Page 17 of Bad Tutor


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He gives the slightest nod toward the front doors.

“Yes, of course,” I mumble, starting for the door. “Thank you for the ride…”

Silence stretches over the enormous property as I walk by myself up to the front entrance. I’ve never felt so small in my life. And my heart is beating so hard I feel it in my wrists.

Before I ascend the final front step, one of the towering double-wide doors opens, and a woman in a clean gray dress steps out.

“Welcome,” she says, bowing ever so slightly.

“Thank you, I’m happy to?—”

“This way, please.” She turns back inside, and I’m left standing there for a moment.

“I guess the workers here aren’t much for small talk,” I shrug to myself. For some reason, another employee giving me the cold shoulder almost provides a modicum of confidence.

Somewhere in these halls, there’s a little girl who probably needs some warmth. I may not have many other qualifications, but warmth? That I can provide.

I cough a little to cover up my little quip and hurry after the woman. She’s already halfway down a foyer that could swallow my entire apartment. Marble floors. A staircase that curves upward with an iron railing. Fresh flowers on a table that probably costs more than everything I own combined.

“Wow,” I sigh, repeatedly.

It’s like something out of a movie.

Well, a silent movie.

Because it isn’t just quiet here. It’s dead silent. So silent that it makes me conscious of every sound I make. My shoes on the marble. My breathing. The whisper of my hair against my collar.

I’ve been in expensive homes before. During college, I babysat for families in Brookline and Newton. Lawyers, doctors, people with money and taste. Those homes were nice.They had good furniture and clean kitchens. Sometimes a piano that nobody played.

This, though…

This is on another level.

Everything is so beautiful and precise. There doesn’t seem to be a single object in sight that hasn’t been chosen, placed, and approved by someone whose standards I cannot begin to imagine.

I start to wonder what I’d have to do to meet those standards, and a cold shiver runs down my spine.

Eventually, we reach a waiting room, though the wordroomfeels inadequate. It’s a wide, sunlit space with leather chairs and a low table with a crystal water pitcher. Three other women are already seated.

And that’s where I’m hit with another reminder that I don’t belong here.

They’re older. All of them. Mid-thirties, maybe forties. And dressed exactly for the job description. Structured blazers, quality fabrics, shoes that don’t have scuff marks.

One woman has a leather portfolio monogrammed with her initials. Another is reading from a tablet, scrolling through a digital teaching portfolio with photographs, graphs, and progress reports.

Shit.

I sit down, cross my ankles, and place my hands in my lap, trying to control the increasingly intense imposter syndrome.

You passed the first round, I tell myself.You’re here. That means a lot.

The self-motivation only helps a little. The tension in the room doesn’t help at all.

None of the women speak to each other. I watch them from behind my eyelashes, noticing how they sit. Confident, composed.

I sit up straighter.

They call us one at a time.