She Took a 60% Pay Cut Offer Quietly. Then Her Boss Opened the Envelope-kieutrinh

The first time Megan offered me the pay cut, she smiled like she had practiced it in the mirror.

Not a warm smile.

Not even a nervous one.

Image

It was the kind of smile people use when they think the hard part is already over because the person across from them has no choice.

The executive conference room at Pure Chem was cold enough to make my fingers stiff.

The glass table reflected every face back at itself, polished and pale beneath the white ceiling lights.

A chrome water pitcher sat in the center, sweating onto a coaster, and the whole room smelled faintly of burnt coffee and lemon cleaner.

Megan slid the paper across the table toward me.

Her manicure tapped the signature line one time.

“There’s the revised compensation package,” she said. “We’re restructuring. Everyone has to make sacrifices.”

Three executives sat behind her, silent and neat in their dark suits.

They watched me with the settled patience of people waiting for a formality to end.

I lowered my eyes to the number.

$34,000.

My salary had been $85,000.

They wanted to cut it by 60% and keep my title, my hours, my responsibilities, my formulas, and my gratitude.

Megan folded her hands on the table.

“Given your situation,” she said, “we assumed you would prefer stability.”

That was the sentence I remembered most clearly afterward.

My situation.

She meant Tess.

She meant the specialist appointments that filled my phone calendar in blocks of blue.

She meant the hospital intake desk where I had learned to keep insurance cards, medication lists, and old lab results in one zippered pouch because forgetting one piece of paper could cost me half a day.

She meant the bills I opened standing at the kitchen counter after Tess fell asleep.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *