I figured it was about time I wrote a Hanukkah story. The Petrotel Adams (West) has appeared in another of my stories; the night manager likes to get up to little shenanigans sometimes. But of course this story stands alone.
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"Hello, Ronnie." I twisted around on the sleek, high stool, annoyed as I always was by my boss' tendency to be just appear out of nowhere. "I need to see you in the office."
"Just a sec. I've got one more card to do." It was getting to be the end of my shift, the grey light giving way to orange in the east as I processed the early-morning checkouts. "I'll be back there in a bit."
He frowned, and I wasn't sure whether it was because he was unhappy that I wasn't immediately obeying, or because he couldn't understand my fast, chirpy
just a sec.
Tony had been working in the States for, hell, over a decade? Something like that. But my fast, sassy mouth sometimes gave him linguistic fits. "Well. Please hurry, Ronnie."
"Got it." I knew what it was about. I wasn't going to get the Assistant Manager promotion, which made sense: sure I was a college graduate, and sure I'd been working at Petrotel since it opened, but Becca had a lot more hotel experience. It was fine; I got along fine with her.
The raise would have been nice, though. Dammit. My sister was graduating in the spring and my brother was about to need driving lessons. There was no fucking telling when my mom would come home. I sighed and punched the last of the card info in. I'd felt good about the interview, but I hadn't really expected to get the gig. Nights suited me better anyway, as far as the hours went. I turned to Lucy, on the desk with me. "If anyone else comes down while I'm talking to Tony, just run the card as far as you can. That fourth screen. I'll do the authorization later."
"Sure thing." She wasn't the most efficient employee in the world, but at least Lucy could be trusted with credit cards. I wasn't going to give her my management ID to do the whole entry, though. Nope.
I slid off the stool, straightened my skirt, and went chopping back to Tony's office on my heels. The hotel was fully awake around me, buzzing smoothly: Jules was serving breakfast, Jackson the valet was... valet-ing, or whatever it was he did, and guests passed to and fro. It had been like this yesterday morning, too, until suddenly it hadn't. I knocked on the office door and slipped inside.
He was sitting there in his suit, newly arrived with one of those ridiculously small cups of coffee they drank wherever he came from. "Sit down, Ronnie."
"I just wanted to say that I appreciated the opportunity to interview, Tony, and I'm very happy in my current gig."
He blinked at me through his thick glasses. "The fuck you talking about?"
I cocked my head. "Um. The assistant manager position?"
"That?" He blinked some more, then shook his head. "No. This is not about that.
"Oh." I blinked. "So... the Hanukkah decorations, then?"
"I told you, I'll discuss those another time," he sighed.
I arched an eyebrow. "I mean, you know there is a point where it'll be too late, right? It's not like we can postpone Hanukkah." My little sister had guilt-tripped me into asking to light up a menorah at work, mostly as an antidote to what she called the hotel's
tired Germano-Scandinavian Christian traditions
. I wondered whether I'd ever been as certain about anything at eighteen.
He blew out a long breath. "I'm happy with the holiday decorations we usually put up," he said coolly. "I know you want to add Hanukkah things, but I always question their... their... what's the word? Utility?"
I just stared. I had no clue what he was saying, but that was okay. He didn't either. He just didn't want to do Jewish things.
"This is about yesterday morning," he sighed. He lifted a piece of paper off his crowded desk and shook it with a faint air of menace. "This was awaiting for me in my office box this morning. What is it?"
"I dunno." I was lying, of course; I thought I did. I stretched out my hand and took the paper, and a single glance at the first couple of lines told me my thought had been right. I tossed the paper back on his desk. "I handled that just fine, Tony," I groused. "He was an asshole. I got the girl out and I started getting the room cleaned up and then Brandon was able to get a head on that pillow the same afternoon." I leaned forward to remind myself what the room number was. "I think they, like,
just
checked out. It was all good, Tony."
"That's not what the complaint form says." He pursed his lips, a petulant detective with a clever suspect.
I sighed, not feeling so clever. Yesterday morning had exploded, and fast. It had started with a call on the staff line around 7:30. "Jesus," Lucy had whined, holding the phone away from her ear. "I think it's Elaine. She's being bitchy."
I'd rolled my eyes and headed up to 309, where one of the maids (and yes, she could indeed be bitchy) was singing a horrific tale, the lyrics of which boiled down to
you're the manager, Ronnie, so get the fuck up here and solve my problem.
And it really
was
a problem, to be fair.
I'd found Elaine, fuming, arms crossed as she stood in the doorway of one of the king-bed rooms. I could smell the problem before I peeked around the jamb: urine. Sweat. Sex. Pot. Beer. She glared at me as I sighed into the room. "The people you guys allow in this hotel," she frumped.
"What the hell is this?" I said it in a low, even voice, worried about waking the woman on the bed. Though, as I soon figured out, she wasn't waking up for jack shit.
"It's what you see," she snapped. "I haven't touched anything. Look around; it doesn't get any better." She buffed her nails self-consciously against her uniform. "I ain't cleaning this shit."