The fluorescent lights of Insight Communications hummed at a frequency specifically designed to erode the human spirit. Strawberry had decided this weeks ago, somewhere between the third and fourth hour of cross-referencing spreadsheets that no one would ever read. The office was a glass box on the fifteenth floor of a Mong Kok commercial building, and through the tinted windows, Hong Kong shimmered in its particular brand of desperate beauty—neon signs fighting against the fading day, double-decker buses exhaling diesel into the thick summer air.
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Strawberry was thirty-four. In the taxonomy of Hong Kong’s matchmaking aunties and office gossip, this made her a "leftover lady"—a term that suggested she was yesterday’s cha siu, still edible but no longer desirable. She had stopped flinching at the phrase around the time she turned thirty-two, when the last of her university friends had sent her a wedding invitation with a photo of a diamond ring that cost more than her annual salary.
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Her desk was a study in carefully managed defeat. A small plastic strawberry sat beside her keyboard, a gift from a colleague who had left three years ago for a marketing job in Singapore. There was a photo of her father, faded at the edges, and a notebook filled with handwriting so small it looked like an ant had walked through ink and across the page. That notebook was her real work. The spreadsheets were just how she paid for the MTR fare and the egg tarts she ate alone on Sunday afternoons.
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"Strawberry, the Q3 report needs to be consolidated by five."
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Her manager, Vivian, didn't look up from her phone as she spoke. Vivian was twenty-nine, wore clothes that probably cost more than Strawberry’s rent, and had been promoted twice in the three years since she'd joined the company. She had also, Strawberry remembered with a dull ache, failed her way through the same business writing course they'd taken together at university. Vivian had asked Strawberry for help with every assignment. Now Vivian told Strawberry what to do, and Strawberry said "Okay," and that was the architecture of their adult lives.
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The Q3 report was meaningless. Strawberry knew this the way she knew that the water cooler conversation about real estate prices was meaningless, the way she knew that the quarterly performance review was meaningless, the way she knew that most of the hours she spent in this building would dissolve upon her death like sugar in hot tea. But it was her job, and she did it, and she tried not to think about the fact that she had once written a sixty-page journal about the way light fell through the window of a cha chaan teng at 7 a.m.
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She had been good at that once. The writing, the noticing. Her secondary school Chinese teacher had pulled her aside and said, "You have a voice, Strawberry. Don't lose it." That was eighteen years ago. She had lost it anyway, not all at once, but in the way that one loses small things—a hairpin here, a sock there—until one day you look around and realize you are missing so much you cannot remember what whole felt like.
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Her father called at 7:32 PM, just as she was packing up to leave.
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"Did you eat?" he asked. The same question every time, as if the answer might change.
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"Not yet. Going home now."
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"You work too hard."
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Strawberry almost laughed. She did not work hard. She worked the way a hamster runs on a wheel—continuous motion, no progress. The difference was that the hamster didn't know any better. She knew. She knew that her classmate from secondary school, the one who had needed extra tutoring in mathematics, was now a senior analyst at a bank in Central. She knew that the girl who sat next to her in Form 6 had just opened her third café. She knew that even the boy who had cried during the DSE exams because he couldn't finish the English paper was now some kind of tech entrepreneur whose face appeared on MTR ads.
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Her father had never once expressed disappointment. This was somehow worse.
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"Baba, are you—" She stopped. She had been about to ask if he was proud of her, but the question felt obscene, like asking for a compliment while standing in a burning building. "Never mind. I'll call you tomorrow."
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"You sound tired, ah girl."
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"I'm fine." She pressed her phone against her ear and closed her eyes. The office was emptying around her, the cleaning lady already pushing her cart between the cubicles. "I'm fine, Baba."
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But she wasn't fine. She was thirty-four years old, she had no savings to speak of, no romantic prospects, no professional achievements that anyone would remember five minutes after she left the room. Her greatest skill was giving other people encouragement she could never quite direct at herself. Just last week, she had spent forty-five minutes on the phone with her cousin Michelle, talking her through a crisis about an upcoming job interview.
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"You're brilliant," Strawberry had said. "You've always been brilliant. Remember when you won that debating championship? That wasn't luck. That was you."
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Michelle had gotten the job. She had sent Strawberry a grateful message with three heart emojis. Strawberry had looked at the message for a long time, trying to feel something other than the cold recognition of her own hypocrisy.
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The MTR was crowded, as always. Strawberry stood wedged between a man playing a mobile game at full volume and a woman whose designer bag kept hitting her in the hip. She watched the stations flash past—Mong Kok, Yau Ma Tei, Jordan, Tsim Sha Tsui—and thought about what her life might have looked like if she had been brave enough to study art.
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Her mother had died when Strawberry was nineteen, three weeks into her first year at university. The grief had been a physical thing, a stone lodged in her chest, and she had chosen business communications because it was the practical choice, because her father had looked so lost, because someone needed to be sensible. She had told herself she could write on the side. She had told herself that the journals and the poetry and the half-finished short stories were not a consolation prize but a parallel life.
