THE LONELINESS OF
A RESELLER
by
Brandon
Doughty
Rain drummed
on the metal roof of the building. It created the hum of an open but empty
phone line, like the receiver was picked up but no one was home. Anyone looking
down the long row of cubicles would see Marina’s head standing like a lone lighthouse
in a flat black sea. She could see dust motes floating in and out of the cone
of light cast by the overhead fluorescent. Considering the hour, this single
lit area enhanced that lighthouse feeling.
It was 10 p.m. and supply
planner Marina Ortegas stood in her cube trying to decipher when her supply would
arrive. Three spreadsheets and a dashboard stood open on her desktop and the
whiteboard that made up the back wall of her cubicle was covered in calculations
as well. She had been concatenating, vlookuping and angrily clicking her track
pad for the past three hours trying to find one simple number. Marina was
positive that you couldn’t find ‘vlookuping,’ in Webster’s, but fuck it: She
was making it a verb.
Marina was sure she must be
missing a key file and felt like she was going through the stages of grief. She
started in denial telling herself she would be home by seven. Then consoled
herself that she wasn’t keeping anyone waiting at home: No dog to feed, no cat
to scratch, no plant to water. Her apartment was basically empty; a closed box.
“At least here I have you, Thrawn.”
Marina looked over at her action figure of Grand Admiral Mitth’raw’nuruodo,
known to well-read Star Wars fans as Thrawn. He was the greatest strategic
battle planner ever known in a galaxy far, far away. She liked the correlation
since she was now a strategic supply planner for one of the largest computer
resellers in the country.
Marina posed him such that he
would not fall when people occasionally walked up to speak with her and leaned too
heavily on one of her cube walls. He was set against a small, pink moon cactus
to help with balance. That’s no moon she thought and laughed out loud.
It was a little reminder of
home, from her dad. A small cactus with smaller pink growths that grew like
tumors out of the top of the little green knob that was the main body of the cactus.
How fitting, she thought. She wasn’t sure what color they were, but
little tumors had certainly been growing within the body of her father when he
died.
She had moved to Seattle almost two
years ago after finishing her degree at The University of Texas. On graduation
day, her father, Ramon Ortegas, had taken her aside and told her quietly, with
tears shining in his eyes, “It has been an honor to raise you. Thank you for
giving me the opportunity.”
He shuffled away, relying
heavily on his cane. He was in remission from a second bout of colon cancer.
His second ten rounds with cancer, chemo and radiation had left his body
emaciated. Marina’s once strong father, whom she had watched lift jet skis off
trailers as a child – not the smartest move she had ever seen from her father,
but proof of his strength – could now barely walk even with the help of his
cane. She watched him limp away with a pain in her chest. Marina worried what
would happen when she moved away.
The dramatic difference in
climate from Texas to Washington state took some getting used to. Her father
had sent the moon cactus and a picture of the hill country taken from near the
360 bridge to put up in her apartment, so she had a little ‘home’ with her, in
her new world.
When the cancer finally took
Ramon down it was a relief to Marina. She could hear how tired he was during
their phone conversations. He lived in constant medicated pain. No more chemo.
No more radiation. Only pain and sadness. The insult to injury was that Marina could
not take the time to visit before he passed away. She was new in her role and still
considered ‘ramping’ as her company liked to describe people who were in a role
for less than two years.
She was a coward for not going.
A bitch.
A bad daughter.
“I love you daddy. You’ve worked
hard.” Her phone-voice was strong and confident. The voice of someone giving a
presentation to senior leadership. “It’s okay to take time for yourself. I’ll
miss you, but it’s okay. I know you’re tired. It was an honor being raised by
you. Thank you for giving me the opportunity.” Her voice started to break on
the last word, and she covered it with a cough and cleared her throat. He died
in his sleep the following night.
Marina continued working for two
days and then risked three days of bereavement leave. This gave her five nights
with her mom. It was too much. She spent no more than thirty minutes speaking
with her mother and that was awkward small talk. She gave a short eulogy at the
service where she saw her mother laugh and react more than at any point leading
up to it. After, she left to, “see some old friends and decompress.” Her
mother’s response amounted to a head nod and a, “that sounds fun, hon,” as she
walked the other direction.
