should probably join in.
Sounds amazing! I type. I’ll definitely watch that!!
I’m lying. I won’t watch it. I don’t know what’s happened to me—maybe I have “box-set fatigue”? Or “box-set discussion fatigue”? Conversations light up at work like bushfires taking hold, and it’s as if
everyone’s suddenly in a secret club, outdoing one another with their expert analysis. “Oh, it’s totally underrated. It’s Shakespearean. You haven’t seen it? You have to.” Whoever is furthest ahead in the viewing behaves like they’re Shonda Rhimes, just because they know what happens in episode six. My ex-boyfriend Stuart was like that. “You wait,” he would say proprietorially, as if he’d invented the whole thing. “You think it’s good so far? You wait.”
I used to watch box sets. I used to enjoy them. But my brain has gone on strike; I can’t cope with anything new. Instead, after I’ve finished eating my wrap, I turn on my TV, scroll down my planner, call up Legally Blonde, and press play movie again for maybe the hundredth time.
I watch Legally Blonde every night, and no one can stop me. As the opening song begins, I sag against my sofa and take a bite of choc bar, watching the familiar scenes in a mesmerized trance. This opening sequence is my downtime. It’s a few minutes when I don’t do anything, just gaze at a pink marshmallow world.
Then, as Reese Witherspoon appears onscreen, it’s my cue to move. I come to and reach for my laptop. I open my emails, take a deep breath as though surveying Mount Everest, then click on the first flagged one.
Dear Karina, I’m so sorry I have not yet got back to you on this. I take a swig of wine. Please accept my apologies.
Two
The next morning, I wake up on the sofa. My hair is still in its elastic, the TV is still on, and there’s a half-drunk glass of red wine on the floor. I can smell its stale aroma, like some kind of noxious air freshener. I must have fallen asleep while I was working.
As I shift uncomfortably and remove my phone from under my left shoulder blade, it lights up with new messages, notifications, and emails. But for once I don’t start scrolling, heart thumping in anxiety, wondering what fresh hell is about to greet me. Instead, I roll back on the sofa and stare at the ceiling, feeling a resolution forming in my brain. I’m going to take action today. Big action. Proper action.
As I rub some belated Olay Total Effects night cream into my skin, I catch my reflection in the mirror and shudder. My winter-white, freckly skin looks like cardboard. My straight dark hair is lifeless. My pale-blue eyes are bloodshot. I look haggard.
But, weirdly, this sight galvanizes me. Maybe I was more stung by the Pret guy’s comments than I realized. He’s right. It is sad. I should not be this person. I should not be in this situation. I should not look so stressed out and haggard. And I should not have to leave my job because the department is badly run.
I go through my options logically. I’ve tried talking to Asher. Doesn’t achieve anything. I’ve tried approaching various other senior types—they all said, “Talk to Asher.” So I need to try further up. Talk to Lev. I don’t have a direct email contact for him; only his assistant does. But I’ll find him. Yes.
I arrive at the office early, feeling wired, and take the lift straight up to the top floor, where Lev’s office is. His assistant, Ruby, is sitting at her glass desk in front of a massive graphic of the distinctive orange Zoose icon, and my business brain registers that it’s a really well-designed and impressive space. This company has so many brilliant aspects. Which is what makes it so frustrating that other parts are so crap.
There’s a huge image of Lev, looking as charismatic as ever, with his wild, unbrushed hair and intent gaze. We use his photo a lot in marketing, because he’s so distinctive. So cool-looking. He’s dating a fashion designer called Damian, and the pair of them look like some sort of Vogue shoot.
But cool-looking only takes you so far. I need the real thing. The real man. Some real answers.
“Hi, I’d like to talk to Lev, please,” I say as I approach Ruby, trying to sound matter-of-fact. “Is he in?”
“Do you have an appointment?” She glances at her screen.
“No.”
Somehow I force myself to leave it at that. This is what you have to do in life: just say “No,” without explaining further. I’m not saying I feel comfortable doing that, but I’ve seen it on Instagram. It’s what successful people do.