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But parallel lines never meet. And somewhere along the way, the writing had become something she did in the dark, after midnight, when even the street noise had softened into a murmur. She wrote in the notes app on her phone. She wrote on the back of receipts. She wrote in notebooks she hid at the bottom of her drawer because the sight of them during the day made her chest ache.
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She was good at it. She knew this the way she knew the earth was round—not because anyone had told her, but because she could feel the curve of it in her bones. Her sentences could make the ordinary strange. Her paragraphs could hold a moment so still and complete that reading them felt like cupping water in your hands.
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But no one read them. No one would ever read them. Because Strawberry had never submitted anything anywhere, had never shown her work to a single living soul, had never even mentioned to her colleagues that she wrote. The risk of rejection had calcified into certainty: if no one saw her work, no one could confirm what she already suspected, which was that she was not good enough, had never been good enough, would never be good enough.
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Her apartment was two hundred square feet in Prince Edward, a subdivided unit whose walls were so thin she could hear the man next door sneeze. She dropped her bag on the floor, changed into shorts and an oversized T-shirt, and sat on the edge of her bed. The air conditioner rattled. The window faced another window, faced another window, faced another window—a Russian doll of other people's lives.
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She opened WhatsApp and scrolled through her voice messages. There were dozens of them, stretching back months, each one a recording she had made and sent to herself. Her own voice, captured in the privacy of her room, singing songs she would never sing for anyone else.
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The first one was from three years ago. She had been sick with a fever, delirious and lonely, and she had opened the voice recorder and started singing "Faye Wong's "Eyes on Me" in a voice thin with illness. She had listened to it afterward, expecting embarrassment, but instead had felt something unexpected: recognition. That was her voice. Not the one she used at work, not the one she used with her father, not the one she used to say "I'm fine" over and over until the words lost all meaning. Just her, Strawberry, singing a song that had made her cry when she first heard it at fourteen.
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She had kept recording. Not for busking, not for a recital, not even for a friend's ears. Just for herself. Some nights, like tonight, she would scroll through the list and play them one by one, listening to the evolution of her own loneliness. A Mandarin ballad. A Cantonese pop song from the 90s. An English lullaby her mother used to hum.
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Tonight, she recorded something new. She opened a fresh voice note, took a breath, and sang a song she had written herself—just a few lines, a melody she had been carrying around for weeks like a stone in her shoe.
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"The city has a thousand lights / But none of them are mine / I am a fruit left on the vine / After the harvest time."
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She stopped. The silence in the room was absolute except for the rattling air conditioner. She pressed play and listened to her own voice, thin and reedy, wavering on the high notes, but hers. Completely hers.
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She saved the recording and put her phone down.
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The next morning, Vivian called her into a meeting room. The glass walls meant everyone could see them, which Strawberry suspected was the point—a public performance of managerial authority.
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"We're restructuring," Vivian said, not unkindly. "Your position is being phased out."
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Strawberry nodded. She had been expecting this for months, had watched the signs accumulate like dust on a forgotten shelf. Fewer projects. Smaller bonuses. Her name disappearing from email chains.
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"We can offer you a severance package, of course. Three months."
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"Okay."
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Vivian hesitated. "Aren't you going to ask why?"
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Strawberry thought about it. She could ask why. She could demand explanations, cite her years of service, point out that she had never missed a deadline, never taken a sick day, never done anything except exactly what she was told. But what would be the point? The why was the same why that had followed her through her entire adult life: because she was not exceptional, because she was not remarkable, because she was the kind of person the world passed by without noticing.
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"No," she said. "Thank you for letting me know."
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Vivian's expression flickered—something that might have been confusion, or disappointment, or the faintest trace of respect. "You'll have until the end of the month."
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"Okay."
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Strawberry walked back to her desk, collected the plastic strawberry and the photo of her father and the notebook filled with her tiny writing. She put them in her bag. She looked around the office—the humming fluorescents, the grey cubicles, the motivational posters in cheap frames—and felt not sadness but a vast, exhausted relief.
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She took the MTR home. She sat on her bed and opened her phone and listened to the recording from the night before, her voice singing about being left on the vine. She listened to it three times. Then she opened a new document on her laptop and started writing.
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Not about the Q3 report. Not about her severance package. Something else. Something about a girl in a cha chaan teng at 7 a.m., light falling through the window, a story she had been carrying for eighteen years.
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She wrote for four hours. When she finished, she sat back and read what she had written. It was good. She knew this the way she knew the earth was round.
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She did not send it anywhere. She did not show it to anyone. But for the first time in a very long time, she did not close the document. She left it open on her laptop, a small bright window in the dim room, and she thought: Maybe tomorrow.
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Maybe tomorrow she would let someone see it. Maybe tomorrow she would stop apologizing for existing in the spaces the world had not reserved for her. Maybe tomorrow she would remember that a strawberry left on the vine was not a failure but a promise—something sweet, something red, something that had grown anyway, despite everything.
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She opened WhatsApp and recorded another voice note. Just her voice, alone in a small room in a city of seven million people, singing a song with no name.
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And somewhere, in the vast humming heart of Hong Kong, a sound so quiet it could have been anything: a woman singing to herself, and not caring who heard.
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