The truth was that she had
stayed at a hotel, alone, a mile up the road from her parent’s house, without
speaking to anyone the entire night and most of the following day.
Marina looked at the picture
held near the top corner of her cube. It was the photo of the Texas hill-country
her father had sent along with the pink moon cactus. Looking at it, she
realized that she had decorated her cube more than her apartment.
“Well, that tracks,” Marina
said, “I spend way more time here than in that apartment. This is where
my eyes are, so this is where my pretty things are.”
Marina checked her screen. “Obviously,
I have everything I need to figure out this supply situation. Right? Well,
if that’s true why am I still stuck here at ten-fucking-thirty and the other
planners have been gone since six?” She was almost sure a file was missing and
she could not get to total landed supply with the data on-hand. So on to stage
two of grief – she was pissed.
It became clear to her, the
entire situation was the supplier’s fault. They obviously forced her to take
this job, tricked her into skipping lunch, missing dinner and corrupted her
into staying up last night to finish reading Getting to Yes. Part of
Marina’s self-development plan was to read a business book each week.
“Forget ‘yes,’ I need to get
to a
supply number. I need to negotiate a fucking inventory picture without going
crazy,” she laughed and realized she was shouting. She looked around to see if
anyone heard her. Still alone.
She looked out the wall of
windows and saw the rain sheeting into the well-lit landscaping near the building.
Beyond the landscaping it was pitch black for about fifty feet before two
standing LED light-poles shone twin pools of light at the entrance to the
parking garage. It crossed her mind that this was poor planning for those
leaving after dark. In physics, black is the absence of light. The area past
the landscaping until you reached the parking garage was disorienting in its darkness.
Not just the lack of light but of reality itself.
Anything could be out there
where reality ends. Or nothing, she thought.
“Yeah well, there’s certainly
been a lot of nothing since I moved here!” She said it aloud just to dispel the
unease the thought gave her.
“What the hell man, I’m creeping
myself out. I’ve got to get outta here. It has been a long day. This supply
number can wait until morning. Maybe.”
“By then I’ll have some PODs to show
what has actually delivered. Fucking asshole supplier. So high and mighty when
you’ve actually been going downhill for years and everyone knows it. Your
support is for shit. Why don’t you help someone out!”
She realized she was crying. And
still talking out loud. This was ridiculous. Why was she crying? She loved what
she did; didn’t she? It wasn’t glamorous but it made a difference, and she was
good at it, dammit.
“Their tools are for shit. And
I’m going to let them know.”
Marina lowered her desk and sat.
She wanted to lean into this, and sitting down felt like strapping in. Her
father taught her if you want to be a bear, be a grizzly. She looked up the
proper email address for the CEO of her supplier and then verified. It was
public so Marina also confirmed it from a number of online sources.
She wrote quickly. The words
poured out of her onto the screen.
When she finished she felt calm.
Or maybe just empty. She decided
both worked and looked at her watch. It was 11 p.m. Marina decided this would
finish off her day better than actualizing her landed supply. She packed her stuff
into her leather bag, saving her computer for last. Before she packed it, she
hit Send.
# # #
In an
animated movie Marina’s email would then travel from one computer to the next.
Following an imaginary path from the CPU of a computer through the data line,
or power cord if you were watching a Pixar film, across the distance into the
receiving computer to then splash against the back of the screen. A clean,
organized process and exciting to watch the data rush from beginning to end. It
leaves a warm and fuzzy feeling as a journey completed. All those little
electrons flowing together in a pack, surrounded and protected by the cables
they travel through.
But this is a wireless world. WIFI,
cellular, 4G and 5G communications leave everything traveling through the air. Radio
waves on top of data signals, a dense fog of information that no one can see.
And it’s dangerous out there. A pack of electrons seems strong and protected,
but a little signal floating through a crowded space with so many other signals
is weak. What if the other signals aren’t nice to it? What if there is
something out there that wants to capture that signal? What if it wants to keep
it? What if it wants to hurt it?
