At one fifty-five, the brass door opened and a tall woman in a charcoal suit walked in. Vanessa shot up so fast her chair scraped. Elena. You made it. Elena Whitfield, CEO of Whitfield Vance, the consulting firm Vanessa had bragged about all lunch. Elena hugged her, then turned toward me and her whole face changed. Grace. Oh my God, Grace, is that you? The room went still. Elena had been my mentor through the Whitfield Scholars Program for two years. She was the reason I got into Wharton’s night MBA. She was the woman who wrote my recommendation letter last month. She looked at my soaked apron, then at Vanessa’s smug frozen smile, then at the phone still recording on the table. Vanessa, why is my incoming Director of Strategy on her knees mopping up your water. Vanessa laughed, a small choking sound. Director of, I’m sorry, what. Elena picked up Vanessa’s phone, tapped it twice, and slid it across the linen. That’s the story you just posted. That’s my scholar. That’s the woman who was supposed to be your boss on Monday. Marlon appeared behind me with a clean towel and a very tight jaw. Vanessa stood up so fast her purse hit the floor. Elena, wait, I didn’t, I didn’t know, she never said. Elena’s voice didn’t rise once. You don’t need to know who someone is to treat them like a human being, Vanessa. That was the entire test. You failed it in eleven minutes. Her friends were already gathering coats. Elena turned to me. Take off the apron, Grace. Your first meeting is at nine. Bring the video. HR will want it. I untied the apron with hands that finally, finally stopped shaking. Vanessa was still whispering my name like a question as I walked past her table for the last time.
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