Worst job ever. They
didn’t even allow me a calculator. Who do I look like? Good Will Hunting?
One afternoon, a guy walked in and casually said, “Hi, I
dropped off some pants earlier. I left some marijuana in the pocket."
Stunned, and looking for candid cameras, I muttered, “Um,
what?”
“I left a small bag of marijuana in my pants pocket. Could
you get it for me?” he smiled.
“Do you just want the pants back?” I asked, confusion
covering my face.
“No, just the bag of weed will be fine. Here is my ticket,”
he handed it to me.
I hesitantly nodded and walked to the back of the building,
the temperature at 345 degrees, and began rummaging through a pile of dirty
laundry.
I found the pants, with instructions to be laundered and
heavily starched, and sure enough, there was a small bag of dope in the pocket.
Looking around for witnesses, I retrieved the drugs and quickly walked back to
the front.
Chief was gone, but standing in his place was a local police
officer. I let out a sound that resembled my lungs collapsing, and I threw my
back against the wall, gripping the bag of marijuana in my hand, as the cop and
old dry cleaner lady gawked at me.
“Everything okay, Susannah?” old dry cleaner lady asked.
“Sh-sh-sure,” I gulped, contraband hidden in my innocent 17
year old hands.
“That young man said he would be back later,” she replied as
she tagged the police officers uniforms. “Said he left something in his pocket?
Did you find it?”
“Uh, yeah. I got it,”
I gulped, perspiring, picturing life behind bars as a 17 year old Republican
girl. The horror.
“What was it?” old dry cleaner lady asked, police officer
witnessing the entire conversation, my hands squeezing the drugs tightly.
“Uh,” my eyes darting around the room, trying to conjure up
a lie, “Paper. It’s just a note or something. I’ve got it.”
“You can put it in lost and found,” she said, quickly
figuring the math for the officer’s items.
I was expected to put a bag of weed in the lost and found?
Fat old dry cleaner man was in the office, reading a newspaper,
breathing like an old bull dog as I shoved the drugs in my pocket, without him
noticing. I scribbled some lines on a sheet of paper, folded it, and threw it
in lost and found.
Hours later, Pusherman arrived.
“Did you find it?” he asked, calm, cool, casual.
“You’ve no idea what I’ve been through. I don’t appreciate
it,” I said, reaching in my pocket and throwing his stash at him before one of
the old dry cleaner people saw us.
He nodded, tucked his drugs in his pocket, and walked out
the front door.
For three hours, at the age of 17, I was a dry cleaner drug dealer.



LOL. omg that is the best story I have ever heard. Awesome. I'm telling my hubby this one!
ReplyDeleteYes, pass it on.
DeletePerfect execution! You are awesome! :)
ReplyDeleteYou are so good at building tension!
Thank you, awesome Pish.
DeleteGreat story telling. I love that you let him know what a crappy situation he put you in. Not a lot of 17-year-olds would stand up for themselves like that.
ReplyDeleteCan't even imagine how you must have felt when you saw the cop. Holy cow!
I told him how I felt in a very scaredy cat way, though.
DeleteWow! That is quite a story. I'm not sure I would have handled it so well.
ReplyDeleteI would've kept it but that's the kind of 17 year old I was. :)
ReplyDeleteThat's the kind of eighteen year old I was. Good thing it dint happen the next summer.
DeleteHysterical Zannah! I can easily see you as the type....not.
ReplyDeleteBtw, I left a big bag of Doritos in my pants (things that you should never say out loud)
WG
Never say that out loud.
DeleteThat was a nail-biter in print, can't imagine how nerve-wracking that would have been for real!
ReplyDeleteI bit all my nails in real life.
Delete"...picturing life behind bars as a 17 year old Republican girl." That made me laugh.
ReplyDeleteYou are much braver than me. I'd turn Narc in a heartbeat. :-)
He was am intimidating looking guy. Too scared to narc.
Deletewow! It gets me thinking what I would have done in that situation.
