You’ve never been on this floor before except for HR. Thick carpet. Glass walls. Art no one who works for hourly wage would ever choose voluntarily. Alejandro is already there, along with Nathan, Deborah, the operations chief, and two people on video from other sites. There are sandwiches nobody touches and legal pads nobody writes on for the first few minutes because everyone is waiting to see if you will speak first.
Alejandro stands when you enter.
That annoys you for reasons you can’t explain.
“Thank you for coming,” he says.
You take the seat farthest from him.
“Don’t thank me yet.”
For the next two hours, you do exactly what they asked. You tell them where people break.
Not at the big obvious moments.
At the small compound fractures. The missed bus that turns into a warning. The warning that turns into a schedule cut. The schedule cut that turns into skipped rent. The skipped rent that turns into going back to the boyfriend, husband, mother, uncle, or neighborhood you were trying to leave. You explain that shower access matters. That dignified emergency cash matters. That supervisors are often the first point of cruelty and the last point of accountability. That poor workers lie beautifully because truth is too expensive.
No one interrupts you.
Not once.
Even the man on the screen from Dallas stops checking his email.
When you’re done, the room feels denser somehow, as if the air has absorbed a weight it cannot put down.
Alejandro is the one who finally speaks.
“How many people do you think we’re losing because survival outside work is harder than the work itself?”
You meet his eyes. “More than you can count from a boardroom.”
He nods once as if taking a blow.
After the meeting, the others leave in clusters, low voices and legal notes trailing behind them. You gather your things quickly, eager to escape before the whole strange night can become intimate. But when you reach the doorway, Alejandro says your name.
You turn.
He is alone now, one hand resting on the back of a conference chair.
“Deborah told me about your mother.”
Of course she did. You feel a fresh wave of anger, less at the disclosure than at the simple fact that your life has become administratively relevant.
“I didn’t authorize that.”
“She believed I could help.”
“You already helped.”
“That’s not an answer.”
You shift the strap of your bag higher on your shoulder. “What exactly do you think happens next here?”
He looks at you for a moment, and when he speaks his voice is lower than usual, stripped of the boardroom tone.
“I think abusive men count on logistics. Distance. Money. Fatigue. Fear. I think if any of those can be reduced, women get a fighting chance.”
That is not the answer you expected.
You expected ego. Savior language. Strategy. Something that would put him at the center of the story. Instead he talks like a man who has watched this from too close before.
The realization comes to you before you can stop it.
“Someone you know.”
He doesn’t answer.
He doesn’t need to.
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