“Alright,” Taylor sighed. She was obviously upset, but she didn’t let
 
 those tears spill over. She stood up slowly, gnawing at her bottom lip.
 
 Christina passed over the paperwork. She hated to think that Taylor
 
 would leave here, probably go straight to her car, and sob there. There was
 
 nothing Christina could do about it. She didn’t like feeling responsible for
 
 someone else’s failure. She wasn’t responsible.
 
 “I’m sorry that I wasted your time,” Taylor said as she stooped to
 
 grab her purse. She rammed the paperwork inside roughly.
 
 “I really would like to see you work on it and come back.”
 
 Taylor rolled her eyes. “Thanks. I’ll be sure to book an appointment
 
 with someone else. Maybe they’ll give me the consideration my idea
 
 deserves. At the very least, they won’t make me wait out there for half an
 
 hour past my appointment time.”
 
 Christina watched Taylor turn and beat a fast path to the door. She
 
 brushed the doorframe with her purse so hard that it nearly got hung up, but
 
 she managed to make a clean exit. Christina sat there, stunned. She’d had
 
 people get up and walk out before. People cursed at her more often than a
 
 person would think. Getting denied was hard. Getting your idea shot down
 
 was even harder. She hadn’t meant to tell Taylor that she wasn’t good
 
 enough or that her idea wasn’t good enough. She’d given her the only
 
 advice that she could. Why was she the one who felt guilty then? It was
 
 more than just the comment about running late. Christina did regret that.
 
 She finally sighed and stood up. She grabbed her things and walked
 
 back to her office. She’d hoped to shave off some time during her meeting
 
 and she had. She’d be on time for her next one. She even had time to grab
 
 her sandwich out of the lunchroom fridge and scarf it down. By the time she
 
 reached her office, she was no longer hungry. Her meeting with Taylor hit a
 
 nerve that she didn’t think was possible to press on. That confused her. She
 
 needed to spend the ten minutes she had thinking about where she’d gone
 
 wrong, and why she couldn’t stop seeing Taylor’s misty eyes, flooded with