[OnTheJob story event]
"Why is it that the washers are all idle, with clothes in them, every time I come in here?" Nicole said. "Anyone?" she called out to the room at large. "Anybody? Are these your clothes?"
"Anyone" didn't answer. Neither did "anybody." So, with an exaggerated sigh, twenty-five-year old, pleasantly plump bleach blonde, married, with three kids, a dog, and a cat Nicole pulled the unidentified-owner clothes out of the washer at the laundromat, tossed them in the adjacent dryer, and slammed the door shut.
"I think it's to give the washers time to chew up just one sock of a pair."
"What?" Nicole asked, in exasperation as she shoved her own load of clothes into the now-liberated washer.
"Why the washers are all idle with clothes in them," Sandi, one of the laundromat attendants, and owner of said establishment, quipped, saddling up to the dryer and putting money in the slot to get the dryer going. It started up with a rumble, which moved fairly quickly into a shake, rattle, and roll. "Whoa," Sandi said. "I forgot that this was the defective dryer we're replacing today."
"Ha, ha," Nicole managed. "So, you fed the dryer because these are your clothes?"
"No," Sandi, a thin, rather hard-looking brunette in her late thirties answered amicably, ever in tune with keeping customers from chewing up the wallpaper. "These are Megan's. She'll pay me back when she returns for them. We're a full-service laundromat, you know. And Megan's a regular. She's good for the coins."
Nicole laughed at that, a better rendition of a laugh than she'd given for the sock joke. "Some laundromat. Never has a washer available when you come to it. And, God, this dryer is ready to take off from the floor. Isn't there any way to turn it off?"
"Not once it's gotten going, no. Trying to pull the plug might get you electrocuted. It's being replaced today. So, if our service is that bad, why do you keep coming here?" Sandi asked. It wasn't asked belligerently. The two women were friends from way back, and Sandi was a pro at dealing with people who had to take their laundry to a public facility. Nicole brought her laundry here every week—or had been doing so for the past six months. A lot of young—and not-so-young—women had been bringing their laundry here in recent months. Business had really picked up of late.
"You know why I keep coming back here," Nicole said.
"Yes, I know," Sandi responded, with a little smile. "Like I said, we're a full-service laundromat."
"So, where is he today?" Nicole asked.
"What?" Sandi said, motioning that she hadn't heard Nicole over the sound of the defective dryer, which was bucking and rumbling in place.
"I asked where Ryan was today," Nicole yelled over the noise from the dryer. Other women in the laundromat heard her and looked up. A couple of them rolled their eyes and sniggered before returning to dealing with their own wash or sitting and gossiping in the chairs at the front window while they waited for the cleansing magic being dealt by the washers and dryers.
"In the back," Sandi said, "doing what he does best."
Nicole didn't have to ask what that was. It was why she kept coming back to this laundromat. She just didn't fully believe until Sandi was so open about it that Sandi realized why business had picked up at her laundromat in the last six months—the six months since Sandi's cousin, Ryan, had come on board to help Sandi run the place.
"Well, I hope he doesn't wear himself out doing it," Nicole said.
"I bet you do," Sandi answered. Both women laughed.
Sandi wafted off to help others in the laundromat, and Nicole retreated to the window seats with her copy of a racy paperback,
Raven's Possession
, and fidgeted, looking occasionally, and impatiently, toward the rear of the establishment. The rattling of the dryer half way between her and the back stopped eventually. She watched an appliance store truck pull up into the handicapped space outside, two burly men come out of the cab, and the back of the truck being opened up. A commercial-grade dryer sat just inside the truck.
Nicole was engaged in watching the men lower the back gate of the truck to pull the dryer down onto a dolly, so she missed Megan coming into the front area, discovering, with a frown, that her clothes weren't in the washer, and being approached by Sandi, who explained they were in the adjacent dryer. When Nicole turned her attention back to the interior of the laundromat as the two servicemen started maneuvering the new dryer through the front door, she saw Sandi and Megan in conversation, but, beyond that, she saw that Ryan had emerged from the back. She readjusted herself into what she believed was one of her sexier poses and slapped on a coquettish smile.
God, he's gorgeous, she thought—thinking of him in a James Dean way, even though James Dean was much too before her time for her to realize it. He stood there, leaning into the frame of the wide doorway leading to the back, first through a smaller room with kitchen facilities, a table and six chairs, and a few machines in it and then into a hallway with the ladies' room and the manager's office to the left and the rarely used men's room and the room where Ryan now lived to the right. The men's room had a shower, so, with the kitchenette in the room between the main area and the office, Ryan was able to exist as the laundromat's live-in caretaker.
Ryan was the epitome of tall, dark, muscular, and handsome, with wavy hair, a shiny-toothed smile, arresting blue eyes, and a loose-fitting chambray shirt, showing tattoos on his upper arms, and low-rise worn jeans. To a woman like Megan—indeed to nearly all of the women now coming to the laundromat—he was the very, very good bad boy.
Nicole watched Ryan come out of his oh-so-sexy slouch against the doorframe and come forward into the main area as the two servicemen muscled the new dryer down the side aisle where Sandi and Megan were standing. Ryan got to the women first, and Nicole gave a little scowl as she saw him pat Megan on the hip and Megan simper at the touch.
Sandi called out to the deliver guys, "That machine goes here, where this dryer is. You can take this dryer away, please. I paid the disposal fee."
"No, don't," Ryan said in a deep, melodic baritone that had Nicole and every other woman in the place nearly swoon. "Don't take the old dryer. It still works. There's an empty slot back in the kitchen. You can move the old dryer back there."
Sandi frowned, but she didn't contradict Ryan. She just helped Megan move her hamper of now-dry clothes to the other aisle and to a folding table. As the two workmen moved to switch the dryers, Ryan walked on up to the front of the room, to the chairs lining the front window. Every woman's eye in the place followed him.
"Hey, there, Nicole. Nice to see you."
"Hello, Ryan," Nicole said in the sweetest flirty tones she could manage. "I hoped you'd be here."
"I'm always here for you, baby," Ryan said. "You want to come on back?"
When the next woman came into the laundromat with her clothes, she stopped at the now-idle washer with Nicole's clothes in it. "Why is it that the washers are all idle with clothes in them every time I come in here?" She asked of the room in general.