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Kate Fuller. ([info]katefuller) wrote in [info]valarlogs,
@ 2014-10-20 16:40:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:kate fuller, richie gecko

Characters: Kate Fuller, Richie Gecko.
Location: Richie’s building; La Habra.
Time: October 20, late afternoon.
Warnings: TBA.
Summary: Getting a job.
Status: Closed, incomplete.

Senior year should have meant nights spent pouring over editions of Cosmo that they bought in the midst of giggling fits; a quartet of girls in a truck heading to A&W for hamburgers while their homework had been unceremoniously dumped beneath their feet. Calculus tests and biology notes and analyses on Hamet instead of floor mats. Their parents would all chastise them for not being more worried about their academics, since this was their last year before they were to be sent out into the world, but all of the stern gazes and lectures were weightless. Most of them already knew that they were assured to get into the school of their choice. Recommendations had already been written. Grades had been exceptional—especially for Kate—up until this point. Nights could be spent trying their first shots of tequila in someone’s basement, planning for prom, and laughing at the silly articles in a trashy magazine—and nobody had to feel worried or stressed unless they were hung-over for church service on Sunday morning.

This was not going to be the senior year she’d envisioned.

She’d skipped church the morning before, feeling righteous and justified all the while until night descended and the guilt began to prickle; eventually she found her cross pendant in one of the unpacked boxes, put it on its chain, and asked for forgiveness. The school and the classes and the people were nothing like that perfect little setup she and her friends had imagined for themselves—a year-long party to celebrate their youth before being catapulted into their futures. The rest of her friends, back home, they still had that year, that time to evolve into the first variation of adults they would become, but tragedy had thrust Kate there, and before she was ready (though two months ago, she might have said she was ready), childhood and innocence were gone, home was gone, and this was what was left. Memories of things that hadn’t happened were far and away better than anything that had ever actually happened. A divine comedy, or something like that.

Kate stood before the locksmith’s building with a near-empty plastic cup of horchata dangling from her fingers. Her aunt wasn’t supportive. Rather than accepting Kate wanting to get a job, she encouraged her niece to join clubs, try out for the volleyball team, join the church youth group or volunteer to help with Sunday school. In spite, Kate had declined all these suggestions, instead forging ahead with her original idea: get a job, make money, graduate, and then whatever. Work hard and stay busy and don’t give up. Although her aunt had given her a lacklustre blessing in the morning, wishing her feigned good luck, it was only because she anticipated—incorrectly—the types of places Kate would be seeking a job. The Abercrombies and the Starbucks of the world. Instead, Kate had stopped into hole-in-the-wall shops to talk to owners about work. And this was the last stop.

Her lips circled around the hot-pink straw and slurped up the last few drops of horchata before she disposed of the cup in the trash outside. Despite the anxiety that had radiated her off her first few attempts, she had calmed down quite a bit, was feeling more confident; having adopted a “no harm in trying” attitude about the whole thing. She pushed open the door to the building and peered inside, but didn’t spot anyone—not a customer nor the owner. The door shut behind her with a surprisingly ungracious thud, announcing her presence before she even said a word. “Hello?” She called into the room as she approached the counter, her head still craning to try and catch a glimpse of whoever was working.



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[info]lockartist
2014-10-23 02:49 pm UTC (link)
Though he didn't have the best interpersonal skills, Richie had something of a gift in reading people. He couldn't give you a whole character history like fictional British detectives could at a glance, but he could usually anticipate the kind of person he was dealing with by how they were standing, what they wore. Kate stood like a girl who came from something sheltered, had all the boxes checked for someone aware of all the points of social etiquette. She told him she was from a conservative town and that he could read on her.

Just like she did a once over on him, he looked her over too. Richie had the tendency to assess people like you did livestock — harshly, looking for flaws instead of assets. Rarely did he look at someone and really note the color of their eyes. Looking at Kate, he noticed the cardigan, the conservativeness and the spark of determination in her eye. Whatever she was doing with her life, coming to this hellhole of a town and looking for a job here instead of some overpriced coffee shop, she had a good idea of what she wanted to do, if not what she was actually doing.

At the end of all of this though, Richie just wanted to get someone in this position so he could stop thinking about it and her motivations for coming here didn't matter as long as she actually took the job. Returning her eye contact, he shook her extended hand out formality rather than manners. He wasn't really the handshake type, but all of this felt almost like play-pretend with how stuck to rules she seemed. Something of a smirk settled on his face as she talked.