Why would people be any safer
than those signals they send containing their data? The human race has spent
its time building barriers to keep safe. The home, the car, the office
building, all of these little pools of safety, and yet everyone still has to
take that step outside the protective shell and float like a lonely email to
the next shelter.
There are clear defects in this
system. If the electrons had to keep jumping from cable to cable, they would be
slower and open to danger. You could lose your data. You’d complain about the
company who made them. You’d complain to the IT department. But there is no IT
department for life. Complaints about the human experience are submitted as
thoughts and prayers. Ask the victims of a school shooting about the usefulness
of thoughts and prayers.
# # #
Tricia Clark woke at 4:25 a.m. She
used the mornings to complete her workout, meditate, eat breakfast and complete
a review of her morning emails by 7 a.m. She challenged herself daily to be the
best version of Tricia she could be. You had to be your best to change the
world. She wanted her company to live this same belief. So, no one on the
Executive team was surprised when Tricia started their morning meeting
discussing an email, she had received from a partner supply planner.
“I received
this at about midnight.” She began. “This email concerned me. Mixed up in there
is what appears to be a valid concern on the tools we offer to our resellers,
so we need to get this over to AMR Ops team to review. But that is not the
priority right now. I think we need to get someone involve–”
“Sorry Tricia, I don’t mean to
cut you off.” This was Eliza Tsai, the Vice President of World Wide Operations.
It was clear the email would work its way to her desk for distribution to the
leaders in Americas Operation. “We get emails from customers pretty often. I
get it, there’s something about this one that piqued your interest, but can we
all take a look? It seems like it would be easier for us to get aligned on next
steps if you could point out your specific concerns.”
“Great point Liz. Let me share
my screen for a moment.” The morning meeting was always hosted virtually. Since
Tricia’s team was global, it was the best way to get everyone in the same
‘room.’ She shared her screen showing the email Marina sent just eight hours
before:
From: Marina Ortegas
Date: January 28, 2020
To: Tricia Clark
Subject: the loneliness
of a reseller
Dear Tricia,
I work as a supply
planner for the 2nd largest reseller of your products in the
country. I am writing to you today to share my experience as a suicidal reseller
in this world and the need for continuous personal improvement. There should be
transparency and visibility in this channel and my heart to see the darkness.
It’s outside too. I can see it. I can’t
see it. I can see that I can’t see
it and it is inside me.
I’m unsure if you are aware, but we rely
on your Operations team to
provide us with the best reason on solutions to our lives, who are in fact your
customers. Our customers are in the health care field as I’m sure you can appreciate,
I seem to be in heavy need these days. The darkness has a huge demand, and the
frontline responders need us.
It is good to be needed. No one needs me.
That being said, there is a need for sacrifice
between both our companies
and the larger reseller community. Your tools are outdated, web service is
virtually non-existent with too few reports available to accurately do our
actualization after spending months forecasting our needs. Help me.
I never imagined saying these things about myself
and the darkness but it
is true. It is there. It is not there. And while I cannot provide specific
solutions to ensure our needs are met, I will say it is difficult if not
impossible to open my chest and present my beating heart, frankly I’m
disheartened. HA!
I’m sure you won’t read this, and
that I’m likely talking to a computer,
but they say you cannot live without the air, so I’m starting in the darkness
today and there is no air.
I hope to see light during my time. Thank you
for the opportunity to warn
you.
Regards,
Marina Ortegas
Supply Planner – Ones & Zeroes, LLC
The team read the email in
silence and tried to internalize the meaning. The quiet continued as this team
of executives, trained and experienced in speaking to powerful people about
difficult issues – trained and tested to work contract deals worth billions of
dollars with not just businesses but entire nations – struggled to find a way
to express their thoughts.
“What the fuck?” said Jeff
Podesta. He was always ready for the golf course, but now sat slack jawed
looking like a man who hadn’t so much lost his ball, but rather found it
stuffed uncomfortably up his ass.
“I think that about sums it up
Jeff.” Tricia replied. “You all look about how I pictured myself this morning
when I read through it the first few times. I went from thinking ‘oh this is
trash,’ to ‘Should Liz take a look at our attainment tools,’ but like you Jeff,
I’m pretty sure I kept coming back to, What the fuck?
