The sound of her name caused her to jump, the shrill call nearly busting her eardrums. For a man that weighed nearly four hundred pounds, her boss had a set of lungs on him that would give Mariah Carey a run for her money. Shaking her head, she scrambled to pick up the few empty bottles she had dropped, her fingers trembling as she desperately tried to put them back in the box before he found her. She could hear his footsteps on the stairs, the weight on his body nearly cracking the decaying wood. “You don’t have to shout, Clemmons. I’m not deaf,” she sighed, her agitation clear as she settled gaze onto his. She watched as he came to a rolling stop, his chest heaving with the exertion and his face scrunching up in distaste as he studied the unfamiliar gaze. She knew what he was seeing – or not seeing, rather, and though she tried not to let it bother her, she couldn’t shake the feeling of discomfort as he opted to focus on something else.
Something that wasn’t her.
“Your break was five minutes ago. I’m not paying you overtime, you know,” he snapped, his voice turning rough as he ripped the box from her arms, practically taking her off the floor with the force. She felt the familiar rush of anger warm her chest, but she quickly extinguished it and took a step backwards. “I lost track of the time.” As far as excuses went, she knew that the one she uttered fell low on the scale, but what else could she say? As she waited for him to load the box on the shelf, she watched as the bottles she’d so carefully put in their places dangled precariously over the edge. And the Moron of the Month award goes to… Her thoughts were followed up with a roll of her eyes as she clenched her fists at her side. Again, he looked over her as he turned with a wave of his hand. “Yeah, well, get to it. I’m not ******* telling you again.” Without waiting for another word, he ambled off deeper into the cellar, his words changing from English to Spanish in a flash.
That was her life.
She was invisible.
Brushing her fingers through her dark hair, she quickly yanked her tattered bag off of the floor and took the steps two at a time. She hated that she had to leave the comfort of the cellar. It offered her silence, whereas the bustle of the crowded bar would offer her a migraine. Before she even pushed open the door, she knew that it was going to be one of the worse nights. The scent of sweat and stale cigarettes caused her stomach to churn, but it was the strong, foul odor of the various liqueurs that about did her in. Doing her best to ignore the bile rising up the back of her throat, she carefully ducked under a meaty arm to make her way towards the back of the bar, her sneakers slipping across the mess on the floor. Cleaning wasn’t her job, but she knew the second she saw the day old grime caked on the hardwood that she would be spending the rest of her evening on her hands and knees. With an exasperated sigh, she closed her eyes before tucking her small frame into an empty chair, her legs tucked beneath her ***. It was the only position that left her able to keep to herself, though she knew that she wouldn’t be an issue. People rarely saw her. She could be standing right in front of someone, and they would stare at her – but she knew by the glazed look in their eyes that they saw straight through her.
She was no better than a ghost.
“Works for me,” she thought as she pulled her pen from her hair, causing the chocolate curls to tumble down around her shoulders. With her notebook already primed in her lap, she had nothing to do but wait. She knew that she had missed part of her break – just as she knew that he would make her take the entire thirty minutes despite of it. There had been a method to her madness, and it had nothing to do with just getting a few seconds of attention. No, it had everything to do with the man that just walked in, however. Her assignment for the week. What a strange assignment it is, too. She remembered the first night she had seen him, his dark hair and broad shoulders drawing her attention immediately. It wasn’t his looks that had her so enrapt, but the way he carried himself. It was in the way he moved, the way his eyes never seemed to miss a beat. He had quickly become the target for her paper due to the vast differences between him and the other Neanderthals that occupied the floor.
Tonight was no different.
Quickly uncapping her pen, she bit into her lower lip as the November wind followed him inside, chilling the risen temperatures of the bar minutely. A few other occupants snapped at the man, demanding that he either come inside or leave, their tones cutting to the bone before they dismissed him. Without wasting time, she began to record his movements, her pen flying across the paper in her careful script, her eyes never once looking down at the lined pages. She had no need to, she knew that her words would be precise from years of practice. Being invisible had its advantages – no one noticed that she was watching the man as he slid into a different chair from the night before. He never seemed to stay in one place, as if he knew that drawing attention to himself would somehow have a negative consequence. Did he not notice that he already had someone that knew everything about him?
“I swear, this is close to stalking,” she laughed, her voice quiet as she settled back into her seat. Had she become obsessed with her target? Perhaps. It was interesting to live a life outside of her own, but she knew that when the assignment was over, she would let him go. She wouldn’t follow him, she wouldn’t continue to study him, even if his presence was enough to raise a thousand questions in her mind. Maybe I’ll have a talk with Professor Montgomery. This assignment has the potential for disaster written all over it, she thought to herself as she quickly jotted down another note.