THE PHONE IN Anjali's cubicle rang even before she had settled into her chair. The caller's name and address popped up on her screen. Thelma Whitehead of Hot Springs, AR. Alaska or Arkansas? An igloo? Cotton fields? And what kind of name was Whitehead? Wa-wa Indian? Thank goodness, the caller was not from an M state, which she'd never have sorted out. MA, ME, MD, MI, MN, MO, MS, MT: that was a nightmare. And no doubt the monitor was listening in.

'Hi, this is Janey. How can I help you, Ms. Whitehead?'

Thelma reeled off her problems, which, if Anjali understood correctly, had to do with not having received her Social Security check, which prevented her from paying her bill on time.

And how exactly, Anjali wondered, am I expected to solve your Social Security problems? 'Come again, please?' she said.

'What do you mean, come again? I ain't never bin there yet!' Thelma cried. 'You don't understand the first thing I bin sayin', do you! I bet you don't even speak our language! Where the hell y'all setting at right now? India? I used to be on y'all's side, but when I get off the phone I'm fixing to call my congressman.'

'Miss Thelma, please to calm down!' Stay calm yourself. You're making mistakes because you're too agitated. No job's worth a heart attack!

Thelma Whitehead hung up after one last, inscrutable imprecation: 'This ain't all bin did yet!'-Anjali didn't recognize those words as English. If only she could say 'Go to hell!' Her own anger shocked her, as it had that day in Minnie's spare room.

'Well, that didn't go too well, did it?' Rishika the monitor broke in. 'Let's see how many gaffes I counted. She's not 'Miss Thelma.' This isn't Gone with the Wind. And where did you pull 'Please to calm down' from? I deliberately threw you a curveball with that thick accent, and you didn't respond very well, did you? You were probably seconds away from correcting her. Remember this: when you're running an open telephone line from America, you're going to get every kind of accent and every level of mangled English. You have to interpret it and laugh along with it or respond to it as if it was perfect English from a textbook. Everyone in America speaks a different English. And then, in Thelma Whitehead's sugary Southern accent, the monitor concluded, 'Hon, you bin losing your cool.'

The phone calls kept coming. Why was she being picked to deal with the most difficult names? It wasn't fair. Slava from MD. Shun-lien from CA. Tanyssha from TN. Witold from IA. Esmeralda from AZ. Changrae from NJ. Aantwaan from LA. Gyorgy from OK. Weren't there any American-sounding names left in America? Why didn't guys like her goofy brothers, Fred and Hank, call from Rock City, Illinois?

She mustered phone-voice cheeriness for Gyorgy. 'Hi, this is Angie, I mean Janey.'

'Huh?'

She pictured a large man in a fur coat and knit cap with earflaps, fleeing a pack of wolves in snowy Siberia. 'How can I help you this morning, Gee-orr-gee?'

The monitor broke in with an angry 'It's not morning for your caller!'

'Sorry.'

'And forget how the name's spelled. It's pronounced George. Keep the conversation to the point.'

Why wasn't the caller doleful Mukky Sharma of IL instead of Geeorrgee/George of OK? She couldn't afford to flunk out of CCI. She needed a job, she needed paychecks. She had to pay for room and board. Minnie hopped on her desk, a vulture sniffing carrion.

George wanted to know if he could renegotiate the terms of his contract. Of course, these were just practice calls, and she was not expected to know what kind of contract he held or the company he held it with. That wasn't the point. The point was to field a difficult problem and make the client go away happy.

'George, have you contacted your local service representative?'

'I keep getting bounced to you guys. Where are you, India?'

'No, I'm right here in Illinois,' she answered perkily. 'Good old Rock City, Illinois.'

'No shit,' said George. 'You could have fooled me.'

'Why not just tell me your problem.'

'I subscribed to one magazine-one magazine, one computer mag-and I get about forty every month and I can't cancel them. Wouldn't you say that's a problem?'

'I certainly would.'

Then the call was suddenly terminated, and Parvati herself broke in. 'Anjali, what have I told you about agreeing with a caller's complaint?'

'Deflect it,' she said.

'Precisely. Do you understand the meaning of deflect? Under these circumstances, does it mean 'I certainly would'? What would be your proper answer?'

In a panic, she riffled through mental notes. Don't agree: deflect. But how to deflect? 'I should have said…' She started to explain, but her mind was saturated. All day long she'd been absorbing censure from the monitors. Defend our client, sympathetically if you have to, but never agree with the callers. Maybe once in a hundred calls they'll have a legitimate complaint. The caller already has a grievance; don't encourage it.

She had to admit failure. 'I don't know, madam. What should I have said?'

'You might have found a way of exchanging one magazine for another. You might even have found a way of reducing the overall number, maybe by five or ten. And between us, forty is certainly an exaggeration, so you might have asked for a full listing. I doubt that he gets more than five or six.'

The phone rang again. 'Janey,' she mumbled in panic. But this time it was her mobile. Against CCI policy, she'd forgotten to turn it off. She'd barely had time to adjust to having it.

'Janey, aka Miss Bose? Having a bad day?'

Mr. GG! 'I could use some cheering up, Mr. GG,' she said. At least she'd swatted the Minnie vulture off her desk.

'Dinner tonight?'

'Afraid not.'

'Come with me to Mexico?'

She was feeling cocky. 'I'll think about it.' Miss Anjali Bose didn't have to stay Deadbeat Janey. Not forever. She had options.

Parvati's amused voice came through. 'That was your best demonstration of phone poise. Now please put away your mobile, and stay focused. It's the bottom of the ninth.'

THE CLASS AND monitors and Parvati met at the end of a very long day. She'd been up since four A.M. It was now three-thirty P.M. She had taken thirty-two calls-a fraction of a normal day's workload for a normal call agent- and now she had to listen, in private, to the monitors' assessments.

She knew from Parvati's body language-a term she'd learned from Peter-that her career was over. 'Anjali,' Parvati said, 'we knew from the beginning that you were going to be different from our usual fresher. We just didn't know how different.'

She hung her head.

'You seem to lose your composure under pressure. Your language skills deteriorate.'

'Yes, madam.'

'I've decided this line of work is not for you.'

'I understand.' And with this understanding came visions of running out of Peter's money, being kicked out of Bagehot House, and having to go back for good to Gauripur.

'Look me in the eye, Anjali. Customer support is a very demanding and very specialized profession. One of the things it demands is the ability to submerge your personality. No one is interested in you, or your feelings. You are here to serve our client, and the client is the corporation, not the caller. I think you have a great deal of difficulty erasing yourself from the call.'

'Yes, madam. I agree.'

'I think you can take something positive from this.' Parvati passed a file across the table with Anjali's name on it. On it was stamped the word SEPARATED. 'Being a call agent requires modesty. It requires submission. We

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