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Oksana Arrived for Her Job Interview and Froze When She Saw Who Was Sitting in the Manager’s Office

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Susan Parker arrived at her job interview and froze the moment she spotted who was sitting behind the managing directors desk.

For twenty years, Susan manned the paperwork, answered endless calls, beamed hopefully at visitors who never deserved it, and brewed coffee so flawlessly for the management she nearly got promoted to Head Barista by mistake. Still, she was made redundant. Life, in all its British glory.

Now, here she was, gearing up for her first interview in two decades.

Susan stood in the hallway mirror, holding a serious conference with herself. Suit: respectable. Hair: presentable. Facewell, nothing will hide forty-six years, but its holding together. Main thing: dont panic. Its just a job. Just another office, another desk, a new extension number.

Her friend Linda, ever optimistic, insisted on seeing her off and provided motivational pep talk in the lift:

Chin up, love. Youre a pro. Twenty years. Thats nothing to sniff at.

Twenty years, Susan echoed. And still got the boot.

Linda shrugged, All experience, darling.

Go on, Linda, or youll be late, Susan said, nudging her out.

The office was in a little side street in Sloane Square, tucked behind an ostentatious four-storey buildingcolumns, glass doors, and a security guard in a suit worn for maximum effect. Shoulders back, deep breath in, deep breath out, through the doors she went.

The receptionist gestured upstairs.

Third floor. The directors expecting youroom 302.

Corridor, door, brass nameplate.

Susan knocked. Entered.

And then: heart freeze. At the desk sat Peter.

Her ex. The very one whose splinters shed plucked out, whom shed fuelled through exams with Cornish pasties, forgiven for the unforgivable, and who left her wide awake till three for years.

They stared at each other.

The sort of moment where you either leg it or stay for further humiliation. There is no Plan C.

So this, Susan thought with almost serene exasperation, is that famous British fate having a laugh.

Peter, annoyingly, looked well. Infuriatingly so.

Honestly, Susan had imagined this daya reunion with her former husbandhed resemble a pickled cucumber past its prime. Thinned hair, little pot belly, maybe some fraying at the edges, the usual eight-year wear and tear caused by being a heartbreaker.

But no.

There he sat, at the big desk, sharply dressed, fitting hair, the confident air of a man who long ago struck a mutual non-aggression pact with his conscience. Bleached streaks at the temples. On the desk: laptop, diary, andfor reasons uncleara miniature cactus. A cactus. Subtle as a marching band.

Susan, Peter said. Not a Ms Parker, certainly not hello, just Susan. As if theyd parted ways yesterday after sharing a roast.

Hello, Peter, she replied, measured.

Peter gestured to a chair. Susan perched, bag on her lap for safetysometimes you just need something to hang onto, even if its only fake leather from Marks & Spencer.

Your CVs here, he said. Nodded. Ive read it.

Good.

Twenty years admin. Impressive.

Yes.

His tone: all business, pointedly not looking quite at hera sort of polite gaze off to the left ear, perfected by people pretending nothing ever happened.

Alright then, playing at professionals, thought Susan. Game on.

So, tell me about your last job, Peter said, with all the emotional investment of a motorway coffee shop.

And off she went, steady and clear: responsibilities, workload, database chaos wrangled, junior staff managed. All the while, an alternate commentary ran through her head.

This is the bloke who said, You just dont understand me, and legged it to Karen from Accounts.

What databases did you use? he asked.

She listed them. Internally: This is the man responsible for my three-month Weetabix-and-tears diet and another six months of no proper sleep.

Did your job involve partner negotiations?

Yescoordinating contracts and board-level meetings.

There he sat. Same suit, same stupid confidence.

Peter scribbled or fake-scribbled into his diary while Susan considered the cosmic comedic timing of this all. Outside, leaves littered a quiet Chelsea streetclassic October. In that room: eight years, a divorce, a row over a flat, another over a garden shed, late-night phone calls to Linda just to say nothing at all, because saying anything was impossible.

Behind the computer, with his cactus.

So, why did you leave your last job? He asked, voice pure professionalism.

Downsizing. Whole admin team was let go.

I see. A pause. You worked closely with senior management, yes?

Yes. My role involved liaising directly with the CEO and board members.

And confidentiality?

Im very discreet.

Peter looked at her properly for a moment. Susan held his gazeneither smiling nor scowling. Just: yes, Im here, and so are you.

Right, the former beloved and now CEO said, setting his pen aside, Id like to continue this chat in a less formal setting. Coffee, perhaps?

Thats when Susan felt a strange clench insidenot anxiety, something else. The sense a new, different conversation was about to begin, and she needed to brace for it.

I dont mind, she said, evenly.

Peter stood, fiddled with the little coffee machine by the window. Back turned. Susan eyed the back of his headhe was going to say something. Something important. Or at least awkward. Thats what the coffee was for.

The machine wheezed and spluttered.

You look well, Peter said, not turning round, suddenly on a first-name, first-person basis.

Susan didnt reply.

He set a cup in front of her, sat down again.

Seriously, he added.

Susan eyed the coffee, then him.

Thanks, she said, neutral.