ReplyDeleteWhat an idiot! Who puts someone in that type of position??? Makes for a great story, though!!! ;)
ReplyDeleteSO FUNNY!! I had such sweaty pits for you as I was reading this!!
ReplyDeleteMy pits were always super sweaty there. Hotter than hell in that place.
DeleteOh Susannah, you are a funny girl. Great story! Here in Northern CA no one would bat an eye, including the police. Everyone and their brother and sister has a medical license for it. I don't like it anymore, but at 17, I would have asked for a small reward for my trouble. Nicely told, I could see it all unfold (though not particularly funny, pun intended).
ReplyDeleteI think that guy lives in California now. No lie.
DeleteOh my GAH! I would have handed him a knuckle sandwich along with his dime bag. ;)
ReplyDeleteHe was 6'5 280. No knuckle sandwich from me.
DeleteI would have died of heart failure when I saw the cop. What a great story!
ReplyDeleteThat was too funny.
ReplyDeleteYeah, fourteen years after the fact.
DeleteHoly cow! How terrified you must have been as a kid... I'd have passed out!
ReplyDeleteAlmost did!
DeleteBut it made for such a good story later on in life.
ReplyDeleteYeah, WAY later.
DeleteOh. My. Goodness. Dry cleaner drug dealer. Hilarious. Ellen
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ellen.
DeleteYou are far better accomplice than I. I totally would have melted seeing that cop.
ReplyDeleteThis is awesome! I loved how the story line played out!
ReplyDeleteI would have DIED! I was such a total square at age 17. I would have just died.
ReplyDeleteHaha!! That was great! I don't know what I would have done. You are hilarious!
ReplyDeleteTy!
DeleteI would have burst into tears in front of the cop and the jig would have been up! Really fun story.
ReplyDeleteOk, you are KILLING ME. This is so funny. Are you really republican? I love the line about Good Will Hunting. This is a fantastic post; I love every word. And your voice-- it's so loud and clear I can hear it and I don't even know you. BRAVO.
ReplyDeleteThank you! And, yes, still republican.
DeleteJeez, the nerve of that guy to just casually ask you to retrieve his weed! Hilarious story, though it must have been horrifying at the time.
ReplyDeleteI love how you told this story!
ReplyDeletePlus, holy smokes that was funny!
LOL-loved the story.
ReplyDeleteflipping hysterical. again. LOVE.
ReplyDeleteHAHA! For some reason I find the fact that they didn't let you have a calculator to be almost as funny as the drug story. What ridiculous people! Were they afraid you would steal it? I would have just started charging everyone $5 per item because it is easy to count by 5's.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you gave the guy a little bit of the business.
That calculator stuff was some bull.
DeleteAaagggh, you poor thing! So, so, so funny. Kudos for the humor and build of tension.
ReplyDeleteThank you all!!
DeleteThis story is pure awesome. I was a nervous wreck for you.
ReplyDeleteLOL! I love this story. Love the line, "picturing life behind bars as a 17 year old Republican girl." IDK. The weed dude had a lot of guts or a lot of stupid. Or possibly both.
ReplyDeleteBAHAHAHA, I Loved this!
ReplyDeleteHow funny! You are a better person than I was at that age. I'm sure I would've been so freaked I would've ratted him out to the cop. Thanks for the great read!
ReplyDeleteWhy are u just now sharing this! You get much props. this made my day! BTW it took me 10 min to scroll down through all the comments. you have a lot of followers!
ReplyDeleteWhy are u just now sharing this! You get much props. this made my day! BTW it took me 10 min to scroll down through all the comments. you have a lot of followers!
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh, I love this post! What a great story and brilliantly written!!
ReplyDeleteBy the way, I awarded you the Fabulous Blog Award! :) Congrats!
http://jleesblog.com/2012/07/18/the-fabulous-blog-award/
It would have been a real tragedy if you hadn't been able to find what he was looking for.
ReplyDeletegood posting about Dry Cleaner Drug Dealer
ReplyDeleteZ, I think you just won the Internet today. For me you did, thank you :)
ReplyDeleteI've always wanted to win the internet! Thank you!
Delete