"Stand clear of the closing doors!" the PA announced sternly, impatiently, and pushy. The fat churro vendor lady with five giant plastic bags, that had churro tips sticking out of them, moved like a glacier. I was only a step away from the black chasm between the platform and the train. A wall of morning commuters was pressed inside, their backs flat against the window with a circle of body steam around them. "Fucking lady, move!" I hissed into her back, drowned out by the cacophony of train wheels singing from the passing express train. She barely budged. I slipped sideways to squeeze past her right side, squeezing my body against the fabric of people standing there, my black, slick leather Kendra Spade (not Kate Spade!) purse clutched tightly to my shoulder. I pulled my left arm with me as best as I could and the flowers. My left hand tightly squeezed the white Feline Goutin flower bouquet wrapping with the $200 flowers.
The door closed an inch away from my left fist. I pulled. The bouquet expanded to become lush and wide from my wrist, forming a conical shape that would not move inside any farther. I held on tight. The train started moving. A giant tweet jacket back lost balance and came towards my face. Being short meant that all I could see in front of me was the back of the man. Not even my black high heels - fancy Jimmy Choo pumps with skinny leather straps - could get my eyes up to shoulder level. I moved my right arm up to guard my makeup from being smudged by the man. The train gathered steam. There was a big whack on the bouquet outside the train. The door got leveraged open an inch and quickly snapped close again. There were three smaller whacks that I felt on my left wrist. Then there was stillness on the bouquet. I knew what that meant. Cold sweat formed on my forehead from standing without breakfast, the lack of air down here, and the general stress of dealing with life.
I got off at the next stop. The eager commuter bodies behind me were pushing me onto the platform, I looked at the healthy green stems in my left hand that had been violently shorn short, frayed at the ends like a cannon blast that split the cannon itself. I swam with the stream rushing up the stairs and tossed the green fodder into a garbage can on the way. I spilled onto the cobblestones of Wall Street. A few short paces away was the entrance to my office, a towering atrium, crowded with the morning onrush. Twenty security turnstiles, beeping with another office drone rushing past every second! We congregated in front of the elevator banks. A big display announced which elevator would open next and to which floors it would go. Whenever the display flashed an update, a rush of people would press with desperation and no regard for personal injury towards the elevator. Luckily, I got swept up by a big linebacker-type guy in a full-on suit with tie because his easiest way of getting on was to simply push myself in front of him. I felt the pressure on my knees as the elevator accelerated to super high speed. My empty stomach dropped and made me woozy. The good thing was that I couldn't faint, packed in so tightly between bodies.
"Did you get me anything for my birthday, Anna?" were the first words that greeted me entering the office. My boss beamed a smile from ear to ear, clearly full of joy and anticipation at a thoughtful gift from me. I gave her a big warm and fuzzy hug. If I weren't trying to get promoted, I would give a fuck about that lady. "Oh, be patient! I got you a wonderful surprise coming," I lied, quietly bemoaning how much I had already spent on her bouquet.
"Your presentation got moved forward to now. It's in the Viking Raid room," Silvia said friendly with a glow in her eyes like she deserved a big pat on the back for being so helpful to remind me. Oh fucking god! I had not prepared the slides for that. I quickened my steps to a gallop on my three-inch heels. Five minutes late was still sort of on time.
I entered the room. I grabbed the last remaining swivel chair at the oval table. Mark had his feet on the table and talked about how important this quarter was and how much the company depended on us to step it up. Everyone else was deeply immersed, typing on their laptops doing real work. I was glad that Mark went on one of his sanctimonious rants about how we were world-class and that we constantly had to push innovation. I started working on my slides for the presentation that I was supposed to hold. I made stuff up. The proposal was for a project code-named "Tiny Mouse." Quant research projected a $350 million market opportunity. Here is another slide about the difficulty of recruiting market research participants. I simply wrote, "Combatting Amgibuity With Selection Strategies" and copy-and-pasted a confused-looking guy from a Google image search. I'd be able to ramble for a while on that topic.
"Anna, are you ready to present our marque project for next quarter?" introduced me Mark to the group. Nobody looked up, except for Paul. He was already sending me a stinky eye.
"Yes, of course! Let me project my slides. We have an excellent high revenue and low effort opportunity," I cooed in front of them. Mark's face was glowing. Paul squinted at me.
I didn't get to talk for five minutes before Paul interrupted me: "Your numbers are complete shit! Show me the data! Where are the data tables for your studies?"
