"You're not at all what I expected," Steele said to Alexandra, and the tall, plump, blonde-haired young Caucasian woman smiled, causing her sky-blue eyes to sparkle. Not for the first time, Steele noticed that Alexandra had a nice smile, and it seemed genuine. Walmart was one hell of a place, full of backstabbing and treachery underneath the veneer of friendliness and customer service.
For the past year or so, Steele had been working at Walmart as part of the security team. The place was certainly complex, to say the least. Mean managers, passive-aggressive employees, tons of backstabbing and treachery. Oh, and a ton of rude clients, especially at this Walmart, which was located in a moneyed area of the Canadian Capital. Steele tried his best not to let the bozos get to him, but he was only human...
"Those rude customers had no right to speak to you this way, just because you're security doesn't mean you should put up with their bullshit, trust me, I'm a CSM, I know," Alexandra retorted, somewhat haughtily, and Steele smiled and nodded. He was about to reply when he saw Moll, the tall, burly assistant manager coming their way, and he wished Alexandra a good day, and returned to his post at the door.
"Thanks again, and enjoy your break," Steele said, and Alexandra smiled and walked away, looking oh-so damn lovely in that dark, flowery summer dress that she had on. Steele resumed his post, and a white family exiting the store looked him up and down. He knew what they saw. A big and tall young black man in a security uniform, definitely something out of the ordinary as far as white folks in the Canadian Capital were concerned.
"May I see your receipt, please?" Steele said, and the family patriarch, a balding middle-aged white guy, paused and stared at him, seemingly angry. Steele locked eyes with the dude, and after a brief moment, he parked his cart and pulled the receipt out of his pocket. Steele read the receipt...slowly, and then handed it back to the old white dude, who left with his wife and daughter in tow.
"I saw what you did there," Alexandra said, smiling, as she walked back into the store, and Steele blinked, a bit surprised to see her back so soon. Alexandra grinned, flashing that fearless smile of hers, and Steele returned her smile. Usually, when facing the unexpected, the young Black man kept his face carefully blank. If you let them get to you, you're done...
"Ma'am, I haven't the faintest idea what you're talking about," Steele said casually, and Alexandra rolled her eyes. She could sense that Steele was not like the others. Walmart attracted a ton of short-term employees who couldn't handle its tricky, weird way of doing things. Cashiers, backroom workers, customer service personnel, they all just came and went. Steele on the other hand had stuck around for over a year...
"Steele, don't play coy with me, that middle-aged dude looked at you funny and that's why you stopped him," Alexandra said with a wry grin, and Steele smiled and shrugged. Damn, this Alexandra gal was definitely not like the others. In Steele's experience, most people working in retail were dull, boring, insecure and mean, but not particularly smart or remarkable. He'd seen enough of them betray each other for petty reasons to learn never to trust them.
"Alright, that guy has given me a hard time recently, told me I didn't have a real job and that I ought to go back to Africa, I remembered his bullshit, and I wanted to stop him, just because," Steele said, his ire rising, and Alexandra smiled, not with sympathy but with empathy. Gently she touched his arm, a gesture which surprised the hell out of Steele. What game was Alexandra playing?
"I just wanted to let you know, I know how you feel," Alexandra said, and then she walked away, and practically sashayed that big butt of hers in that flowery dark summer dress. If Steele had a weakness, it was a cute, curvy gal with a big butt but he tended to avoid the white ones because they were quite often too much trouble. Way too much trouble for a brother just trying to earn a few bucks to complete his final year at Canada's Capital University.