Peter hesitated.

Susan, I want to say something. Not as your manageras, well, someone who knows you.

Well, this just got interesting, Susan thought. Interesting and about as safe as a budget flight captain appearing in economy with meaningful expression.

Im glad its you sitting here, Peter said at last.

Pure chance, Susan remarked.

Maybe. He offered a half-smile. But I am glad. Truthfully. Youre a real professional. Thats obvious. And its exactly what I need here.

Alright.

But Id like he paused, picking his words like he was hopping over black ice, Id like us to start fresh. No old baggage. Completely blank slate, shall we say.

There it was.

Susan set her cup down.

Blank slate. Eight years and blank slate. The court battle over the flat: blank slate. Those months she could hardly choke down toast: possibly blank slate too.

She paused, studied him like you’d study a new central heating system before agreeing to sign up.

Peter, she began, let me get this straight: youre offering me a job, so long as I pretend nothing at all ever happened?

A hint of eyebrow twitch from Peter.

Im asking to start over. Thats not quite the same.

No, Susan said, its exactly the same.

Silence. The cactus stood tall and indifferent, as only a cactus can.

Thing is, Susan went on, I dont intend to bring up the past. No need, no energy for it. But neither will I act like it never existed. Because it did. Thats my life, not just a page someone else gets to turn.

Peter met her gaze, still quiet.

Im here for an interview, Susan said, Not a nostalgia night. If you need a head of admin with two decades experience, Im happy to talk terms. But if you want someone acting as if eight years ago never happened, Im definitely not it.

She sipped the coffee. It was remarkably good, she notedbringing a small and separate sort of joy.

Peter was silent, looking at her with an expression she struggled to place at first. Then she realised: it was respect.

Youve changed, Peter said.

Eight years. Youd hope so, Susan agreed.

Peter moved to the window, watched the street, then turned.

Susan, his voice softer, I know I was wrong. Back then. It isnt a blank slateyoure right. It happened, and I handled it badly.

Susan looked at him.

She hadnt seen this coming. Not this.

For eight years, shed played the scene in her headhed be angry, hed be dismissive, hed say something patronising. That hed simply admit, I was wrong? Not in her mental playlist.

Nice to hear, she said, after a pause. Even if its about eight years late.

He nodded. Very late.

Silence again, but now softeasy, the kind after a proper, honest talk when you finally stop sparring.

About the job, Peter said, Id like to offer you Head of Admin. Its a step up from your old role. Terms are excellent. But, of course, your choice.

Susan thought a moment.

Ill have a think, she replied.

Fair enough.

She stood, picked up her bag. Peter stood up properly now, no formalities, just a bloke seeing off someone he respects.

Susan, he called as she reached the door.

She turned.

Thank you for not bolting when you saw me, he said.

Susan considered this.

I wasnt planning on staying, to be honest, she said, honestly.

In the corridor, Susan took a momentjust a deep breath outside the door, gathering herself.

Outside, Linda waited with a paper cup of vending machine coffee. She clocked Susans face and was primed with her number one question:

Well?

They offered me the job, Susan said.

A good one?

Yep. Head of Admin.

Blimey. Linda paused. And the boss?

Peter.

Linda stared.

Peter? Your Peter?

Ex-Peter, Susan clarified.

And?

I said Id think about it.

Susan accepted the coffee and took a sip. It tasted like optimism tinged with cardboarda flavour as British as October drizzle, and somehow far more comforting than artisan roast.

They strolled down the little Chelsea lane, leaves crunching in their well-worn British way. The sun did its best to shinenot enough to warm, just enough to make an appearance.

But this time, Susan said, with a small smile, the choicell be mine. Not his. Mine.Linda grinned, bumping her shoulder. Damn right.

They walked on, the crisp air alive with newness, the sort of day where last chances and first beginnings swirl together and its impossible to separate one from the other. Susan looked ahead, past the red double-decker bus trundling past, past the chattering schoolchildren and the window displays shed catalogued for years out of habit. For a moment, everything felt suspendedher life before, her life ahead, the strange feeling of stepping into both at once.

At the street corner, she stopped, just to look at the city. She felt, powerfully, the weight of her own decisionsher own voice, her own name on front doors and brass plates. Whatever she chose, the past couldnt dictate the future unless she let it.

Linda gave her a questioning glance. Susan only smiled, wide and genuine. You know what, Lin, she said, after all those years fetching someone elses coffee, I think Ill treat myself to something nice for once. And before Linda could reply, Susan spotted a nearby patisserie, marched herself in, and ordered the biggest, most ridiculous slice of lemon cake the counter had to offer.

Outside, she bit into her wedge of sunlight-yellow cake, tangy and sweetso alive it demanded notice. Linda laughed, joining her, and together they ate on the curb beneath the waning sun, letting crumbs fall and laughter bubble.

New job or no, ex or not, Susan realised: she didnt have to rewrite the past, only live better in spite of it.

A taxi splashed through a puddle. Susan watched her reflection shimmer in its window, then fade, replaced by the promise of someone walking forward, shoes ticking steady and surea woman who, at last, got to choose her own direction.

And for the first time in a very long while, she did.

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