“Okay people. Thoughts now that
you’ve seen it and had some time to digest?” She watched as mute icons were
disabled and voices started offering options.
“Liz, we should definitely check
on the attainment tools.”
“Yes, I’ll get that over to AMR
today. Obviously not the whole thing, I’ll just note the concern about the
tools.” Liz responded.
“Should you call the CEO of Ones
and Zeros?”
“Maybe just this Marina’s
manager? Can we find that name?”
“Call the suicide hotline.”
“Call the folks in white coats.”
“Too late. The low men in yellow
coats already found her.”
“That’s enough of that,” Tricia
called out. “I don’t even know what that means and this is no time for jokes.
Calling someone is a good idea, but I think that calling Shuli is a bit much.”
Shuli Gaspard was the CEO of
Ones & Zeroes. He and Tricia had known each other for years. “No reason to
jump that far up the ladder. Calling the CEO for a concerning email from one
supply planner? That would be like asking me to know–”
“Tricia you realize you’re our
CEO and you’ve already spent at least an hour with this.” Jeff added.
“True, but it still feels
impersonal. I think I’m going to call this planner directly. And Liz, whenever
you get it over to AMR Ops make sure they know that we want someone to call her
about the tools. Not just an email. She was sure to put both her office and
mobile number in there. Make sure they use them.”
“Will do,” Liz said. She felt on
firm ground when speaking about actions and deliverables for her teams. She was
more unsure on the personal steps Tricia was contemplating. “Are you also
suggesting I call her? Call this,” she paused to check the mail again, “Marina,
myself to make sure she’s safe?”
“No, she didn’t email you. I
know it’s unorthodox, but I think I’m going to call her myself.”
“But Tricia, that’s crazy. Why
don’t,” Jeff thought for a moment, “why don’t we figure out who she reports to
and give them a call? Isn’t it more their wheelhouse anyway?”
“My thought is,” Tricia began,
“if her leadership was paying any attention, I wouldn’t be getting these types
of emails at midnight. Besides, look at that last bit, where she says no one is
going to read it. Maybe what this poor person needs is for me to show that I
did read it. I am no better than she is. We all have our dark times.” A shiver
ran through her. Poor choice of words.
Tricia leaned back taking a sip
of tea. Having made the choice, she felt better. Like Eliza, she was more
comfortable after making an actionable decision.
“I’m going to call her today.”
“If you don’t mind, I can join
you in your office at noon and sit in when you make the call.” Eliza knew it
was better to team up for hard negotiations and tough talks, and this was
likely a very tough talk.
Tricia agreed to meet at noon
and the meeting moved on to the regular business of the day. None of the executive
team mentioned Marina or the email but her words hung on each of them like a
shadow dragging late into the day.
# # #
Just after noon in Seattle an
office phone started ringing. It stopped, long enough for a voicemail and then rang
again.
It rang again.
Stopped.
Rang, yet again.
Rise and repeat.
Lee Ling, the planner in the adjacent
cubicle, annoyed at the repeated unwelcome noise and interruptions walked over to
see why no one answered, considering it likely the person had gone to lunch. Most
calls at noon ended up in a voicemail box.
He leaned on the cube wall a
little heavy, knocking off some little red-eyed action figure. It landed on a dusty
desk that seemed unused. He could not remember anyone sitting there recently, but
there was a mess of numbers and calculations on the white-board as if someone had
been really working something out. The whole thing was gibberish to Lee, but
hey man this wasn’t his row, he was on the other side planning wearables. Way
easier gig.
Lee reached over and set the
phone to Away to stop the ringing. Let them fill up Mr. Red-eye’s mailbox.
# # #
Another phone started ringing.
That infernal default ringtone that defines the 21st century in a
single round of ‘deedle do de do de do.’ It was the sound you heard in a dark
movie theater. You heard it on the other side of the doctor’s office; heard it
four aisles over when you were in the grocery store, and then again just two aisles
away. It was in the stall next to you in the restroom.
That goddamn ringtone.
It rang again. The same phone.
