Chapter 6
A Direct Attack Is for Amateurs
Rather than angry, I was just… stunned.
She really took credit for those reports? They werenât even that hard!
I lowered my already pitiful opinion of my senior even further.
If she werenât like this, we couldâve just worked well together.
She was practically choosing the harder path all by herself.
But the real problem wasnât how complex the documents were.
Only managers are supposed to handle those, yet sheâs making an apprentice do them? Even seeing such files could get someone in troubleâand she wants me to write them? What if I made a mistake?
If it were me, Iâd never give that kind of work to a junior, no matter how capable.
âSnap out of it! Donât just take whatever they dump on you!â
Pinea looked frustrated that I wasnât reacting. Nicola tried to calm her down.
âCoco probably doesnât know what to do yet. Weâll help however we can for now.â
Nicola⊠One day, Iâm really going to have to sit that boy down and teach him just how cruel the world can be.
***
Unfortunately, Pinea and Nicolaâs help ended that very day.
âSo, I heard those two helped you with overtime yesterday?â
That was the first thing my senior said when she called me down to the basement first thing in the morning.
Damn it.
I stayed silent. When someoneâs already decided to be mad, the worst thing you can do is give them something to grab onto.
âHow touching. Such a lovely friendship youâve got there.â
She gave a sharp, mocking laugh.
âIf I hear about that happening again, those two will be doing overtime every day. Got it?â
âYes.â
She gave me a long, hateful glare before storming off.
Everyone had gone home yesterday⊠So how did she find out?
As I climbed the stairs, I saw the tough-looking girl who always stuck to Pinea leaning against the wall, staring down at me. The same one whoâd said Iâd been âmarked.â
âI told you not to act up.â
Her wiry hair and mean little smirk were the perfect match.
Oh. So it was you.
No need to think about itâthere was the answer right in front of me. I gave her a single glance and kept walking.
Apparently, that was the wrong move.
âYouâll regret this!â she shouted behind me.
Guess sheâs decided to hate me forever. Great.
Was it really that hard to just coexist peacefully? I was finally starting to move past the âincompetentâ stage.
Back in my rookie days, stuff like this wouldâve made me panic. Not anymore. Thinking too much only raises your stress levels.
When I got back to the workroom, Pinea and Nicola rushed over.
âWhat happened?â
âLooks like Iâm on my own for overtime.â
âWhat? You got caught? How?â
Pinea gasped and covered her mouth. I glanced toward the snitch whoâd followed me in.
âI swear Iâm gonnaâ!â
Pinea was ready to charge at her, and I had to grab her arm.
âDonât. The seniorâs protecting her.â
âWhat? How could sheââ
Nicolaâs round eyes widened in shock, then drooped again.
âCoco, whyâs everyone treating you like this? You didnât even do anything wrong.â
Oh? He gets angry too?
I blinked, genuinely surprised. But just as quickly, Nicolaâs gentle expression returned. Pinea clicked her tongue.
âItâs jealousy, what else? Who gets jealous of a trainee, honestly.â
As customers started trickling in, we had to drop the conversation and scatter back to our posts.
What a mess.
Originally, the overtime hadnât bothered me much. My plan was to just quietly endure it until I could move on.
Still pisses me off, though.
Forcing overtime when itâs not urgent is unforgivable to any working adult. But if it started to drag my coworkers down too, that changed things.
Telling the branch manager directly would be my last resort.
My senior had been here far longer and was considered skilled. If I reported her, theyâd just call me arrogant and probably fire me on the spot.
And honestly, I was only recently out of the âhopeless caseâ category myself.
No company likes a troublemaker.
Even back in the modern world, probationary employees could be let go at will.
So⊠letâs start setting the stage first.
I wasnât about to let my first career here crash and burn so easily.
***
Overtime became my daily routine.
Afternoons were chaosâthe busiest hours right before the evening rush.
âExcuse me! Can I get one of these?â
âDo you have any more in stock?â
âThis basketâs crooked on one side!â
It was absolute madness.
