T1 2024 🆕

“The old trail washed out,” the text said. “The one behind the cabin. Creek rose six feet in two hours. Never seen that before.”

On the last Friday of February, Lin stayed late. The office was a mausoleum of abandoned coffee mugs and blinking router lights. She had finally wrestled the sensor data into a Frankenstein’s monster of a forecast, complete with confidence intervals so wide you could drive a garbage truck through them. She was attaching it to an email when her phone buzzed. t1 2024

She stared at the words. The old trail was where she’d learned to ride a bike, where she’d hidden from her brother during games of ghost in the graveyard, where she’d gone to cry after her first real heartbreak. A trail her grandfather had cut in 1972. “The old trail washed out,” the text said

T1. The acronym had metastasized from the company’s strategy decks into her dreams. First quarter. Make it count. Set the pace for the year. Her boss, a man named Derek who used words like “circle back” and “low-hanging fruit” without irony, had sent a GIF of a rocket ship on January 2nd. The implied message: You are the rocket. Or you are the debris. Never seen that before

“Just interpolate,” Derek had said in their Monday stand-up, his pixelated face a mask of earnest stupidity. “Model the gaps.”