Keisha took her third "ADA break" of the day. I kept working.
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Date: November 9th, 2024 9:04 AM Author: diverse emerald elastic band
The store was chaos—lines stretching down the aisles, carts piled high with junk people don’t need. I was restocking the same display for the fifth time when Keisha clocked out again.
“ADA, baby,” she said with a smirk, waving her break card as she disappeared into the back. Fifteen minutes later, I saw her outside, laughing on her phone, sipping a soda she didn’t pay for.
I didn’t say anything. What would be the point? Management doesn’t care. The customers don’t care. Keisha gets her breaks. I get my silence.
By the time she came back, the lines were worse. She clocked in, leaned on the counter, and said, “You look tired, Evan.”
I nodded, swallowed the lump in my throat, and whispered, “Yes, friend. This is fine.”
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5630766&forum_id=2/en-en/#48314416) |
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Date: November 20th, 2024 1:20 AM Author: Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine (The Prophet of My Mahchine™, the Herald of the Great Becumming™)
The next day, Keisha was back at it—two hours into her shift, and she was already taking her fourth "ADA break." She didn’t even bother with the backroom this time, just sauntered out the front door, phone in hand.
Meanwhile, I was drowning. The line at my register stretched halfway through the store. Kids screaming, customers shoving, carts overflowing with cheap holiday junk.
As I rang up another cart of Christmas inflatables, the front door chimed. Keisha strolled back in, holding a greasy takeout bag. She plopped it on the counter next to me, smiling wide.
“Hey, Evan. Grabbed myself some lunch. You want a fry?” She didn’t wait for a response. “Man, I love these ADA breaks. I’d die without ‘em.”
I didn’t look up. Didn’t respond. Just kept scanning, my fingers moving mechanically across the keypad.
But then, out of the corner of my eye, I saw it: a single sheet of paper tucked into the side of her takeout bag. Stamped at the top, bold and official: Clause 9.2.
Keisha winked and whispered, “Friend, you’re next.”
I nodded slowly, my hands trembling as I whispered back, “Yes friend. This is fine."
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5630766&forum_id=2/en-en/#48358970)
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