
When I Stopped Carrying Her
Chapter 2
Under the stares of coworkers—some sympathetic, others straight-up entertained—I stepped into the janitor's closet and changed into cleaning gear.
Just as I grabbed the bucket and headed for the restroom, a voice snapped from behind me:
"Aaron Lawson, stop right there!"
Rachel.
She usually treated me like a ghost at work. This was the first time she called me out in front of everyone.
She walked over, stone-faced, towering over me. "I told you to come to my office. Why didn't you?"
I didn't explain. Just said, calm as ever, "Busy working. Didn't have time to check."
That was a line she used on me all the time. Hearing it thrown back at her made her flinch.
"It's just a small thing. Do you really need to be mad over it?"
Once she was sure no one could hear, she sighed and dialed it back. "I know you're upset about Victor's reward, and yeah, I didn't defend you.
"But he's the sales manager I just promoted. He DID bring in real results. I couldn't call him out in front of everyone and kill his momentum.
"You've got to see where I'm coming from—"
I cut her off, ice-cold. "You know damn well that wasn't a reward. That was bullying. Straight-up humiliation.
"And those results you're bragging about? You think they came from Victor sipping lattes in his office? If I wasn't out there every day, in the rain and cold, grinding nonstop, skipping meals to lock in clients, this company wouldn't have sold a single property in this frozen market."
Her face dropped as my words landed. "Don't get cocky like you're the only one holding this company up.
"If it weren't for Victor's winter campaigns, would we even have foot traffic at our open houses? You're riding his coattails.
"Stop playing the victim. It's pathetic."
She turned to leave before I could get a word in.
If I hadn't heard it myself, I wouldn't have believed someone I'd loved for over a decade could say something that dumb.
Those so-called "brilliant" campaigns? Victor set up a couple folding tables outside the showroom, handed out free cups of lukewarm black coffee, and gave away three-dollar gloves from Temu.
Half the coffee got tossed. The gloves usually ended up in the trash.
But to Rachel, that was what brought in real sales. And me? I was just leeching off Victor's glory.
All these years, I never bragged about my numbers or complained about the grind. I always protected her girl boss image—strong, capable, in control.
I thought if she had even a shred of heart, she'd see what I gave.
But I was wrong. She didn't miss it—she chose not to see.
In that moment, whatever was left in me for Rachel just snapped.
I dropped the mop and sleeves and said, cold and final, "Fine. If Victor's the one carrying everything, then I quit. And we're done. Let's go our separate ways."
All these years, no matter how pissed or let down I was, I never came at her. Never once talked about breaking up.