But thanks to my part-time job experience back in university, I handled customers like a pro.
One of the staff who was manning the counter turned to me after a sale.
âWow, youâre a lifesaver. I didnât know you were that good with customers! You smile so much it makes me feel better. Maybe we shouldâve put you on sales from the start.â
âOh, no. I skipped work a lot when I was sick and even came in late sometimes. Iâve caused enough trouble already. Iâm just glad I can help now.â
He waved a hand dismissively.
âStill, Iâm amazed. People donât usually change this fast. Youâre doing great now, thatâs what matters.â
âThank you! Iâll keep working hard!â
He chuckled warmly.
âSuch a good kid.â
As the line of customers began to shrink, his tone lowered.
â…You must be tired from all that overtime, huh?â
âWhâwhat? How do you know?â
I covered my mouth, pretending to be shocked.
âSheâs been like that forever, but this time sheâs going too far,â he muttered.
I quickly waved my hands.
âOh, no, itâs fine! Sheâs just trying to help me improve!â
âImprove my foot. Youâre too naĂŻve, kid.â
âCough, cough! Sorry!â
He sighed. âJust take care of yourself, okay?â
I only smiled weakly, pretending to brush it offâwhile quietly laying another brick in my plan.
***
âPinea. Got a second?â
She tilted her head, surprised. I rarely ever called out first.
âWhatâs up?â
âYouâre kinda close with the deputy branch manager and the others, right?â
She frowned. âClose? Not really. They just send me on errands a lot, so I get to talk to them.â
Thatâs exactly why they trust you.
Unlike meâthe one who started as dead weightâPinea had always been diligent and proactive. Thatâs why everyone trusted her enough to rely on her.
And thatâs how sheâd accidentally seen the documents I was handlingâthe kind meant for managers only.
âCan you check something for me?â
I handed her a small note. She skimmed it and nodded.
âShould be easy. I can get it by today. Whatâs this about?â
âJust gathering some information. Youâll see.â
I smiled lightly. Pinea didnât look convinced but agreed anyway and headed upstairs.
***
A few days laterâ
âI need you two to do me a favor.â
Both Julie and Marcella looked up from breakfast.
I hadnât regained the memories they were hoping for, but at Marcellaâs suggestion, weâd started talking casually, as family. It still felt awkward, but I was getting used to it.
âCan you tell the store Iâm sick today?â
Marcella jumped up, startled.
âWhat? Are you feeling sick? Youâve been working overtime nonstop latelyâŠâ
I nodded weakly.
âYeah. I think I caught something. Please, just tell them I canât come in.â
âOkay, but⊠are you sure thatâs okay? You already took time off when you were really sick a few months ago.â
She looked genuinely worriedâunderstandably so.
But this absence was necessary.
âDonât worry. They canât fire me.â
I pulled the blanket over my head and allowed myself a rare morning of sleep.
***
âI knew itâsheâs been pushing herself too hard.â
âPoor thing.â
The staff and apprentices at Daijo sighed when they heard Marcellaâs report.
To them, Coco was a hardworking girl who stayed late every night doing difficult work that would exhaust anyone.
Then the senior came rushing down from the second floor.
âWhereâs Cornelia?â
âUm, pardon?â
âI said, whereâs Cornelia!â she snapped, eyes wild.
When she heard the news, her pupils trembled violently.
One of the clerks asked timidly, âIsnât today the day the branch manager does the morning review? Youâre almost late, maâamâŠâ
âI know that!â
She screamed again, and everyone went silent, exchanging uneasy glances.
Whatâs her problem?
No idea. Sheâs lost it.
Their eyes said it all.
Thatâs when Pinea finally realized what Cornelia had doneâand why sheâd needed that information.
So thatâs it⊠I knew something was up.
Cornelia had skipped work on the exact day her senior had to present those documents to the branch manager.
The next morning, when Cornelia was called in for questioning, she caught Pineaâs eyeâ
and winked.