The customer looked confused and unhappy. An elderly woman glancing nervously at all the technological gadgetry on display.
"Can I help you, madam?" It wasn't easy in my present mood, but I forced out my widest grin. The one that seldom failed to reassure the less technical customers, and made me feel proud of my justified skill in putting them at their ease. Usually they relaxed instantly and poured out their shameful feelings about their lack of technical skills, knowing they had found a kindred spirit. My bosses acknowledged that my cheerfulness and real desire to help these people gave me an edge when it came to selling to these more diffident customers. My sex helped too. There were not many women assistants in this male dominated field.
The customer glared at me. This was so not what I was expecting, that I cringed. Maybe she could sense that my smile was false. "I'm looking for a smartphone with Android capability that is also compatible with Ubuntu Linux based software," she said.
I didn't want to admit I had no idea what Ubuntu was, so I cleared my throat nervously preparing to ask her more questions.
"You must know what Ubuntu is," she snapped.
"I'm afraid..."
The woman rolled her eyes and sighed. Audibly enough for a man in his thirties with a wispy moustache to look up from his stocktaking and move towards us.
"What seems to be the problem, madam?" My supervisor Bob was all smiles now. Not like half an hour ago when he was yelling at me for taking too long in the toilet.
"This young lady is not being very helpful."
How Bob managed to combine an obsequious smile at the customer with a contemptuous dismissive gesture towards myself I had no idea, but then he is the master of the non-verbal put down. They must teach it in management school.
"I'll take over from here, Maxine," he said. "Perhaps you could start packing up for the evening."
I turned away, my eyes glistening. I should be used to the waspish customers, my eye rolling boss and my aching feet by now, but being snubbed so expertly by the little old lady felt like being bitten by a butterfly. On today of all days, a miserable winter afternoon where the rain was rippling in sheets outside, it was just too much.
When five o'clock came round, I slunk out of the shop without saying goodbye to anyone, ran through the sheeting rain to my car, then burst into tears.
When I got home I saw the dishes I had forgotten the night before. My flat mate Clarissa would growl at me I knew, but somehow I just couldn't face them. I couldn't even muster the energy to push the dirty dishes to one side while I made myself some dinner, even though that only involved chucking a few things out of the freezer and heating them up. I dragged myself into my bedroom, turned on the electric blanket - cheaper than the bar heater - huddled into bed, and howled, the more so when I remembered the embarrassing session of the previous night on that same bed.
I recalled the sound of grunting, the feeling of a foreign object rubbing inside me, the bed creaking, then the smell of semen and rubber as Brian finished his business, slipped off me, made his excuses and left.
He was one of a series, like serial killers, only in my case more like the serially dead. Each of them say they love me, then each of them bonk me and leave me, hurting me in the process - physically as well as emotionally.
The type of parting varies. Some would loudly accuse me of being frigid, or a lesbian; then there were the nicer ones, who would be more circumlocutory, waffling about how I was a 'nice girl... not you but me... just need time to find myself...' yada, yada, but it came to the same thing in the end: I was just a lousy lay. For some reason, while I crave the intimacy of close contact, when things get hot and dirty I just tense up inside, leading to disappointment all round, an ache in my crotch, lovers' balls and recriminations.
I had just started to get warm and sleepy when my phone rang. I hauled it out of my pocket and looked at the display. It was mum. I didn't want to talk to her. She loved me I know, but I just couldn't cope with her preaching at the moment. I know I'm a disappointment to my mum. She went back to work when dad left her and has done a lot more with her life than me. I let the phone ring, the trilling sound of the latest phone software lulling me back towards slumber. I could hardly afford to heat my room, but thanks to generous staff discounts and easy repayment options where I worked, I had no problem buying the latest electronic gadgetry.
My phone changed its tone to a harsher beep; there was a new message for me on Facebook. I glanced at it without enthusiasm - then gave a second look. It was from Andrew, the one tutor during my tech course who had encouraged me; didn't always look at me in a way that suggested that somewhere on the planet Zog a mother was still wondering where her daughter had got to.
Andrew had urged me to go back to tech and finish the courses I had missed and needed to complete my degree. If he was to be my tutor then I would have done so; but he had left the same time I did. Something about his teaching being too controversial and offending the powerful council, who had ties with the influential primary industry organisations. "The entire economy of New Zealand is based on killing," he told us in one of his classes once. Quite true when you think of it, but not the sort of thing that would endear him to the establishment. Andrew was now living in Wellington where he was doing something with the activism community.
After all my friends had graduated and moved to different parts of the country, I dropped out of tech and moved back to Opotane to be near my mother, who had just started working at an environmental consultancy firm. My good friends from tech became just Facebook friends, together with Andrew, and the boyfriends, most of whom unfriended me after the first disappointing sex session.
I read through Andrew's message. "Hi Maxine. I have a job interview in Opotane next Thursday. Would be great to catch up if you are available."
It would be nice to see a friendly face from my past. I messaged back. "Would love to. Congrats on the interview. Do you need me to help in any other way?" I thought he may like to stay overnight if he didn't want to tackle the long drive to and from Wellington twice in one day.
A reply came back almost immediately. "Can you pretend to be my GF for the interview? They allow whanau support, and they kept asking me all these questions about why I wanted to move to a small town. To be honest, it doesn't attract me that much, but as things stand I would take a job in Syria if one was offered. A local GF may help my chances."
I knew that as a concession to Maori applicants, who supposedly had strong family ties and made decisions collectively, companies advertising for more senior positions allowed applicants to bring along spouses, family members or significant others to interviews. It would be considered racist to only allow this privilege to the native Maori, so many non-Maori also took advantage of this 'whanau support.' Needless to say I had never been interviewed for jobs at the level where such solicitous regard for the applicants' well being was part of the process.