She Claimed She Was Fluent In French—Then Headquarters Arrived-Teptep

In my resume, I boldly wrote: “Fluent in French.”

That was the line that ruined my first three months at the company.

Not because it was false.

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Because everyone decided it had to be.

My name is Lam Van, plain enough to disappear on a staff list and ordinary enough that people often forgot it after the first introduction.

My CV was no better.

I had graduated from a third-tier university, the kind of place that did not make hiring managers sit up straighter or circle your name in red pen.

My application was one sheet among hundreds, a quiet little document sliding through the system without weight, without shine, without anyone expecting it to matter.

The only line that stood out was the one I had written almost too firmly, as if confidence on paper might make up for everything else.

Fluent in French.

In another company, perhaps someone would have asked me about it.

In this one, they laughed first and asked nothing.

By the second week, I had become a small entertainment.

There were no official announcements, of course, no email chain, no cruel poster pinned above the kettle.

It was subtler than that.

A glance when I entered the break room.

A pause before a sentence.

A smile that arrived half a second too early.

The office was full of those little social knives, the harmless-looking kind people use when they want to cut someone without leaving proof.

At first, I pretended not to understand.

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