I brought imported tea to the office and labeled it as mine. It vanished in three days. The next box? Same story, so, I made special tea with salt and soy sauce. Two days later, I heard someone gagging, and discovered who the thief was. To my shock, it turned out to be our new HR manager—Elodie.
Elodie had just transferred from our Toronto branch three weeks before the tea drama started. Everyone was raving about how efficient and kind she was, and to be fair, she had that approachable vibe. Always smiling, always listening. She’d even brought in homemade banana bread on her first Monday, and no one suspected a thing.
So yeah, when I rounded the corner that morning and saw her spitting tea into the office sink, coughing like she’d swallowed battery acid, I froze.
She didn’t see me right away. I watched her stare at the mug with confusion, then dig into the communal tea shelf with a frown. That’s when I noticed the salt-and-soy-sauce packet I had stuffed in the tea tin. My handwriting on the label. No mistaking it.
“Uh… are you okay?” I asked, stepping into the break room like I hadn’t just caught her mid-theft.
Elodie jerked around, clearly startled. Her face flushed a deep crimson. She stammered something about “trying a new blend” and then excused herself quickly, leaving the rest of the tea untouched on the counter.
I didn’t say anything to anyone. Not at first.
I wasn’t even mad, weirdly. More confused. Why would someone making twice my salary be stealing tea?
But I was petty, too. I printed out a sign that said, “Smile! You’re on camera now. Tea thief, consider this your last cup.” I didn’t actually install a camera. I just needed the madness to stop.
Except it didn’t.
The following Monday, the last box of oolong I had brought from my trip to Taipei disappeared. Lid and all. The container I labeled was gone completely.
And this time, the petty turned into pissed.
I drafted an email—half-rant, half-polished complaint—addressed to office management, with photos of my labeled tea, the empty shelves, and even the gagged-up mug I had taken a quick snap of in the sink (yes, I know, weird, but I was documenting).
I had my cursor over “Send” when I hesitated.
Something about it didn’t sit right.
So instead, I walked the long route—straight to Elodie’s office.
She looked surprised when I knocked, but motioned me in.
“Can I help you?” she asked, smiling like nothing was weird.
I didn’t smile back. “I think you’ve been drinking my tea.”
Her face went blank. “Excuse me?”
“I saw you in the break room. Last week. With the tea I labeled. The one I… tampered with.”
To her credit, she didn’t lie. Didn’t deny. Just closed her laptop and let out the heaviest sigh I’ve ever heard from another human.
Then she said, “I didn’t know it was yours. I mean—I did. I just didn’t think it would matter.”
It was such a bad excuse, I almost laughed.
“Of course it matters. It’s labeled.”
She nodded, then stood up and shut the door.
And that’s when everything flipped.
She said, “Look—I shouldn’t have done that. I’m sorry. I’ve been under a lot of pressure. My partner and I split right before I moved here. I was living in a sublet, and when I got here, my luggage didn’t show. I didn’t even have my own stuff until last week. I’ve been eating crackers and stealing tea just to get by.”
That caught me off guard.
She looked polished. Always wore heels. Had a sleek laptop case and a better phone than mine. I never would’ve guessed.
“I just… I didn’t want anyone to know,” she added. “It’s embarrassing.”
I didn’t say anything for a moment.
Then I asked, “Why not just ask?”
She laughed, dry and bitter. “Because asking makes it real. And I thought I’d get it together before anyone noticed.”
I could tell she meant it. And I believed her.
So instead of sending that email, I left her office with a strange mix of sympathy and secondhand shame.
But that wasn’t the end of it.
Over the next week, Elodie stopped showing up to the office.
No explanation.
No sick day emails.
Nothing.
I figured maybe she’d quit out of embarrassment. Or HR had caught wind of something else.
Then, one afternoon, the director called us all into the conference room.
He announced that Elodie had taken a “personal leave of absence.” Said she’d be gone indefinitely and we shouldn’t expect updates.
Which only made the rumors spiral harder.
Some people said she was fired over a compliance breach. Others whispered she’d had a breakdown. One guy joked she’d stolen office supplies and skipped town. None of them knew the truth.
But I did.
And part of me felt guilty for starting it, even if I hadn’t meant to.
Weeks passed. The tea shelf stayed full. My stuff untouched. Peace returned.
And then one day, I got a text from an unknown number.
“Thank you. I didn’t say it properly back then. But thank you.”
It was Elodie.
I replied: “You okay?”
She responded: “Getting there. Life’s messy. But I’m sorting it out.”
That was it. No explanations. No requests.
Just a sense that maybe she really was trying to rebuild.
Fast forward three months.
Our company hosted its annual retreat—two days at a nearby lodge with workshops, team-building, and awkward dancing.
I almost didn’t go. But last minute, I caved.
And guess who showed up on the second day?
Elodie.
Hair shorter. No makeup. Dressed more casually. She looked… real.
And better.
She didn’t stay long. Just came for one session. But during the lunch break, she found me near the buffet table and handed me a small, wrapped box.
“From Montréal,” she said.
I opened it later that night in my room.
Inside? A tin of premium jasmine tea. My favorite.
No note. Just the tea.
It hit harder than I expected.
Because I realized something then—sometimes the people who look the most put-together are fighting invisible battles. And sometimes, small acts of understanding ripple further than we ever know.
When Elodie eventually returned full-time, she was different. Softer. She brought her own tea. She asked questions, listened more. And we—oddly enough—became friends.
Not besties. Not lunch-everyday kind of close.
But the kind where, if either of us saw the other drowning, we’d throw the rope without hesitation.
A year later, I left that job for a new opportunity.
Before I left, Elodie pulled me aside and said, “You taught me grace when I didn’t deserve it. I hope I pass that on.”
And I think she has.
Last I heard, she helped set up an internal fund for employees going through hard times. Quietly. No PR. Just a box by the break room labeled “For when life throws curveballs.”
I dropped in a box of my favorite tea before I left.
Not labeled.
Because now?
It didn’t need to be.
Life’s strange like that. You start off trying to catch a thief, and end up learning how to forgive. We never really know what someone’s going through. Sometimes kindness costs less than confrontation—and means so much more.
If this story made you think twice about assumptions—or just made you smile—hit like and share it 💬🧡