The Rival I Left Behind
Vera Quinn and I spent seven years tearing each other apart in the corporate world.
When we first started, she sabotaged my presentation slides, hoping to watch me humiliate myself in front of the board.
I retaliated by flagging her fraudulent expense reports to HR, making sure her name was dragged through every department in the company.
When we were both up for the director position, she locked me in a supply closet to make me miss the final interview.
The moment I got out, I poached a major client she had been pursuing for six months, leaving her at the very bottom of the year-end performance rankings.
In our industry, we were fire and water—completely incompatible.
Then three years ago, the endless scheming finally felt hollow. I handed in my resignation and walked away from the industry for good.
The day I packed my desk and left, Vera was leaning against the elevator door, her eyes full of mockery.
"Giving up already? Mylo, a cowardly deserter like you deserves to starve on the streets".
I hit the "close" button, swearing I never wanted to see her face again as long as I lived.
Three years later, we crossed paths again at the industry’s annual gala. Vera was now the youngest partner in the industry.
She looked at me as I stood there, humbling myself to pour drinks for an executive, and let out a sharp laugh.
"It’s been a few years, and you’ve fallen this far? Working as a glorified escort to scrounge up some investments? What happened to that pride you used to fight me with?"
But I wasn't there to secure any investment.
I was there to beg that executive for a few more days to pay off the predatory loans my father had left behind.
I just needed enough time to sign the consent form for my stomach cancer surgery with a clear conscience.