So I got my first paycheck this week, and let's face it. Nothing ups job satisfacion like cold hard cash. I've had a series of very different jobs, not always connected and not always interesting, and I'm still on the fence as to my current position. One week into it I had a holiday, and Skeet and I hightailed it out of town once it hit home that my days of painting my toenails while I watch Oprah are over.
While on the five-hour drive to the city, Skeet thought it would be appropriate to call all the numbers on the sides of trucks and report perfectly innocent people for poor driving. This reminded me of an incident that happened many years ago, at one of my old jobs.
I was about 19, and a graphic designer at this DC printhouse. Part of my duties as the only gal were to endure constant sexual innuenduoes, make coffee, and answer the phones. One afternoon I took a call from a lady who called to report one of our drivers. I was a tad surprised when she rattled off the license plate, but not as surprised as I would be once I hung up.
The man in question was an older gentleman of color, one of those classic cases that walks around with a Bible and tells you to "Have a Blessed Day" and other platitudes while secretly watching you when you bend over and giggling about it like a Nancy with his buddies. He had the unforgivable habit of wearing patchouli oil, which must have made him the man back in 1978, but was impossible to get out of one's skin for days should you happen to shake his hand, and the odor of which impregnated his delivery car and immediate vicinity. Let's call him Theodore.
The lady on the phone mumbled for a good minute or so, telling me that she didn't want me to think that she was being awful but she thought we might want to know what had been going on in the company car. Turns out this lady lived in a bad neighborhood, and she had observed the virtuous Theodore pick up a flamboyantly dressed young girl from a corner and take off down the street. Now I was no innocent. I knew what she was, but I decided to play dumb for the sake of details, so I asked her how she knew that the girl in question wasn't a relative or friend.
"Well", she said, "I don't want to get graphic, but I saw.... the motions...her head..."
Yep. Theodore had picked up a prostitute to give him head while he made deliveries in the company car.
The company car that was low to the ground.
The company car with our toll-free number on it.
You haven't lived until you can walk into your boss's office and almost cause him a brain hemmorrage from a combination of shock and laughter.
Later that afternoon, Theodore walked in a big grin. No one wanted to shake his hand, and we were all grinning like idiots. When he got called into the office, we just kept hearing "She was my cousin."
Needless to say he was fired, and that incident become a keeper.
Anyone else have a memorable work tale to share?