Being a Senior Coordinator was not something you slowly got used to.
It came with pressure.
In her first week, Azara took over three projects Ireti had left behind...
All of them were messy. now she wished it would just be lifted off her shoulders and passed to someone else,
One was a supply chain audit that was already two weeks late.
Another was a vendor negotiation that had stopped because no one followed up.
The third was a reporting system that had been started, stopped, started again… and was now just a folder full of different documents that didn't match each other.
Azara stayed at work until eight on Monday.
Until nine-thirty on Tuesday.
By Wednesday, she brought extra clothes to the office. She already knew how the week would go.
That night, Nkechi called her at 9:15pm.
"Are you still at the office?"
"I'm almost done."
"Azara… you've been there for thirteen hours."
"Twelve and a half."
There was silence.
"Is this still about the wall?"
Azara looked at her laptop. The spreadsheets. The emails. The notes she had written everywhere.
"It's about the job, Nkechi."
"The job… or something else?"
"The job," she said firmly.
And she meant it...
Because something had changed.
She had discovered something she didn't expect.
She was actually good at this.
Not in a fantasy way.
Not the kind where everything is easy and perfect...
But in a real way.
The kind where you see a problem clearly… and solve it step by step.
She fixed the audit in three days by starting from the final result and working backwards.
She restarted the vendor negotiation by calling the supplier herself. Straight to the point. No delay. They sent a new proposal in two days.
She rebuilt the reporting system from the beginning. One clean document. Clear and simple.
She deleted the old confusing files.
Then she sent the new one to the team with one line:
This is the version we will use.
The team was watching her.
She knew it.
Not in a bad way.
Tunde had been quietly supportive from the start.
A woman named Chisom also started including Azara in more emails. That alone showed trust.
But still…
People knew how she got the role.
It wasn't normal.
So she knew one thing.
Her work had to prove she deserved it.
And it did.
In her fourth week, she got her first email from the executive level.
It came at 7:14am.
From an address she didn't recognize.
The subject was simple: Q3 Routing Review.
She opened it.
The message said that her work had been reviewed. The approach was good. But they wanted her to explain her thinking behind one part.
She should prepare a short summary for a meeting on Thursday.
There was no full signature.
Just a name: E. Adekunle.
Azara paused.
She thought about the name.
Adekunle Adrian Cole.
Then she noticed the "E."
Not him.
Someone else.
She let out a breath.
She needed to stop reacting every time she saw that name.
She replied calmly. Said she would prepare the summary.
Then she continued working.
On Thursday, she attended her first executive meeting.
There were eight people in the room.
She was the youngest there.
By far.
The man who emailed her was there.
Emmanuel Adekunle. The Chief Operations Officer.
He nodded at her when she entered.
That helped.
She presented for eleven minutes.
She had learned something.
Leaders don't want long stories.
They want clear results.
And just enough explanation to trust you.
When she finished, Emmanuel asked if anyone had questions.
There were three.
She answered all of them clearly.
That evening, on her way home, she called Nkechi.
"I think I'm starting to understand this place."
"Good," Nkechi said. "It's about time."
At home, the photos were still on the wall.
She hadn't removed them.
She had thought about it once.
But she left them.
They didn't hurt anything.
And the biggest one… the picture of him standing by the window…
It didn't feel like obsession anymore.
It felt like direction.
Like something guiding her.
She still hadn't seen him in real life.
He stayed on the higher floors.
Sixteen. Seventeen. Eighteen.
In meeting rooms she had only seen from the elevator.
And honestly…
She was okay with that.
She was building something real.
Everything else could wait.
It only waited two more weeks.
One Tuesday morning, Azara arrived early.
7:30am.
She liked the office when it was quiet.
She was working when the elevator opened.
Four people walked out.
She didn't look up at first.
She heard movement. Voices.
Then one voice spoke.
"This is the Operations floor?"
Something about the voice made her look up.
It was calm.
Steady.
The kind of voice people listen to.
He was taller than she expected.
That was her first thought.
He stood with Emmanuel and two others. Talking. Observing everything around him.
Wearing a dark suit. No tie. Relaxed, but sharp.
Azara quickly looked back at her laptop.
Too quickly.
Her heart was racing.
She pressed her feet flat on the floor, trying to stay calm.
Focused on her screen like nothing else existed.
They were walking across the office.
They would pass.
Nothing would happen.
"Who prepared the Q3 routing brief?"
His voice.
He was asking Emmanuel.
"Our new Senior Coordinator," Emeka said. "Azara. She joined last month."
Footsteps came closer.
Then stopped.
Azara looked up.
He was looking at her.
His face was calm. Professional. But focused.
Like he was really paying attention.
"The vendor system," he said. "Was that your idea?"
"Yes," she replied.
Her voice was steady.
Somehow.
"It was well thought out," he said.
A short pause.
"Good work."
Then he moved on.
The others followed him.
The elevator doors closed.
Azara sat still at her desk.
For almost forty seconds.
Then she slowly took her phone from under the desk.
She opened her messages.
Typed to Nkechi:
He spoke to me. He said good work. He is taller in person. I am fine. Do not reply immediately.
Nkechi replied in twelve seconds:
I am replying immediately. WHAT!
