pink_silk_glove
Literate Smutress
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2018
- Posts
- 3,355
Big Jake's 24-hour Diner was a 3600 square foot rectangle in the middle of a parched open lot in front of the sign reading 'Nevada Welcomes You'. It was a truckers' haven in the desert and at any given time a couple dozen big rigs or more parked themselves in a few scattered rows on the lot. Many of them kept their engines running either to power their refrigerated trailers or the air conditioning in the cab while their drivers slept off the previous few hundred miles. The uneven pavement, devoid of any painted lines, was heavily cracked in places with patches of loose gravel strewn from the gaps, and was sun leached of any of its original blackness into a light ash grey. The lack of a liquor license in the temperant state of Utah did not seem to deter the long haul truckers (who were often regularly substance tested anyways) from the large portions of greasy meat eggs and hashbrowns washed down with fresh hot coffee for breakfast lunch dinner and midnight specials. At certain times of day business was busier than others but but it was never dead. Up to eight waitresses (and in this throwback joint they were still called waitresses and not servers) would be on shift for lunch or dinner while the wee hours of the morning would still employ three of four.
Of all the places on Earth that Mom had ever had or could have dragged her to, Wendover Utah had to be the worst. With hundreds of miles of dry salty desert to the east and jagged barren mountains to the west, it was a prison, a wasteland. The weather was appalling. The dryness and the heat did no favors for her delicate and densely freckled complexion and her hair felt frizzy and dirty most of the time. With a population of six-thousand it was small town hicksville. The favorite passtimes of her classmates (with whom she'd made very few connections) consisted of driving their four-by-fours up into the hills, getting drunk, dirt biking and shooting guns - a culture that she found most crass and even distasteful.
The worst part was the casinos. Wendover sat upon the border of Nevada and the whole town was constructed in a narrow line along the business siding of Interstate 80. Gambling was by far the biggest industry. Without it the place would have been a ghost town. As such, the Utah side was pathetic dirty and small. In Nevada, the hotels and casino resorts with their massive tacky signage glowed like a throbbing and swollen sore thumb in the surrounding nothingness of the dustbowl. One step across that line into the Silver State, transfixed and decrepit seniors sat on their fat butts pulling slots for hours at a time while the corporations took advantage of their addictions as they siphoned away their savings and pensions. It was a shameful existence.
Back in October was the seventh time that Sandy had been uprooted in her life when when Mom decided to pull up stakes from Sacramento. She was ready to just get through the twelfth grade and enroll in local college. Then maybe she'd have a chance to establish some roots of her own and detach herself from her Mom's whims of survival. It was a scary proposition but it was something. For the first time in her life she even had a boyfriend. Sometimes it was Mom's employment that had dictated their gypsy ways, sometimes it was men. This time it was a new low. Mom had packed the two of them up to go live with Gavin, some guy that she had met online. Sandy protested, asking if it was wise to move in with someone that they'd never met, but Mom justified herself when she assured her daughter that she had gotten to know him through chatting over the previous three months. Sandy tearfully said goodbye to Aidan so that Mom could embrace this new Gavin fellow. Over the years she had become very adept at packing things, knowing what to keep and what to leave behind. She did so one more time and shoved it into the car for Utah.
Gavin was nothing special but after Christmas even he was gone. He packed a bag and climbed into his truck one morning, explaining that he and a friend had secured a plumbing contract for a condo in Provo and that he'd be back in three weeks. Three became six and then he stopped returning Mom's messages altogether. Sandy was yet again the victim of Mom's poor judgment as they moved into a basement suite to save on rent. The move was easy as she had hardly unpacked anything since the fall.
Aidan had agreed to maintain contact. They had discussed the possibility of Sandy moving back to Sacramento after graduation for college and their relationship could resume. Then in February, like Gavin, he too stopped responding. A month later she hit his facebook page to see photos of him with some other girl. The pic of Aidan in a warm embrace with this short curvy raven haired one named Grace bludgeoned to death any possible notion that they may have been just friends. Sandy was crushed. Her own judgment hadn't been any better than Mom's after all.
