The air in the mechanical room had the distinct, metallic tang of overheated dust-the kind that settles on a transformer and waits for the humidity to drop before it starts to sing. It is a dry, sharp scent that triggers a primal alarm in the back of your throat.
My forehead was still throbbing from where I’d walked into a perfectly clean glass door earlier, a mistake born of looking through things instead of at them. I was standing there, nursing a rising lump and staring at a fire panel that was currently nothing more than an expensive wall decoration.
In this industry, we are surrounded by things we look through. We look through the glass, through the contracts, and most dangerously, through the long stretches of time between the moments we actually pay attention.
It is a year of quiet punctuated by a single, frantic week of negotiation. We have built a market where the only voice a service firm ever truly hears is the sound of the renewal date approaching. For , the relationship is a black box. Then, on the , a lever is pulled.
The account stays, or the account goes. It is a binary verdict delivered with the cold precision of a guillotine, and it
