1
I'd had it. I'd had it with being poor only two days after payday. I'd had it with having to scrounge for extra hours at my shitty barista job just to justify even working there. And I'd had it struggling to find extra time to study the topics for this semester of college. I had decided that today was going to be a change. I needed to find some way to change my life, turn it around so I wasn't so miserable all the time. So, as I sat against the wall of the coffee shop where I worked, smoking a cigarette, I had my phone out, scrolling through the different listings of help wanted ads.
Thursday nights were always slow, and I had already been on my break for longer than I was allotted. But I wasn't worried about it. Ben, my boss, had already gone home for the day, and Susan was running the shop, tending to the two customers we had. She knew what I was doing and had agreed to let me do my thing for a while.
So far, nothing was popping up as realistic ways to earn extra cash. Mowing lawns, selling white blood cells, tutoring special education students and helping and elderly couple build a deck for their yard were oddly enough at the top of my list. I sighed, took a long drag on the nearly dead cigarette, and shut off the screen. I wasn't getting anywhere with this. Perhaps tomorrow I'd look at the ads at the campus advertisement board, and see if there was anything there.
Feeling sour, I stood, tied my apron back on, and walked sullenly back into work. Susan immediately saw my downtrodden look, and gave me one of pity.
"No luck?"
"Unless you can teach me how to build a deck from scratch..." I said, coming around the counter and leaning against the soft serve machine.
"Haley, you know I love you, but can't you just cut a few classes, to take of some of the load? You're going to drive yourself crazy."
"I think I'm already there, you know me." I said, pulling out a hair tie, and bundling me dark hair up into a ponytail.
"What about baby sitting? You could study while you watched some kids, and make a few bucks at the same time." Susan mused, beginning to wipe down the counter in front of her. She had her blonde hair in curls today, and they waved merrily as she made sweeping movements across the counter top.
"I didn't even see any ads for that, but really, can you imagine people leaving their kids with me? I swear I can barely keep flowers alive, let alone little kids."
Susan smirked, but said nothing. I appreciated her input, but I knew I needed to find something different. Something that allowed me to make a nice stack of cash quick. My broken down car was in desperate need of some TLC, my refrigerator was more empty than a homeless man's belly, and if I could get the A/C fixed in my crummy apartment, it would almost make up for the shitty laptop I had to deal with everyday.
"Well," Susan said, turning back to me, "let's close up, and you can go home and get some sleep."
"More like go home and kill myself trying to pass Psyche. I'm down to a D average, and midterms are coming up."
But nonetheless, I started sweeping the lobby. The only remaining customers started to shuffle out, bidding Susan and I a good night. The last customer was still seated, drinking his latte slowly. I sighed inwardly, annoyed, and turned off the open sign. I started toward him, to hurry him along. I noticed suddenly that he was staring at me with a knowing grin as he sipped his hot drink. Unnerved, I approached him.
"We're closing up, sir."
He gave me a long look over, and then stood. He was a good looking guy, actually. Older than me, surely in his thirties. He had a crisp haircut, slicked back sharply, and a thin goatee on his chin. His wireframe glasses gave me to feeling of intelligence, though having worn glasses for years myself, I knew that they were in no way a guarantee of brains.