Then school was over. She had graduated and didn't know where to turn next. A hundred miles east was Salt Lake City. A hundred miles the other way was Elko. She knew nothing of and not one soul at either of them. Another three hundred miles further west was Reno, but that was merely Wendover on steroids. None of these destinations appealed to her in the slightest. She thought about applying to art college for graphic design of some sort. There was one in Boise and another in Salt Lake but without a scholarship where would the tuition come from? Sandy needed a job but since she was still nineteen she couldn't legally work in the casinos like her Mom could, so she started with Big Jake's.
She had been there a week and was finally getting used to the fast pace. The four-to-midnight was tough. That stretch from five until nine was a noisy madhouse. Wall to wall burgers steaks and ribs with heaping plates of thick cut fries, all of it drowned with copious amounts of steaming coffee. Just refilling the creamers and sugar bowls ate up an hour of the shift. She poured so much coffee that she quickly learned to do it with her left arm so that her right wrist didn't ache from doing all the work on its own all day.
Then there were the stares and the crooked grins, the 'honeys' the 'sweethearts' and the 'babys', the suggestive winks. There had even been a couple of invites for private time in the back of a truck. Men two and three times her age, with scraggly hair hanging from their chins and slim to none wisping from the edges of sweat stained ball caps, and bodies bulging out of their dingy work clothes, would hit on her. Even at six in the morning they would still slide into a booth or belly up to the counter in romeo mode, with nothing to lose in hopes of that one-in-a-million shot that the skinny fair-haired freckled girl might just possibly say 'Yeah, what the hell, sure.' Not all of them would be this way of course, but there was always one or two in the house that thought they had a chance or at least entertained the fantasy of getting with a sweet young girl and would attempt to engage her in idle chatter, keeping her at his table a minute longer than necessary while other hungry customers waited. Sandy certainly wasn't the only target by far. That would have been Trish, the pixie blonde with the round face eyes tits and booty, but all the girls on the staff dealt with the same shenanigans so she wasn't alone. Sandy brought up the subject with Magz, one of the shift managers, about how to handle it. "As long as they don't touch you, just smile and go with it," she advised with a wink. "You'll make more tips." Magz wasn't lying as Sandy was to find, but each time she tallied up her receipts she couldn't help thinking that it felt like prostitution - let them ogle away and take their money.
It was a quarter past ten as she was finishing up her break. Her feet felt swollen in her black flat shoes and thin black knee high socks, but she rose from the toilet eager to get to the end of the shift and go home. She checked herself in the mirror, her otherwise pale face covered in a myriad of tan gold and copper freckles. They blanketed her shoulders arms upper back and chest as well. It was pointless to try to hide them so black eye liner was her only makeup. Her hair was plain and straight, past her chest and parted in the middle. It was that color that couldn't decide if it was blonde or brown. "Is that how you got your name, from the color of your hair?" she had been asked thousands of times. She had even asked her mother the same question when she was four or five years old but Mom had told her that it was only coincidence. Sandy never wanted to be the tomboy that most perceived her as. Plain thin freckled and with hair the color of prairie dust, she looked like she came from a farmyard in Kansas. Still, to assert herself in a more dolled up way would only invite attention that she wasn't always comfortable with. The dress code at Big Jake's was black and feminine, and feminine was defined as no pant legs but skirt hems only. The little gold badge to the left of her chest read her name stenciled in black. Often the hang of her hair would obscure it and if she were honest, she preferred the anonymity. Her t-shirt that night was black and was printed with an ornate graphic of the cover art for the Dum Dum Girls' 'Too True' album. A black pencil skirt past the knee finished things off.
