Nothing about this place said “mid-level clerk.”
For a moment, I wondered if I’d come to the wrong floor. I checked the plaque beside the door. APEX TECH. Steven’s company name. I knew that much: he’d always talked about “Apex,” but in my mind it had been some anonymous warehouse of cubicles and flickering fluorescent lights, not… this.
I swallowed, tugged my cardigan straight, and approached the reception desk.
“Excuse me,” I said, forcing a smile. “I’m looking for someone in HR, or maybe Mr. Condan’s manager? I’m here about his leave papers.”
The woman behind the desk looked up. She was young, neat, with a sleek ponytail and the sort of nail polish I’d only ever window-shopped at the pharmacy. Her smile was warm and automatic—until I said my husband’s name.
“Condan?” she repeated. “As in… Mr. Condan?”
“Yes,” I said. “My husband. Steven Condan.”
She blinked. Once. Twice. The way people do when they’re trying to decide if they misheard or if the world has just tilted.
“Your husband?” she asked, lowering her voice. “You’re Mr. Condan’s wife?”
“Yes,” I said again, more slowly now, unease creeping up my spine. “He’s been unwell. I came to submit his doctor’s note so his leave can be approved.”