"I expect perfection and discipline."
Can you pinpoint the singular moment when your life changes? The exact instant when an alien thought first crawls in? A vision straight out of the darkest and most repressed corner of your subconscious, worming its way into your mind.
The moment when an everyday, social interaction -- say, a professional relationship -- becomes contaminated with unspeakable fantasies.
It's an important moment. The contamination cannot be undone. What's a perfectly normal scenario for other people becomes impossibly sexualised in your head, so corrupted and twisted by your own imagination that you can never treat it with detachment, ever again.
I can pinpoint that moment. It's when, standing proudly in front of Alessia, I place my hands on my hips, arch an eyebrow expectantly, and tell her that "There will be no slouching, and my standards are very high. I hope you're up to the task, Alessia. I expect perfection and discipline."
That's not the kindest thing to tell to your newest employee. That's fine. I've never been the kindest of employers. I've changed three maids in the past five years, for one reason or another, and I've been a harsh taskmistress to them all.
But I have extra reason to take it out on Alessia. Actually, more than a few reasons...
In school, we were never enemies, nor were we friends, but we viciously competed for grades. I won that fight, in the end... and from the looks of it, every subsequent round of competition, because in the years since we've lost track of one another, Alessia has gone nowhere.
I'm a successful and respected law professor at a prestigious university, and -- uncommon enough in academia -- I make enough bank that I can afford to hire a domestic cleaner. But Alessia? Well... she's the cleaner.
Most people would gloat in such a scenario, but my reaction is a little more elaborate than that. I take in her figure, this ridiculously pretty dark-haired girl who's had to switch into a -- practical, but still so enticing -- maid uniform, so she can clean her betters' homes for a living...
I have to stop myself from biting my lip. I've never had a name for the thoughts that used to pass through my head over the years. That eventually one of us would do something so blatant, so manifest, that the other would have no choice but to recognise the other as the winner. And then...
And then, I'm not sure. But in the smoke and haze of these formless fantasies, I do imagine one of us standing taller than the other. The loser reclining her head in recognition and shame. Acknowledging herself as the winner's social inferior.
Just thinking about it makes me quiver.
It feels like, at last, I'm on the cusp of realising this long-held fantasy. In truth, I've been thinking about it less and less over the years, so it's a shock to realise how badly I want this. I want Alessia to avert her gaze before me, before mutely cleaning my apartment. I want to assert myself on her.
Beggars can't be choosers, I know, so when I make my statement about perfection and discipline, I expect her to buckle, or flinch, or even just suffer it in silence, because enduring my bullying will be a condition of her employment.
But that's not what Alessia does.
She looks me straight in the eye, looking unfazed in the slightest, and says three simple words to me.
"As do I."
For a moment, I'm at a loss for words, confused by the seeming non sequitur in the conversation. In reality, I know this is the kind of subtle confrontation we used to have all the time in school. In a heartbeat, the crack of the old electricity is once again in the air.
Like I said, we've never been enemies. I honestly couldn't even give a name to the weird, standoffish attitude we naturally developed towards one another, the wordless intensity of our competition. I've been looking forward to finally seeing this old nemesis humbled by her new station in life, but she isn't, in the slightest.
It seems that falling on hard times has not sapped Alessia's confidence, to the point that she feels like standing up to her prospective employer like this.
I take her in, her smug expression, the way her long black hair frames her tanned face, and to my embarrassment... I'm the first to look away.
I don't know why that makes me feel... weird. Like there's an odd heat in my belly. I came into this conversation expecting to just browbeat my new employee into submission. Not only that, I came in with all the advantages normally ascribed to those in my position.
I'm the employer, the privileged, successful person who sets the terms. She's the employee who needs a way to pay the bills. The mere self-enforcement of social etiquette would give me power over her.
Instead, with a curt statement whose meaning I can't exactly parse, and a stare I couldn't meet, she's put me at a disadvantage. Me. The lady of the house, her prospective boss, the girl who's definitely won our fight -- in the classroom, in the job market, and in life.
"So, Chiara," Alessia says, seemingly pleased with my wordless capitulation, "when do I begin?"
"Ahem," I say, clearing my throat, regaining my composure, and once more locking gazes with my old rival. She caught me off guard, that is all. Soon, she'll be literally cleaning my apartment, and we'll see who's confident then.
"Friday," I say. "You'll be doing Friday afternoons."
For a moment, studying the glimmer in Alessia's eyes, I think she's going to challenge me on this point too. Instead, she thrusts her hand forward. I clasp hers in a grip that's a little stronger than it needs to be, and she squeezes right back.
"Alright," she says, and her eyes never leave mine. If I thought this'd be an easy win, I'm apparently in for something else entirely, but that's fine. I know that I can take her.
Even so... this is an important moment. A moment of contamination. Lots of people hire cleaners, lots of people work as cleaners. And yet, from this moment, I know I will never be able to look at this profession the same way.
It is inexorably tied to the struggle, the competition to prove oneself the better woman, with the loser reduced to a role as a domestic helper. It's hard for me to ignore the quiver that goes through my sex at the mere thought. If it weren't so abstract, it'd feel almost...
Sexual.
***
"Thank god it's Friday."
Can you recognise the singular moment when you rediscover what it means to feel truly alive?