She could have stayed, negotiated, promised to try harder to hit deadlines, to be more “flexible.” Instead, she scheduled a meeting for the day after tomorrow and set the auto-email. Then she left the building, not running but walking with the slow, deliberate steps of someone who knew how to pace themselves.

Two months later, she was at the lake. The surface mirrored a sky so precise it felt like a high-quality download of the world. She opened her laptop, not to answer emails but to write: a short guide she called "Escape Forced Overtime — Free Download: Extra Quality." She made it available as a free download on a small site, not to preach but to offer a template: clear policies, scripts for saying no, budget worksheets, and the emotional reframing that promised life beyond the timesheet.

One midnight, as rain stitched the windows of the office tower, Jenna watched the empty chairs like ghosts. The screensaver of a looping ocean scene mocked her with calm. She pressed her palms to the keyboard and dragged a file into a folder labeled “Escape.” It was a folder she’d created after the thousandth overtime request, the thousandth sigh, the thousandth apology from Brian in HR who always promised to “look into it.”

The guide circulated quietly. Some forwarded it to colleagues; others printed it and pinned it to office noticeboards. Replies came—thank-you notes, new boundary stories, one from a manager who admitted he’d implemented a "quiet hours" policy and seen wellness scores improve.