“No appointment?” She raises her perfectly tweezed eyebrows.
“No.”
“Well, you should make an appointment.”
“It’s urgent.” I try to sound polite. “So perhaps my appointment could be right now?”
“I’m afraid he’s not here.” Ruby lays the information down like a winning card. “So.”
Her eyes have a snide glint to them, and I feel a prickle of antagonism. Since when did everyone in this company become such a bitch?
“Well, maybe you could reach him for me,” I say, as pleasantly as I can. “It’s to do with a crisis in his company, so he might want to listen. He might want to know what’s going on. Because it’s not great, actually. It’s not great at all. And if it were my company, which I’d started from scratch, you know, I’d want to know. So. Maybe you should give him a call.”
I’ve lost my pleasant veneer, I realize. In fact, I sound weirdly intense. But that’s OK. That’s good. It shows I mean business.
Ruby surveys me coolly for a few seconds, then sighs.
“And you are…?”
I feel a surge of rage. She knows exactly who I am.
“I’m Sasha Worth,” I say politely. “Director of special promotions.”
“Special pro-mo-tions.” She draws out the word elaborately, wrinkling her brow and nibbling on a Zoose-branded pen. “Have you tried discussing this issue with Asher?”
“Yes,” I say shortly. “Lots of times. That hasn’t worked out for me.”
“Have you talked to anyone else?”
“Several people. They all tell me to go to Asher. But, you see, talking to Asher doesn’t achieve anything. So I want to talk to Lev.”
“Well, I’m afraid he’s not available.”
How does she even know that? She’s been sitting right here, making no attempt to reach him.
“Well, have you tried him? Have you called him?”
Ruby rolls her eyes, not disguising her contempt.
“There’s no point calling him,” she says, in a super-slow, patronizing tone, “because he’s not available.”
Something strange is happening to me. All the noises in the surrounding offices are getting louder. My breath is coming faster and faster. I don’t feel quite in control of myself.
“Well, there must be someone,” I say, taking a step forward. “OK? In this entire company, there must be someone. So please find them. Now. Because I have a problem and Asher hasn’t fixed it and no one seems able to fix it, and I’m losing the plot. I. Am. Losing. The. Plot. I’ve gone off sex, do you know that?” My voice is getting shrill. “That’s not normal, is it? To go off sex? I’m thirty-three!”
Ruby opens her eyes wide and I can already see her relaying this whole conversation to her mates over drinks later, but I do not care. I do not care.
“Oooooo-kay,” she says. “I’ll see what I can do.”
She types busily, then pauses, and I see her register some new piece of information on
her screen. At last she looks up and shoots me a cold smile.
“Someone’s coming to talk to you. Would you like to take a seat?”
My head churning, I sit down on the nearby sofa, which is covered in an orange and green retro print. There’s a bowl of vegan snacks on the coffee table, several tech magazines, and a new brand of filtered water in an eco-paper bag. I remember sitting here when I interviewed for the job. Double-checking my outfit. Running through all the reasons I would be thrilled to join such an exciting, dynamic company.
“Sasha. What’s up?”
My chest clenches as I hear the familiar strident voice. This is who Ruby has summoned? Joanne? I can hardly bring myself to look at her as she plonks herself down on the sofa in her casual blazer and flared jeans combo and shakes her head reprovingly.
“Ruby says you’ve become a little overemotional?” she says. “Sharing too much? Losing your temper? As you know, Sasha, I did warn you about the consequences of neglecting your personal reflections. It’s up to you to check in with yourself.”
I can’t speak for a few seconds. My throat feels choked with rage. Is she saying this is my fault?
“It’s not a question of personal reflections,” I manage at last, my voice trembling. “It’s a question of staffing, of management failure—”
“I suggest you bring any specific problems up with Asher, as your department head.” Joanne cuts me off crisply. “But in the meantime, I do have some news, which Asher will be announcing later: Lina is no longer working for the company.” She shoots me an icy smile. ...
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