Someone needed to answer it. Save the world from having to hear that incessant
tune just one more time. It was muffled, but there it went again. One of those
people that couldn’t take the hint that the person did not want to speak to
them. Maybe they were unavailable.
Maybe, they were gone.
When it started ringing again Dale
McGuire finally noticed where it was coming from. This place is getting so
trashy he thought. First he found red graffiti in the parking garage,
sprayed on the service door like a Pollock painting. Now the very same day he found
people leaving their shit laying out in the landscaping. What a mess.
The noon sun was high, it was
mild but bright outside and the shadows were short. And yet, there was a
leather computer bag lying in deep shade. Something like mud had dried thick and
reddish on one side where it had obviously splashed down last night during the
storm. Although, the patch of ground seemed very dry considering the amount of
mud. Was it a little rustier in color than mud?
It was a nice bag; expensive.
Someone must surely be searching for it after losing it last night. Probably
running to their car in the rain, it had slipped off a shoulder, in the dark. It
was in an odd location, lying between the building landscaping and the perpetually
lit entrance to the parking structure.
There was something else. It was
flatted like a gardener’s nightmare, a stomped green thumb. It had little pink tumors
on top.
The phone started ringing again,
even though it was clear no one was going to answer. Not anymore.
# # #
Subsequent testing of the
substance on the bag and the parking garage proved to be blood. It was assumed
to be Marina’s. However, no brush nor comb was found in the bag nor later in
her apartment. No other sample large enough for testing was found to compare
against Marina’s own DNA.
It surprised no one to learn
that there were cameras covering almost every possible corner of the office;
inside and out. When the footage was reviewed later the observers were able to
track Marina’s progress through the building to the exit. After that, her
movements became murky, no more than suppositions. Like the life of Schrödinger’s
Cat in its box. A perpetual razor’s edge between existence and nothing. Observation,
by its very nature changes that which is observed.
The external cameras were
partially obscured by the heavy rain. Twenty minutes before Marina left, it captured
a black octagonal shadow that moved from the parking garage toward the
building’s door, but never entered. It joined the shadows beyond the landscaping
but never emerged.
It was assumed to be an
umbrella.
The shadows were black. Black is
the absence of light. Cameras require light to capture their observations. When
Marina stepped from the building the camera captured the movement into the
shadow. But did it observe anything else in the absence of light?
In the first steps, in the
shadows, did Marina hear a splash she first assumed was her own foot in a
puddle? The camera did not capture sound. But did it record when a black gloved
hand grabbed her forearm? A knife might come silently, shearing skin, then
tendon, leaving a carved notch in both radius and ulna, while the first of
life’s blood begins to pour down the blade and Marina’s hand. Against the cold
rain the blood is lava hot, but quickly cools. Her fingers, no longer capable of
tension, release her bag and cactus. Both fall to the ground. Had she
brought her cactus? Why? Had she not planned on being back in the office? She
couldn’t remember. Her mind was darkness.
Suppose a muddy, black clad foot
stepped on the sad little cancer cactus as Marina feels her air cut off by what
must be an arm. She fell back into that strangling body and was lifted, not dragged,
back toward the parking structure. But not into the light, no. On the far right-hand
side, in the shadows, stands a service door. It’s a double that allows workmen
to bring heavy equipment and tools from the garage. The camera above this door
sees the shadows. It captures the nothingness of black.
The blade might have found
Marina’s neck. It was meant to carve and so it does. There might have been a
sound, but the camera doesn’t capture sound, and the cut was quick, severing larynx
and carotid. Arterial blood sprayed the wall here. In her final moments, what
was once Marina felt the hot fire of blood pour down her opened windpipe, learning
but not understanding that she’s dying of a slit throat and drowning simultaneously.
The rain continued to pour, flattening mud, washing concrete paths.
The camera captured nothing as Marina
faded to nothing.
The video showed Marina walking
through the building and exiting into darkness twenty minutes after the
octagonal shadow passed by. The camera showed nothing else. Thus, no one
observed anything else. The results of the case were inconclusive and filed as
a missing person whom few seem to miss. And Schrödinger’s Cat remained waiting
in the closed box.
THE END