A little background before I tell today's story: I don't work in a particularly nice part of town. In fact, I work in the straight-up hood. Yes, straight-up.
Every morning before work (and sometimes during depending on how fast time decides to move that morning) I go to a nearby convenience store to get an energy drink.
There are five other, nicer convenience stores I could visit - but they don't carry the particular brand of drink I want. Nor could my patronage there ever give me such a story to tell.
Anyway, I told you that to tell you this:
This morning I went to my usual store to grab my usual Canned Energy Supplement. I passed two panhandlers, went in and made my purchase. I have to pay in cash here because they won't let customers use a card unless $5 or more is spent - so I gave the guy a fiver and paid for my drink.
Walking out the door one of the guys asks me for change - eighty-five cents.
First of all, I applaud him for his technique. By asking for a specific amount he probably increases his chances of skeeving change off an unwary passer-by because he creates the illusion that he might be purchasing something useful - other than malt liquor.
Second of all, my energy drink cost $2.15. I paid with a five-dollar bill.
My change was eighty-five cents.
Apparently this hobo was psychic. Naturally I pulled the wool over his eyes and lied to him - I don't have ANY change.
And as I turned around the most beautiful, voluptuous crack-ho ever walked up to the store. She pirouetted gracefully in her crack-trance, twitching and looking around her warily.
Psychic hobos and ballerina crack whores make my life complete.
4 comments:
What do we work in the same neighborhood?
I love crack whores that can ballet dance. It's almost poetic to watch.
he was probably a lawyer in an old life.
Haha - perhaps we work in the same BUILDING Malach! Dun dun DUNNN.
Mike - ballet + crack = award winning performance. It's amazing how people act when they're tweaking.
I suspect he was, Counsellor. I suspect he was.
A footnote - when I say my change from paying with a five was eighty-five cents I literally mean CHANGE. As in, coinage.
There was clearly more given to me in the form of bills.
Or maybe I'm a crackhead ballerina.
Post a Comment