Lowballed and Lied To
My boss, Kyle Brown, had just processed payroll when Sam Jefferson, the trainee I had been mentoring, tossed me his phone. He said, "Can you hold this for me while I use the bathroom?"
I took it without thinking, then froze when I saw the screen. That was because a notification had just popped up: [This month's salary has been deposited. Total: $4,692.00.]
I had been with this company for eight years, and I only made one thousand dollars a month.
When I was hired, Kyle had told me that we were a startup. As long as I worked hard, I would make big money eventually. But over the years, Kyle had traded in one Mercedes after another while my salary kept shrinking.
At present, my savings were less than four thousand dollars. I was close to not being able to afford the medical bills for my younger sister, Eva Rivers, who was very sick and bedridden.
Meanwhile, the trainee I was mentoring made close to four thousand seven hundred dollars a month.
I stayed quiet for a moment, then turned and asked the employee beside me how much he made.
He stammered for a long time and would not answer.
I understood it then.
I picked up my phone and opened the recruitment message a competitor had sent me a few days earlier.