Chapter 6: The Copier Confrontation
After the brutal meeting finally concluded, the office atmosphere turned incredibly bizarre. People actively avoided walking past Mara’s desk, yet they constantly stared at her from the safety of their cubicles.
Owen came close enough to attempt an apology, stammering through a half-sentence before seeming to completely run out of the English language. Mara spared him the agony by aggressively pretending to check her empty inbox.
She needed to escape the heavy, suffocating stares. She practically ran into the small, cramped copy room.
She stood in front of the massive industrial printer, desperately trying to convince the machine to stop blinking PAPER JAM in angry red letters. There was, in fact, absolutely no visible paper jammed anywhere, but there was plenty of emotional hostility radiating from the plastic casing.
“I am going to throw you out the fourteenth-floor window,” Mara whispered aggressively to the machine, violently opening and slamming the toner door.
“I find physical threats rarely improve their performance,” a deep voice noted calmly from the doorway.
Mara froze. She didn’t turn around immediately, her hands gripping the cold plastic of the printer tray.
Evan Pierce stood a highly respectful distance away, his hands casually slipped into his trouser pockets. He looked less terrifying now, stripped of the aggressive boardroom posture, but his presence still consumed all the oxygen in the tiny room.
She took a slow, deep breath, bracing herself.
“So,” Mara said, slowly turning around to face him. “Do I call you Evan, Mister Pierce, or your majesty of declined debit cards?”
He almost smiled. The corners of his eyes crinkled slightly. “Evan is perfectly fine.”
“Great. Evan,” she replied, shutting the copier door significantly harder than necessary. “Next time you want to deeply understand how poor people navigate the world, maybe try asking a question before going undercover as a stranded civilian.”
He absorbed the sharp insult without flinching. “I entirely deserve that.”
“You honestly deserve much worse,” Mara fired back, her exhaustion replacing her fear. “But unfortunately, I am still on the clock at work.”
A heavy, thick silence stretched between them. The printer whirred aggressively, mockingly printing a completely blank test page.
“I wanted to personally thank you for the coffee yesterday,” Evan said quietly, breaking the silence.
Mara finally turned her whole body to face him. The anger burning in her dark eyes was not loud, but it was incredibly, terrifyingly precise.
“That coffee was not a secret job interview, Evan,” she stated, her voice tight with suppressed rage. “It was not a moral character reference for your HR files.”
“I know it wasn’t,” he replied gently.
“It was absolutely not permission to aggressively drag me into the center of your corporate investigation!” she snapped, taking a step toward him.
“I needed to show them exactly how deeply the toxicity had rooted itself,” Evan defended himself calmly. “Your situation was undeniable proof.”
“Do you have any idea what you actually did?” her voice lowered into a raw, painful whisper. “Because when men like Graham Ellis hurt people, women like me learn to stay completely invisible just to survive.”
Evan’s expression faltered for the very first time.
“And today, suddenly, every single person in this company saw me,” Mara continued, a single angry tear escaping her eye. “Not because I finally decided to speak up. But because you decided to point a massive, blinding flashlight directly at the corner where I was desperately trying to hide.”
Evan had absolutely no quick, polished corporate answer for that.
That was the very first thing Mara liked about him, completely against her own will. He did not immediately try to fill the uncomfortable silence with empty leadership language or defensive excuses.
He just stood there and let the ugly truth make him deeply, profoundly uncomfortable.
Finally, he slowly reached into his suit jacket. He pulled his leather wallet out and carefully extracted a crisp, five-dollar bill. He held it out toward her.
Mara stared at the green paper, then looked slowly up at his face. “You’re trying to financially reimburse the specific incident that caused my existential workplace crisis?”
“I am beginning to suspect that this gesture is incredibly poorly timed,” Evan admitted, his arm dropping slightly.
“Keep it,” she said, finally yanking her heavily jammed printout from the machine’s tray. “Consider it your tuition for learning how the real world actually operates.”
She aggressively shoved past him, walking out of the copy room before he could formulate a response.
Evan stood completely alone in the humming room, looking down at the five-dollar bill in his large hand. Yesterday, Mara Collins had generously bought him coffee. Today, she had brutally handed him the invoice for everything he still did not understand about humanity.
Have you ever tried to help someone, only to realize your “solution” made their life infinitely more difficult?