Back in the diner proper, the sizzle of the kitchen the clinking of cups and plates and the random chatter refocused her. The air conditioning hummed as it did twenty-four-seven. If it ever would conk out during a lunch shift she would surely die. The night outside the windows was black, with only the street lamps and the shapes of the trucks outlined by their clearance lights bright enough to outshine the internal reflections on the glass. The outer walls were lined with booths and the floor was gridded with tables. At the front was a long counter with swiveling backed stools. It was divided in the middle by an access gap for the staff and each end had its own touch screen cashier station. On the wall behind were the coffee machines, cups and saucers, the cutlery and the toasters as well as windowed shelves filled with a multitude of pies. The interior of the place was subdued with dark wood and maroon vinyl upholstery and the table and counter tops were black for ease of cleaning. Sandy took the carafe in her left hand and made the rounds of top ups. There were less than two hours to go. Then she could walk the three blocks home and soak her feet before going to bed.
Of all the places on Earth that Mom had ever had or could have dragged her to, Wendover Utah had to be the worst. With hundreds of miles of dry salty desert to the east and jagged barren mountains to the west, it was a prison, a wasteland. The weather was appalling. The dryness and the heat did no favors for her delicate and densely freckled complexion and her hair felt frizzy and dirty most of the time. With a population of six-thousand it was small town hicksville. The favorite passtimes of her classmates (with whom she'd made very few connections) consisted of driving their four-by-fours up into the hills, getting drunk, dirt biking and shooting guns - a culture that she found most crass and even distasteful.
The worst part was the casinos. Wendover sat upon the border of Nevada and the whole town was constructed in a narrow line along the business siding of Interstate 80. Gambling was by far the biggest industry. Without it the place would have been a ghost town. As such, the Utah side was pathetic dirty and small. In Nevada, the hotels and casino resorts with their massive tacky signage glowed like a throbbing and swollen sore thumb in the surrounding nothingness of the dustbowl. One step across that line into the Silver State, transfixed and decrepit seniors sat on their fat butts pulling slots for hours at a time while the corporations took advantage of their addictions as they siphoned away their savings and pensions. It was a shameful existence.
Back in October was the seventh time that Sandy had been uprooted in her life when when Mom decided to pull up stakes from Sacramento. She was ready to just get through the twelfth grade and enroll in local college. Then maybe she'd have a chance to establish some roots of her own and detach herself from her Mom's whims of survival. It was a scary proposition but it was something. For the first time in her life she even had a boyfriend. Sometimes it was Mom's employment that had dictated their gypsy ways, sometimes it was men. This time it was a new low. Mom had packed the two of them up to go live with Gavin, some guy that she had met online. Sandy protested, asking if it was wise to move in with someone that they'd never met, but Mom justified herself when she assured her daughter that she had gotten to know him through chatting over the previous three months. Sandy tearfully said goodbye to Aidan so that Mom could embrace this new Gavin fellow. Over the years she had become very adept at packing things, knowing what to keep and what to leave behind. She did so one more time and shoved it into the car for Utah.
Gavin was nothing special but after Christmas even he was gone. He packed a bag and climbed into his truck one morning, explaining that he and a friend had secured a plumbing contract for a condo in Provo and that he'd be back in three weeks. Three became six and then he stopped returning Mom's messages altogether. Sandy was yet again the victim of Mom's poor judgment as they moved into a basement suite to save on rent. The move was easy as she had hardly unpacked anything since the fall.
Aidan had agreed to maintain contact. They had discussed the possibility of Sandy moving back to Sacramento after graduation for college and their relationship could resume. Then in February, like Gavin, he too stopped responding. A month later she hit his facebook page to see photos of him with some other girl. The pic of Aidan in a warm embrace with this short curvy raven haired one named Grace bludgeoned to death any possible notion that they may have been just friends. Sandy was crushed. Her own judgment hadn't been any better than Mom's after all.
Then school was over. She had graduated and didn't know where to turn next. A hundred miles east was Salt Lake City. A hundred miles the other way was Elko. She knew nothing of and not one soul at either of them. Another three hundred miles further west was Reno, but that was merely Wendover on steroids. None of these destinations appealed to her in the slightest. She thought about applying to art college for graphic design of some sort. There was one in Boise and another in Salt Lake but without a scholarship where would the tuition come from? Sandy needed a job but since she was still nineteen she couldn't legally work in the casinos like her Mom could, so she started with Big Jake's.
