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Chapter 30 - A Job in the City

Getting a job, Cielo Diaz realized, was not about dreams.

It was about emails.

And waiting.

And refreshing your inbox like your future depended on Wi-Fi behaving itself.

"Have you tried sending more applications?" Jessa (Ocampo) asked over the phone.

"I have sent seventeen," Cielo replied, sitting cross-legged on a small bed that squeaked every time she shifted.

"Make it thirty."

"That feels like emotional spam."

"That is called persistence."

You're with her in a small rented room in the city.

Bare walls. One electric fan. A table that insists it is stable but makes no promises.

Outside, Manila heat presses against concrete like it has unfinished business.

Inside, Cielo Diaz scrolls through job listings.

Junior Developer – 2 years experience requiredEntry Level – must already know backend, frontend, life directionFresh graduates welcome – portfolio required, certifications preferred, soul optional

Cielo Diaz stares at the screen.

"These requirements are contradictory," she says.

Jessa laughs through the phone. "Welcome to reality."

Eventually—

one reply arrives.

Short.

Direct.

No emojis. No warmth. Very corporate.

Interview Invitation – Production Assistant

Cielo Diaz reads it twice.

Then a third time.

"…This is not IT," she says.

Jessa pauses.

"Does it pay?"

"Yes."

"Is it in the city?"

"Yes."

"Then congratulations," Jessa says, "you are now interested."

And just like that—

Cielo Diaz prepares again.

Not for code.

Not for systems she controls.

But for systems she will enter and survive.

You travel with her.

Early morning bus.

Engine coughing awake.

Strangers half-asleep, half-dreaming, all trying to outrun something.

Cielo Diaz sits by the window.

Not avoiding sunlight today.

Just observing it differently.

The city grows slowly outside the glass.

Small houses become buildings.

Buildings become towers.

Noise becomes rhythm.

"Okay," Jessa says on the phone before the interview, "act confident."

"I will act accurate," Cielo Diaz replies.

"That is not the same thing."

"It is close enough for employment."

The office building is tall.

Glass. Steel. Cold air inside that feels like it belongs to someone else's budget.

Cielo Diaz steps in.

Instant shift.

Heat outside. Control inside.

She likes that.

Structure.

Even if it is not hers.

A woman hands her a form.

"Fill this out."

Cielo Diaz sits.

Reads every line carefully.

Because in her experience, rushed answers are where life hides traps.

Position Applied For: Production AssistantExpected Salary: negotiable (translated: I need this job but I will not say it out loud)Skills: typing, organizing, adapting, surviving unpredictable systems

The interview is short.

Almost suspiciously short.

"Why do you want this job?" the interviewer asks.

Cielo Diaz thinks for a moment.

Then answers honestly.

"I want to understand how real-world production systems function."

The interviewer nods.

"Are you okay with multitasking?"

Cielo Diaz tilts her head slightly.

"Define multitasking in this environment."

"Doing many things at once."

She nods.

"I can adapt to concurrent tasks with shifting priorities."

The interviewer blinks.

"…That was very technical."

Cielo Diaz doesn't smile too much.

"I studied Information Technology."

Two days later—

the call comes.

"You're hired."

No dramatic pause.

No music swelling.

Just reality, delivered plainly.

You stand with Cielo Diaz in her rented room again.

This time the air feels slightly different.

Not better.

Not worse.

Just… changed.

She sets her bag down.

Looks around.

"This is temporary," she says.

But her voice is steady.

Not unsure.

Not hopeful in a fragile way.

Just… factual.

First day of work.

Production office.

Loud in a different way than school.

Everything urgent.

Everything "ASAP."

Everything "Cielo, can you—"

"Cielo Diaz!" someone calls. "Print this!"

"Cielo Diaz! Call the supplier!"

"Cielo Diaz! Where's the file?"

She pauses once.

Only once.

"…I am not in IT," she mutters under her breath.

A coworker laughs. "Welcome to production!"

And you follow her through the day.

Running between desks.

Fixing documents that were never finalized.

Answering calls that are already behind schedule.

Turning chaos into something that can be submitted.

At one point, someone dumps a stack of papers on her desk.

"Sort this by priority."

Cielo Diaz looks at it.

No labels.

No system.

No logic.

She exhales.

Then quietly begins to build order.

Not loudly.

Not dramatically.

Just… step by step.

By noon, she is no longer just reacting.

She is structuring.

"Hey," a coworker says, passing by. "You're fast."

Cielo Diaz nods.

"I am organizing chaos."

By afternoon, her shoulders ache.

Not from physical labor.

From constant decision-making.

Constant adjusting.

Constant thinking.

But she stays.

Because this is familiar in a new way.

Unstructured systems.

Unpredictable inputs.

Human variables.

She understands this language too.

Just not as comfortably yet.

That night, in her small room in the city—

Cielo Diaz sits on the bed.

Laptop closed.

Notebook open.

Outside, the city hums like it refuses to sleep properly.

You sit with her in the quiet.

She writes.

Entry: A Job in the City

Today I learned that real systems are not clean.

They are not logical like code.

They are messy, reactive, and constantly breaking.

She pauses.

Then adds:

But they can still be managed.

Not perfectly.

But enough to function.

Another pause.

Longer.

I am not where I expected to be.

But I am learning how to stay where I am placed.

She closes the notebook.

Leans back.

Stares at the ceiling.

No panic.

No grand realization.

Just fatigue mixed with quiet acceptance.

Outside, the city continues without her permission.

And Cielo Diaz—

probinsyana, coder-in-training, accidental production assistant—

is no longer just entering systems.

She is learning how to survive inside them.

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