"Richie. If I wanted you to call me Mr. Gecko, I would have asked you to." His tone was always blunt, always teetering on mocking by nature, and he wondered if throwing a spanner in her little formal routine would stop her up. He hoped she didn't expect some TV version of a job, because he wasn't the kind of person to follow any standards but his own.

Following her eyes as they moved around the storefront, he could pick out each of the things that were 'wrong' with it. Stupid things that he wouldn't bother himself with like wiping off dust or sweeping the floor, not when he had a safe to get open or a key to make. Though he wasn't the kind of person to want to willingly live in a mess, he had the issue of not allocating his time to things he didn't want to do. "I'm looking for someone to take care of the shit I don't want to do," he replied, something of a laugh in his voice. The little teasing quality in her tone, like all things like that, was like an arrow that embedded in his brain. Mentally snapping the shaft of it, Richie had a feeling she wasn't out to offend him. "If you think you can handle it, then the job is yours."

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[info]katefuller
2014-10-24 11:10 pm UTC (link)
“Fair enough, Richie.” Mr. Gecko, Richie, Richard—it was all the same to her, whatever he wanted to be known by. And as Kate and never Katherine, she understood the significance of choosing how you were to be addressed.

His tone was clipped and matter-of-fact, which almost had the impact of being abrasive, but Kate wasn’t put off by it, though she did wonder if it would get old and fast. Again, no preamble, direct and to the point; all swearing and offering a job without even needing to blink. That was the opposite of just about everything she’d ever been accustomed too—formalities, niceties and southern hospitality. For her sense of her comfort zone (which encapsulated many of these things), she thought she might actually prefer his approach, even if she could never employ it.

And her surprise was not well-masked. Kate wasn’t much of a liar. Being offered a job so off-the-cuff with no formal exchange of resumes or references or even an impromptu interview threw her for a loop. She wanted to press, even if it meant exchanging the would-be dynamics of potential employee and employer, to ask him if he wanted a list of qualifications or a quick run-down of her positive traits, or whatever people did in an interview. Her mouth even opened momentarily to go down this path, but after a moment, her lips shut and pressed into a thin line. If he wanted any of that, he would have asked. After a beat, she nodded. This was what she wanted, after all.

“I can handle it,” she told him. No I think I can or I’ll try my best. Just I’ll do it. If having a potentially abrasive boss was meant to be a potential deterrent, it wasn’t. “I’ll start whenever you need me to. I’m available every afternoon and all day on Saturday and Sunday. The more hours you need someone here, the better.” And she meant it. Any time he had to spare, she’d take. Without the extent of extracurricular activities she’d had back in Texas, Kate had nothing but free time here in La Habra.

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[info]lockartist
2014-10-29 02:34 am UTC (link)
Richie only nodded at her comment. With him, he always had the problem of either saying too much or too little at times and it was really because he had terrible people skills. It wasn't nerves that made him use more words than necessary and it wasn't shyness that kept him quiet. Sometimes Richie was hyper-focused on what he was doing and didn't say anything, sometimes he didn't have anything to say and did waste his time making small talk, something he both hated and was terrible at. At some point, it turned into a vicious cycle.

Most of the times when he did speak, if he wasn't passionately elaborating on some obsession or another, his tone was matter-of-fact and to the point. Part of that was his desire to cut out potential for small talk, especially with strangers, and part of that was his want to keep things from wasting his time. He said what he needed to say and waited for the appropriate response. His mind worked black and white like that sometimes and he's sure a few people along the way have called him things because of it, but he tried not to pay attention to it.

"Good," he answered. Richie should have been more formal about hiring, but that would have wasted more time than necessary. He wouldn't say he was the best at judging character, but from where he stood right now, he could trust her with the front of the house things he couldn't be bothered with. If she quit, she quit and he'd find someone else, but for the time being, she was willing to do the work and didn't walk off offended by his attitude, so that said a lot.

"Tell me what hours exactly you can work and you can start next Monday." Simple enough. He had enough money to hire someone for whatever hours, it was actually parting with it that was going to hurt him. But at the same time, Richie wasn't ever really that attached to it. It was strange. He never wanted to spend the money, but he didn't really love it. It should have been the opposite, having nothing growing up should have left him insanely greedy, but he was mostly ambivalent. That wasn't to say he didn't like having the ability to get things he thought he needed, but even when he had been pulling huge jobs, he still lived in small, basically empty apartments, never invested in huge houses or expensive cars. The last thing he bought was a VHS tape because he wanted it.

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