push it real good
- Eddies
- 332
Jocelyn had worked the overnight shift at the all-day, all-night diner where she had her day job. Her feet were sore and she was tired, but at least she had a few rolls of eddies to show for her trouble. She had found that unbuttoning the top three buttons of her uniform blouse was a sure-fire way to get more tips in the evenings, when the salarymen and midlevel managers wrapped up their day but wanted to grab a bite before heading back to their megabuildings. Something about real (well, real-ish) food served with a smile and a hint of cleavage was preferable to a microwaved vending machine burrito or, God-forbid, a tube of soy paste.
Then in the mornings, it didn't matter how many buttons were done up, the people in the morning just wanted someone efficient with the carafes of coffee, which Joss was, thankfully. So she had extracted a decent amount for the time spent. Not enough -- not by a long shot -- for what she wanted, but... enough to worry. So she had tucked the money into her socks, curling around her ankles.
She stopped at a crosswalk, took a moment to check her phone. She had a few memes from her foster brother, an update on a cyberspace gig she had scheduled it for later in the afternoon. The only unexpected item was an automail from her own shared capsule apartment, announcing that the elevators were down for unexpected maintenance and wouldn't be up until after 1:00 PM.
That was a bummer. Jocelyn wanted nothing more than to go home and sleep, but young and spry as Jocelyn was, she was not hiking up 74 flights of stairs young and spry. She was tempted to turn back to the diner, but she suspected they wouldn't want her sitting there in her uniform. She looked around, noted the intersection, and a memory chimed with her. A tattoo and piercing parlor she had passed several times on the way to and from work. She took a left, headed down the street instead of crossing, and found the place. Nowear -- charming, she thought. It wasn't long before the young woman was pushing into the shop, pausing a moment to let her eyes adjust.
"Hello," she greeted the store's attendant -- proprietress, though she wasn't to know it. Joss stood back to look up at the sketches and designs for tattoos and piercings, in the manner of a student of art at a museum. She had piercings -- one through her septum, a few each on each ear -- but no tattoos. Not yet, anyway. "Are these all yours?" Joss asked, nodding at the displays.