Hi,
Vix
here *
waves
*. This story is a part of the
On the Job Story Event
hosted by the phenomenal HeyAll.
Abstract
: After five years of putting off her own career ambitions, Daphne quits her job during the 2021 ice storm. Her boss, Kyle, thinks sheâs working from home on a report.
Disclaimer
: This story is just a light romance about a workplace affair in a marketing company. If you like romance, comedy and a little bratty Dom/sub play, then hopefully youâll enjoy it!
Thank you for reading, and thank you
HeyAll
for hosting this event!
As always, all characters are over eighteen, and all rights are reserved.
___________________
Telling My Boss To Fuck Off!
by Vix Giovanni
âOmigod, Daphne, you should have been a lawyer. Or a doctor. Or a pharmacist. Or, hell, even a manicurist. Anything else,â I mumbled under my breath as I typed up a report for my anal retentive boss, Kyle.
This Marketing Analyst job was only supposed to have been a short term gig. Two years tops. Just something to tide me over while I earned enough money to get my MBA, since my parents were putting all their savings (as well as their hopes and dreams) into my sister, Nataliaâs, medical school education. But five years later, instead of the forecasted two, here I was, still doing the same old shit.
Playing devilâs advocate, the company I worked for would probably claim that I technically wasnât doing
exactly
the same thing Iâd been doing five years before. I wasnât still just a Junior Marketing Analyst, like Iâd been when I started; I was now a
Senior
Marketing Analyst. My job was no longer merely highlighting numbers in raw data and comparing regional sales; now, I was also entrusted with the responsibility of taking those highlighted numbers and plugging them into Excel-based charts and graphs.
Big whoop.
In reality, it was the same old shit and just came with a new title. My job promotion didnât even come with an office or even a new desk. No: for five years, Iâd been in the exact same spot, in the exact same positionâstill at my boss, Kyleâs, beck and call at the desk directly in front of his office door.
I hadnât even been given a new desk chair! And Iâd been in this job for so long that my butt had left a permanent dent in the seat; not that the company seemed to care about that at all. In fact, they probably saw it as evidence that I was a team player. Before COVID, I was expected to be at my desk, in that horrid, uncomfortable chair, for exactly seven hours a day with an hourâs break for lunch; no more and no less, unless Iâd been preapproved for overtime. But because of COVID, my company was allowing me to work from home on alternate days, so long as my boss, Kyle, didnât need me in the office.
So, why did I stay? After graduating at the bottom of my class from a bottom-tier college near my hometown in upstate New York, I thought that this job was probably the best I could do. Plus, there was the companyâs âsuper seductiveâ 401(k) match, medical, full dental and a handful of other benefits. As a Senior Marketing Analyst, I was finally earning enough to live alone instead of with roommates (hooray: adulthood!)âalthough, most of my income went towards the rent on my tiny pre-war one-bedroom apartment in a walk-up in Long Island City.
If it wasnât already clear enough: I wasnât making bank. My new, inflated job title and slight salary raise barely could keep up with real world inflation! And Iâd hit the ceiling of anything more I could achieve career-wise without further credentials. The only way I could achieve more and do more was to go back to school and get my Masterâs degree in business. After five years of the same old shit, even the pay was no longer worth the
agita
.
Especially since I had to earn that pay by working for Kyle Campbell. Yeah, even his alliterated name was annoying! Granted, all the C-level heads of our company were impressed by him, and he was a well-known rising superstar in the advertising industry. But still: being a super successful, super brilliant, super accomplished businessman didnât make up for him being
suuuuuch
a total douche. And neither did his handsome face, or how amazing he looked in a suit, or the sexy way heâd sometimes rake his fingers through his thick hair while he was thinkingâŚ.
WaitâŚ. I totally did not mean that last sentence!
What I
meant
was that working day in and day out with Kyle was completely draining. Literal torture. Despite my companyâs official COVID policy, Kyle still regularly asked me to come into the office to work! My hours were from eight a.m. to five p.m., and as soon as his clock read eight oâone, Kyle would either call me into his office, or come to my desk to dictate a list of tasks and assignments as long as he was tall. And every assignment always had a million checkpoints that required me to go back and touch base with him, so that he could âmake sure I knew what I was doing.â Insert rolled eyes here.
And no way a task could possibly take longer than he thought it should, or that a client might call and ask for last-minute changes that could push back the deadline. No way! If anything like that happened, then Kyle would literally come and hover over me all day, standing over me to watch me work and put his two-cents into whatever it was that I was doing.
I haaaaaated that, more than anything. So frustrating! Not only was his tall, broad physical presence totally and completely overbearing: I could feel the tension in his energy whenever he did that,