I took a deep inhale. Panic crawled over me. I had made up everything. I hadn't had time to even think about what the project should do. My research assistant was supposed to give me her first draft results in the afternoon, after the meeting. Was this the moment, I would get fired? I pulled myself together. I told myself to stay cool.
"Anna is the most solid researcher I know! I personally went through all her data tables. I couldn't find a single typo!" Mark defended me.
I realized what was going on. The "Mouse" in "Tiny Mouse" was an animal reference. Mark ran the projects coming out of animal experiments. Paul ran the experiments coming from supercomputer data simulations. My project was going to either funnel budget allotments to Mark or Paul. They weren't interested in the data. They were fighting over whose department would grow next quarter. If I hinted more at a pharmaceutical drug from our researchers that used animals and live cultures, Mark would back me more and more. I didn't need to answer about the numbers. I simply needed to back Mark. What was that fucking stupid bacteria that Mark had talked to me over happy hour last week? Oh, that was it! I chimed in, "From the first time, I heard about Helicobacter pylori, I had a hunch that there was a lot of potential."
That was it! Mark went for the bait. He started blabbering about Helicobacter pylori. Paul couldn't get a word in about where the data for that was. I quietly slipped into the background of my own meeting. When I'd get the real research results from my assistant, I'd simply send out an e-mail that the revised data surprised us all. Thank god! The people of the next meeting stormed into the conference room and demanded us to leave pronto.
At lunchtime, I sat down with a cup of coffee and a box of sugar packets. One of the next, I ripped it open and let it drizzle into the black. There are 16 calories in a packet. I needed about 300 calories to make up for a meal. That's about twenty packets. I kept at my task. It was a little reassuring to do something tactile and peaceful. My research assistant spotted me. She came rushing by. She gushed to tell me that the supercomputer simulation of microsome propagation, code name "Tokyo Nights," was projected to make $200 million next quarter with a confidence of 43%. I told her, "That's not better than a coin flip." She let her head drop down defeated, "Nothing else had a meaningful statistical correlation." She was a Chinese girl, fresh out of college with her jet-black hair shorn short like a woman who had been punished in medieval times for adultery. I had had a feeling that I would be stuck in the office not able to buy a meal outside. I swallowed the terribly sweet concoction down.
In the evening, when I was putting the finishing touches on a revised report that touted "Tokyo Nights" as a sure thing because of advanced analytical regression (I had run every algorithm on the data until one finally gave me the result I was looking for), Liz came by my desk with a pep in her step like something very happy had happened to her. I gave her a high-five like I knew what was going on. Then she cheered me, "Let's go! We are running late!"
I had to break my pretense and ask her what was running late. "Don't you remember, you are coming to the Rumble boxing class for the first time today! You've been wanting to get in shape for so long. This is when you finally put yourself first!" she cheered me on.
Oh, shit! I had forgotten that I had promised her. I didn't have a change of clothing, but I was going to make do somehow. I had her guide me by the elbow to the elevator so that I could finish typing the report on my phone. Gotta love Google Docs and how connected it is. Thankfully, the train was only normally crowded. We got to stand and talk about how we wanted to get promoted, save money, and retire early. That was the dream! Right? Raise a family. I had recently turned 35 and felt the pressure to get pregnant before I slipped down the fertility cliff too far. "Ten Rumble sessions and you'll look so hot that the guys in the street will be falling on their knees for you!" Liz promised me.
The Rumble studio used to be a small hole in the wall coffeeshop. There was a tiny front desk with a drop-dead gorgeous model - looking like a Gaisha, blood red lips with black hair styled for a museum exhibition - behind a touring counter that made her sit in darkness. The entrance room was crowded with women our age. We all waited for the door into the studio to open. There was no changing room, only a gender-neutral restroom that was already occupied. The other women simply changed into the open or came with their yoga pants under their clothing already. I had nothing, not even sneakers. I slipped out of my pumps and took off my blouse, pretending that my regular bra was a sports bra. I put my items in a cubby and stood ready: barefoot in my beige bra and with my belly showing. You gotta go with things. Nobody gives a shit in this city.
The trainer had us do jumping jacks, push-ups, running around, and anything to wind my lungs and soak every inch of my skin with sweat. Liz effortlessly bounced around, making me feel even more inadequate. She gave me a slap on the butt with excitement to make me stand up again after I collapsed flat on the ground on the third push-up. The forty-five minutes were a blur.