Chapter 2
The Useless New RecruitâThatâs Me!
Unbelievable.
Iâm useless? Me?
Nowhere in my entire life have I ever been treated like this.
So they thought I was just a pretty face with flowers blooming inside my head, huh? Guess this âbeautyâ had been throwing away her only advantage right out on the street.
If theyâre surprised I show up on time, I must really be at the bottom of the barrelâŠ
Cold sweat ran down my back from the very first day. I was still reeling from the shock when a young man with brown hair and droopy eyes approached me.
âCoco, I heard you were really sick. You feeling okay now?â
He looked genuinely worried, scanning my face. Judging by that, we mustâve been at least on friendly terms. I answered as naturally as I could, trying not to sound suspicious.
âYeah. Iâm okay now.â
âReally? If it gets tough, you can tell me. You know the branch managerâs been upset because of you, right?â
âBecause of⊠me?â
So I wasnât just uselessâI was catastrophic.
Feigning confusion, I asked this Nicola about what exactly Iâd done to upset our boss.
âLetâs just say⊠itâs not the kind of mistake a normal person could make in such a short time.â
âWhat?â
âHuh?â
âAh, nothing.â
The more he explained, the worse it sounded.
Showing up late was the least of my crimes. When told to clean, I apparently made things messier. I couldnât count inventory properly, forcing other staff to redo calculations several times. I forgot customersâ orders, making them wait forever.
And recentlyâoh, this was the best partâI had spilled the storeâs most expensive bottle of perfume, ruining it completely. It was such a big loss that now, whenever anyone hears the sound of something breaking, they assume itâs me.
The branch manager must be a saint.
âLuckily, he didnât fire you. Said you could repay the damage out of your salary.â
âŠWhat?
âWait, you guys donât have⊠like, accident insurance or anything?â
âHmm?â
âOh, no, nothing.â
This was worse than I thought. The looks Iâd gotten earlier werenât out of curiosityâthey were hostile. I needed to redeem myself fast.
âSo, really, youâve got to be careful this time, Coco. Okay? I mean it.â
I nodded meekly, feeling a bit deflated. It was like starting a new game on very hard mode. The tutorial hadnât even begun.
âItâs no use, Nicola.â
A freckled girl with twin braids appeared, another tough-looking girl beside her.
âIf she were the type to learn, we wouldnât be here. Why not just give up?â
âFinea, thatâs harsh! She just came back after being sick.â
Nicola looked offended, but the freckled girl only scoffed.
âDoesnât make a difference. Actually, itâs probably better. At least when sheâs sick, she doesnât cause trouble.â
âHey!â
The tough-looking girl chimed in.
âSheâs right. You know how much trouble sheâs caused us? Everyone but you hates her. Sheâs a walking disaster!â
At this point, even Iâd want me gone.
I could fully understand why everyone disliked the original Coco. But now, this body belonged to me.
âJust you wait, Corneliaâyouâll be fired soon enough!â
âYeah, fired!â
The two stormed off, spitting their curses behind them.
âCocoâŠâ
Nicola looked helpless, worried Iâd be hurt.
Honestly, I wasnâtâsince I hadnât done any of it. What mattered was what came next.
I calmly placed a hand on Nicolaâs shoulder.
âCoco?â
âYouâre going to help me.â
***
According to Nicola, this was a store that sold daily goodsânothing fancy.
The work wasnât too different from back home: selling, restocking, organizing, cleaning. Straightforward stuff.
For a seasoned office worker like me, this was childâs play. And no, they werenât about to trust me with anything too important anyway.
No register system, thoughâthatâs annoying.
Only certified trainees could handle transactions, so that wasnât my problem yet.
The store was a two-story buildingâthe first floor for sales, the second for accounting and inventory. The manager, assistant manager, and senior clerks had their offices upstairs. Bigger operation than Iâd expected.
Of courseâitâs called âDaijo.â Shouldâve guessed it wasnât just a corner shop.
My position was more part-time than full-time.
âGuess Iâll pay off that perfume first, then start looking for another job.â
Nicola had been a huge help. He found my âstrange behaviorâ a bit suspicious at first, but I told him the fever left some aftereffects, and he bought it. Weâd only known each other for a couple of months, so he didnât have a clear idea of what the old me was like. If anything, he seemed impressed that I was suddenly asking questions.
My first question had been simple: âHow much is my salary?â
He told me all trainees earned the sameâforty zeni.
Later that evening, I asked Julie about it. She said that was barely enough for a weekâs worth of medicine for someone named Rio.
I started jotting down important details in a notebookâanything to help me adjust to this world. Currency unit? Definitely important.
A weekâs worth of medicine? Thatâs ridiculous.
And it wasnât like my pay would skyrocket after training. To earn more, Iâd have to catch the managerâs eye and sell a lot.
So much for saving money to move out. At this rate, Iâd be chewing stale bread forever.
I needed to reset my goals.
- ***
âWow! Six out of six daysâon time!â
Nicolaâs voice was full of wonder.
âIs the sun rising in the west today?â
After hearing all the horror stories of my past performance, Iâd decided the first step was getting the basics right.
Attendance and punctualityâcornerstones of every working personâs reputation.
If you just show up on time, youâre already better than the worst. Even if youâre not a genius, no one can really hate a diligent worker. Well, assuming your coworkers are reasonable humans.
This was the first thing that had to change after the disaster my predecessor had caused.
âGood job! Really!â
Nicolaâs exaggerated praise drew side glances from the other employees. Their looks said it allâwas she really that bad before?
Perfect. With expectations this low, even a little effort will look like a miracle.
âBig deal,â Finea sneered. âSheâs just scared of getting fired.â
Sadly⊠she wasnât wrong.
âCanât you guys just praise her a little?â
I ignored them all and quietly walked to my assigned area.
My main job was cleaningâsweeping, mopping, and making sure the shelves looked neat.
I wasnât allowed near the merchandise after the perfume incident, so I mostly helped customers find things when they asked.
From what Iâd learned, Daijo was a branch of the Daijo Trading Company, a major business with headquarters in the capital and branches in every province.
Guess Iâve been spoiled by all those modern mega-martsâthis still feels like a tiny shop to me.
Still, for this old-fashioned world, it was impressive.
I actually enjoyed the quiet. No one bothered me except for kind, fearless Nicola, the only person who dared talk to the âuseless trainee.â
Peaceful. I like it.
You donât need to be friends with everyoneâthatâs a golden rule of corporate survival. Just keep your head down until itâs time to quit.
âHey! Is this how you run a business?!â
A shout cut through my thoughts.
âMaâam, Iâm sorry, but we canât offer a refund for this product.â
It was Finea, looking cornered, standing before an elegantly dressed middle-aged woman.
âWhat do you mean, no refund? The flyer says âfull refund if youâre not satisfied!ââ
That toneâI knew it too well.
Finea looked pale. âBut maâam⊠you brought back only the stems.â
In her hands were bare grape stems, not a single grape left.
âDo you know who I am?!â
I let out a hollow laugh.
Did I just time-travel back to the modern era?
Ha⊠right. No matter the worldâa workplace is still a workplace.