Chapter 28
Chapter 28
“That’s my point, Lina,” Rosie remarked softly. “I have seen you give second, third, and fourth chances to people who
have messed up far more. Some even repeatedly.”
She was right, but I was my mother’s daughter and therefore stubborn as a mule. “It’s not the same.”
“Why not?”
“Because.”
Her green eyes turned harder; she was not letting this go. So, she was going to make me say it. We were going to talk
about it.
Fine.
“How about because he told our boss that he would rather work with anyone else in InTech? On his second day of
work.” I felt my blood rushing to my face at the memory. “Key on anyone. Even Gerald for crying out loud.” I hadn’t
overheard Aaron mention Gerald in particular, but I was sure I had heard everything else.
“Anyone but her, Jeff. Just not her. I don’t think I could take it. Is she even capable of taking on this project? She looks
young and inexperienced.”
Aaron had told that to our boss on the phone. I had happened to walk past his office. I had accidentally overheard,
and I hadn’t forgotten. It was all etched in my memory.
“He had known me for two days, Rosie. Two.” I gestured with my index and middle fingers. “And he was new. He
came here and discredited me to our boss, indirectly kicked me out of a project, and put in question my
professionalism, and for what? Because he didn’t like me after the two minutes we talked? Because I looked young?
Because I smile and laugh and I’m not a cyborg? I’ve worked hard. I’ve worked my ass off, getting to where I am. You
know what comments like that can do.” I felt my voice pitch high. Same went for the pressure of my blood now
pumping into my temples.
Making an effort to calm myself, I released a shaky breath.
Rosie nodded, looking at me with the understanding only a good friend would. But there was something else there
too. And I was under the impression I wouldn’t like whatever she had to say next.
“I get it. I do, I swear.” She smiled.
Okay, that was good. I needed her to be on my side. And I knew she was.
I watched her walk around the table and take a seat beside me. Then, she turned and faced me.
Uh-oh. This wasn’t all that good anymore.
Rosie placed a hand on my back and continued, “I hate to remind you of this, but you didn’t even want to be on the
GreenSolar project. Remember how much you complained about that client?”
Of course I’d had to go and find a best friend who had a borderline photographic memory. Of course she remembered
that I had been glad to be relocated to a different project.
“And,” she continued, “as you very well said, Aaron didn’t know you.”
Exactly. He hadn’t bothered to do that before he decided to label me as a hindrance and talk shit about me to our
boss.
I crossed my arms in front of my chest. “What’s your point, Rosalyn?”
“My point is that, sure, he judged you based on only a couple of days,” she patted my back. “But you can come across
a little … informal. Relaxed. Spontaneous. Sometimes loud.”
My scoff was heard all the way in Spain. “Excuse me?” I gasped loudly. Dammit.
“I love you, sweetie.” My friend smiled warmly. “But it’s true.” I opened my mouth, but she didn’t give me the chance to
speak. “You are one of the hardest workers here, and you are amazing at your job while you manage to create a light
and fun working atmosphere. That’s why you are a team leader.”
“Okay, I like this direction far better,” I muttered. “Keep going.”
“But Aaron didn’t have a way of knowing that.”
My eyes widened. “Are you defending him? Shall I remind you that we—as friends—should hate each other’s
enemies and nemeses? Do you need me to print a copy of the best-friend code for you?”
“Lina”—her head swiveled, looking frustrated—“be serious for a minute.”
I sobered up immediately, deflating in my chair. “Okay, fine. Sorry. Go ahead.” This is property © NôvelDrama.Org.
“I just think you were hurt—understandably so—and that bothered you enough to write him off this long.”
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