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Chapter 4 - Chapter Four: The Welcome No One Warns You About

‎The first thing Azara noticed about the Operations floor was the simple colours and aesthetic,

‎Everything was grey and beige. White. Shiny metal. All very refreshing..

‎The walls were plain. The lights were bright in a way that was just okay, Well thought out and aesthetically pleasing.

‎Her team sat near the far window. Six desks arranged in two rows.

‎But the desk right beside hers was already taken.

‎A woman sat there.

‎When Azara arrived, the woman looked up at her… then looked back down at her computer without saying anything.

‎That morning, Mrs. Adeyemi handled Azara's onboarding.

‎She was kind, but in a very organized way. The kind of person who liked systems first, and people second.

‎She explained the company. Gave Azara her ID card. Showed her around.

‎Introduced her to a few people.

‎Azara forgot their names immediately because she was trying too hard to stay calm.

‎The last person she met was a woman with neat braids and sharp eyes.

‎"And this is Ireti Coker," Mrs. Adeyemi said. "Senior Coordinator, Operations. She will be your direct supervisor."

‎Ireti looked at Azara slowly. From head to toe. Then back up to her face.

‎There was no warmth in her eyes.

‎"Junior Coordinator," Ireti said.

‎"Yes," Azara replied, smiling.

‎Ireti didn't smile back.

‎She turned to her computer.

‎By noon, Azara began to understand.

‎It started with small things.

‎When Azara asked questions, Ireti gave short answers. Just enough to respond, but not enough to really help.

‎When sending emails, Ireti copied everyone… except Azara.

‎In front of others, she called her "the new girl," even though Azara's name was clearly on her ID card.

‎None of it was obvious.

‎That was the problem.

‎If you pointed at just one thing, it would sound small.

‎But when everything added up… it became heavy.

‎On Wednesday, Azara made a mistake.

‎She wore color.

‎She chose a rust-orange blouse. It was neat. It looked professional. It fit well.

‎And when she wore it, she felt good.

‎Confident.

‎Like she was allowed to take up space.

‎She walked into the office, dropped her bag, and opened her laptop.

‎"Oh," Ireti said from beside her, without looking up. "So this is what we're doing today."

‎Azara turned. "Sorry?"

‎"The top," Ireti said. "It's very… expressive."

‎The way she said "expressive" didn't sound like a compliment.

‎Azara felt her jaw tighten.

‎"Thank you," she said calmly.

‎"Hmm," Ireti replied, still typing. "There's a dress code here, just so you know. Some people actually read the handbook."

‎Azara had read the handbook.

‎It said business casual.

‎It said nothing about color.

‎Her blouse was not inappropriate in any way.

‎She knew that.

‎Still, she said nothing.

‎She just focused on her work.

‎Thursday was worse.

‎Azara had gone downstairs to get water.

‎When she was coming back up, she heard Ireti's voice around the corner.

‎Not quiet. Not loud either.

‎Just loud enough to be heard.

‎"I don't even know where they find people like this now. Showing up looking like a market"

‎Someone laughed.

‎Azara stopped on the stairs.

‎Her hand tightened around her glass.

‎Words like that don't just hurt in the moment.

‎They stay.

‎They make you question yourself.

‎Your clothes. Your choices. Your confidence.

‎She didn't go forward.

‎She turned back.

‎She went downstairs and stood in the kitchen for a few minutes, staring at the window and breathing slowly.

‎Then she went back upstairs another way.

‎On Friday, everything changed.

‎Azara was at her desk, working.

‎One earphone in.

‎Focused.

‎Ireti walked over and dropped a printed document on her keyboard.

‎"This needs to be redone," she said.

‎Azara removed her earphone and looked at it.

‎It was her report from Wednesday.

‎She had spent six hours on it.

‎"What exactly needs to be changed?" Azara asked calmly.

‎"Everything," Ireti said. "The format is wrong. The columns are wrong. Even your thinking is wrong."

‎Her voice was loud enough for others to hear.

‎"I don't know what standard you're used to," she continued, "but here we do things properly. If you can't handle that, I can have you moved somewhere easier. Maybe the mail room."

‎The office went quiet.

‎The kind of quiet where everyone hears… but no one looks.

‎Azara looked at the paper.

‎Then at Ireti.

‎She felt that familiar feeling.

‎A calm anger.

‎Deep. Controlled.

‎"Okay," she said quietly. "I'll check the format."

‎"Good," Ireti replied, and walked away.

‎What Azara didn't know was that someone had recorded everything.

‎Three desks away, a young man named Tunde had his phone on his desk.

‎He had noticed the pattern all week. And had recorded, Especially because he also got the same treatment when he was a new employee..

‎He initially hadn't planned to record anything.

‎But his phone was already there.

‎The video lasted forty-three seconds.

‎It had clear sound.

‎He watched it once. contemplated a bit...

‎Then he sent it to HR.

‎He also copied the COO's office.

‎And he wrote just three sentences:

‎"This has been happening since Monday. I think management should know. I have more if needed."

‎Azara didn't hear about it from HR.

‎She heard it from Tunde.

‎He came to her desk around 4:45pm.

‎He looked serious. Like someone who had just done something big.

‎"I need to tell you something," he said.

‎On Monday morning, before 9am, everything was already happening.

‎Ireti was called to the executive floor at 8:47am.

‎She came back around 9:30am.

‎She went straight to her desk.

‎Opened her drawers.

‎Started packing her things quietly.

‎She didn't look at anyone.

‎When she walked past Azara's desk, she kept her eyes forward.

‎Her face was hard.

‎If she wanted to say something… she didn't.

‎She walked out.

‎The door closed behind her.

‎At 10am, Mrs. Adeyemi came to Azara.

‎"Azara, can we talk?"

‎They sat in a small meeting room.

‎Mrs. Adeyemi folded her hands and spoke carefully.

‎"We have a zero-tolerance policy for bullying," she said. "Mr. Cole takes it very seriously. Three years ago, the company lost someone because a situation like this was ignored. Since then, we don't take chances."

‎Azara stayed quiet.

‎She was thinking about that word.

‎Personally.

‎About a man she had never met… making rules because of something that mattered to him.

‎"Ireti's employment has been terminated," Mrs. Adeyemi continued. "Effective immediately."

‎She paused...

‎"Also, after reviewing your work this week, which has been very strong… we would like to promote you to Senior Coordinator, Operations."

‎Azara blinked.

‎"Her role," Mrs. Adeyemi said simply.

‎Azara walked back to the office floor alone.

‎She stood beside the new desk.

‎Ireti's old desk.

‎Bigger. Closer to the window. Facing the rest of the team.

‎She thought about everything that had happened that week.

‎The orange blouse.

‎The comments.

‎The pressure.

‎Then she sat down.

‎Opened her laptop.

‎And started working.

‎From across the room, Tunde looked at her and gave a small nod.

‎She nodded back.

‎That was enough.

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