bookmate game
en

Wesley King

  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    Conventional wisdom suggests that, when the world finally does begin to fall apart, love will be the only thing left that really matters. Petty grievances will fall away.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    Instead, you will spend time with loved ones. Hold them close. Be present. Let them know that you care.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    I run through the lists of today’s clients, circling the items I still need. Listen, I’m not here to judge anyone’s life choices, but, Mr. Culver, are three different types of soft cheeses and organic pomegranate seeds, like, really priorities right now? I make my best guess for Mrs. Phillips, which is all I can do, given the woman still doesn’t know how to text, and make my way through the maze of shoppers who are demonstrating the whole spectrum of concern levels.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    “Miss!” someone calls out from somewhere between canned goods and chips, and I’m 99 percent sure that he’s not talking to me because I have a messy bun and a hole in the armpit of my favorite T-shirt and Miss is some country
    club shit. “Uh, miss. Hello, I’m talking to you. Excuse me. You can’t do that.” A boy taps me on the shoulder and when I turn around, I see that we are the exact same height, looking eye to light blue eye, a detail that I only notice because, first of all, I’m not oblivious, and, second of all, he is all up in my business.

    “Excuse you,” I say, but with attitude, and while trying not to notice the passersby staring me down like I’m trying to shoplift an entire case of frozen pizzas. “Social distancing.” I shoo him back.

    He hooks his palm around the back of his neck and stares down the Salty Snacks aisle. “Oh, um, sorry, but you’re not supposed to hoard . . . toilet paper.”

    “I’m not.” I lean my elbow on the cart handle, mentally tap-tap-tapping as a frantic shelf-stocker in a black apron and an “Ask Me about Super Savings” button rushes between us.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    “Actually, you’ve got six packages.” He says it like it pains him a little to be the one to point this out. And yeah, I made sure to score a load from Lou in Inventory as soon as I arrived because I read the news. “The shelves are empty,”
    he says, “and it’s just—well—you’re only supposed to take what you really need. So that there’s enough to go around.”

    I eye his basket: a wheel of brie, Clorox wipes, and two bottles of sparkling water.

    “So that’s what you really need?” I reach up and pull my bun tighter. “Not that I need to explain myself to you, but this is my job.” Like it pains me a little to be the one to point this out. “I deliver groceries.”
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    Slowly, I take a pack of toilet paper and use the only nail whose life my teeth have miraculously spared to rip into the plastic, selecting a single roll. “Catch,” I say, and throw it over to him.

    “What’s this?” He squeezes the roll.

    “Toilet paper.” Obviously.

    “Yeah, but I—”

    “You didn’t say how much.” I pause a beat for him to catch up. “The contract simply stated that I owed you toilet paper. Period. Frankly, I think I’m being generous. It’s a double roll.”

    “Okay, but I clearly meant—I mean—this—”

    “Sorry.” I shrug. “Verbal contracts are binding, I hear.”

    I turn as I’m walking away with my loot. He’s standing on his tiptoes. “Come on. It’s not like you can give someone an opened package!”

    “That was from my stash,” I yell from the end of the aisle. “Pleasure doing business with you.” I salute. Shopping lists complete.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    “Well, it turned out we didn’t really specify,” I manage weakly.

    I’m still trying to remember how that happened. We were negotiating and it seemed to be fairly equitable . . . and then I was looking at her big green eyes and the way the right corner of her lip moved when she smiled and then I had no toilet paper and yeah it all makes sense.
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    She takes a deep breath and examines me. Her eyes are sharp and small and hazel like our mom’s had been . . . minus the warmth. “It all just seems a little . . . odd for you,” she says finally, picking at her teeth.

    “The embarrassing handling of a negotiation—”

    “No,” she corrects, analyzing some residual broccolini. We had that for dinner two days ago. “That’s standard fare. I meant the actual gumption to negotiate with a stranger. You screamed ‘Stranger Danger’ every time someone walked by us in a parking lot until you were twelve. You’re neurotic.”
  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    A diagnosed neurotic, in fact. First came the GAD: generalized anxiety disorder. That one sucks, but it’s the panic
    disorder that truly kicks my ass. I earned that label in eighth grade following my first public panic attack.

    Def of neurotic

  • Thomas Everett Vanderboomcompartió una citahace 9 meses
    It was the loose strands of hair falling around her cheeks. It was the way she spoke . . . the confidence and the easy lopsided smile and the way her eyebrows arched and fell in a second conversation that was surprisingly easy to decipher: vaguely amused, this boy is an idiot, vaguely amused, this boy is an idiot . . .

    And yeah, they never indicated: Oh, he’s cute. Or: I wish he would ask for my number. God, I wish I’d asked for her number. A last name. A chance. All I have is Max.
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