She had been there a week and was finally getting used to the fast pace. The four-to-midnight was tough. That stretch from five until nine was a noisy madhouse. Wall to wall burgers steaks and ribs with heaping plates of thick cut fries, all of it drowned with copious amounts of steaming coffee. Just refilling the creamers and sugar bowls ate up an hour of the shift. She poured so much coffee that she quickly learned to do it with her left arm so that her right wrist didn't ache from doing all the work on its own all day.
Then there were the stares and the crooked grins, the 'honeys' the 'sweethearts' and the 'babys', the suggestive winks. There had even been a couple of invites for private time in the back of a truck. Men two and three times her age, with scraggly hair hanging from their chins and slim to none wisping from the edges of sweat stained ball caps, and bodies bulging out of their dingy work clothes, would hit on her. Even at six in the morning they would still slide into a booth or belly up to the counter in romeo mode, with nothing to lose in hopes of that one-in-a-million shot that the skinny fair-haired freckled girl might just possibly say 'Yeah, what the hell, sure.' Not all of them would be this way of course, but there was always one or two in the house that thought they had a chance or at least entertained the fantasy of getting with a sweet young girl and would attempt to engage her in idle chatter, keeping her at his table a minute longer than necessary while other hungry customers waited. Sandy certainly wasn't the only target by far. That would have been Trish, the pixie blonde with the round face eyes tits and booty, but all the girls on the staff dealt with the same shenanigans so she wasn't alone. Sandy brought up the subject with Magz, one of the shift managers, about how to handle it. "As long as they don't touch you, just smile and go with it," she advised with a wink. "You'll make more tips." Magz wasn't lying as Sandy was to find, but each time she tallied up her receipts she couldn't help thinking that it felt like prostitution - let them ogle away and take their money.
It was a quarter past ten as she was finishing up her break. Her feet felt swollen in her black flat shoes and thin black knee high socks, but she rose from the toilet eager to get to the end of the shift and go home. She checked herself in the mirror, her otherwise pale face covered in a myriad of tan gold and copper freckles. They blanketed her shoulders arms upper back and chest as well. It was pointless to try to hide them so black eye liner was her only makeup. Her hair was plain and straight, past her chest and parted in the middle. It was that color that couldn't decide if it was blonde or brown. "Is that how you got your name, from the color of your hair?" she had been asked thousands of times. She had even asked her mother the same question when she was four or five years old but Mom had told her that it was only coincidence. Sandy never wanted to be the tomboy that most perceived her as. Plain thin freckled and with hair the color of prairie dust, she looked like she came from a farmyard in Kansas. Still, to assert herself in a more dolled up way would only invite attention that she wasn't always comfortable with. The dress code at Big Jake's was black and feminine, and feminine was defined as no pant legs but skirt hems only. The little gold badge to the left of her chest read her name stenciled in black. Often the hang of her hair would obscure it and if she were honest, she preferred the anonymity. Her t-shirt that night was black and was printed with an ornate graphic of the cover art for the Dum Dum Girls' 'Too True' album. A black pencil skirt past the knee finished things off.
Back in the diner proper, the sizzle of the kitchen the clinking of cups and plates and the random chatter refocused her. The air conditioning hummed as it did twenty-four-seven. If it ever would conk out during a lunch shift she would surely die. The night outside the windows was black, with only the street lamps and the shapes of the trucks outlined by their clearance lights bright enough to outshine the internal reflections on the glass. The outer walls were lined with booths and the floor was gridded with tables. At the front was a long counter with swiveling backed stools. It was divided in the middle by an access gap for the staff and each end had its own touch screen cashier station. On the wall behind were the coffee machines, cups and saucers, the cutlery and the toasters as well as windowed shelves filled with a multitude of pies. The interior of the place was subdued with dark wood and maroon vinyl upholstery and the table and counter tops were black for ease of cleaning. Sandy took the carafe in her left hand and made the rounds of top ups. There were less than two hours to go. Then she could walk the three blocks home and soak her feet before going to bed.