The last long while had been nothing for Tenshi if not stressful. At first, it was her real life that had smothered her nearly to death in misery, with loved one after loved one lost to this or that time and time again, all the while she had ever long struggled to find her own reason to carry on. Wake, eat, work, sleep, and in between she would find the time to philosophize. Was happiness ever meant to be in her reach?
Terrasphere had answered that question for her, and it had immediately become her paradise. A video game, where she could finally be herself in ways impossible to imagine here on planet earth. A video game, where she met one silly wolf, and even started crushing on him. Sai, the one person she was able to hold onto, and let go of, and see return to her some number of days or weeks later. It was enough for her. It was still her paradise. All until she saw... something peculiar. Something small, that should have been insignificant until she began to read more and more into it.
Even though she wanted to supply a bottomless well of faith towards Sai, there were just too many things, coincidences or otherwise, that kept lining up and making sense to her. Tenshi was no Angelique like she always wanted to be, but in the real world, Christian wasn't a terrible person to be. Self-reliant, self-sufficient, the world only ever required him to get better and better at watching his own back. That was why Tenshi's well of faith in her new Terrasphere-only boyfriend had run dry.
He had no interest in investing what was left to give from his admittedly fragile heart in anyone he wasn't absolutely positive would be there to see the end with him, and Tenshi wanted to change that.
That was why tonight sucked even worse than it already usually did, as a small mass of customers known colloquially as the 'closing rush' swarmed the counter. Impatient people trying to get home, indecisive people who don't seem to understand the definition of the word 'closing', and even regular people who are simply unfortunate enough to need a cake at such a time as five-before-ten-at-night. Every night, Christian had to close alone due to understaffing, and he was so used to it that he was fairly certain having another person would just slow him down. Sure, it would save him the sweat and the soreness, but he was used to it by now, and it was kind of like his daily exercise.
"Order for Sandy!" He called out to a customer waiting at a table.
It was worth mentioning, the place that Christian worked was actually a single department inside of a local grocery store. Each department was almost its own entity though, which had to do with the store's founding history. To keep it short, it used to only be a primary grocer with a supply for fresh dairy. Afterwards, a butcher shop was built into it. After that, produce and bakery were pretty close. Basically, it was one large store made up of many smaller stores that weren't actually stores.
That was the reason the bakery had tables to sit at, instead of a counter with a glass case full of cakes in front of you, and also just more bread and cakes behind you. It was a draw for people to come earlier in the day and get fresh baked goods while being able to sit down and enjoy their time away from work--which befuddled Christian even to this day, as one would think that these people would want to come earlier in the day, not within the last half hour of being open. Whatever, it wasn't the worst thing ever. Not usually, but tonight...
Tonight, Christian's mind was somewhere else, and he could only manage to smile for seconds at a time as he handed people their order--not so much while taking them, but he spoke as politely as he could.
"Sorry, I'm not allowed to give anything out for free."
....
"I mean, we do throw it out if it doesn't get bought, yes."
....
"Yeah, I'm sorry. I don't make the rules, I just have to follow them..."
The same. Old. Conversation. Day in and day out. Yet for the first time ever, this was Christian's paradise. Not because he wanted to be here dealing with some of the most spoiled people in California, but because it kept his mind off of Sai and Angelique. He was far too busy to pay them any mind on nights like these, and nights like these were all he had.
Unless he logged onto Terrasphere again, but he was apprehensive to say the least. That unbearable pain he had endured was beyond terrifying, but if nothing else he could call Cidney. Yeah, after work, he would bike home, call Cidney, and just cozy up in bed. No need to worry about Sai. No need to test his theories tonight.
@Sai
Terrasphere had answered that question for her, and it had immediately become her paradise. A video game, where she could finally be herself in ways impossible to imagine here on planet earth. A video game, where she met one silly wolf, and even started crushing on him. Sai, the one person she was able to hold onto, and let go of, and see return to her some number of days or weeks later. It was enough for her. It was still her paradise. All until she saw... something peculiar. Something small, that should have been insignificant until she began to read more and more into it.
Even though she wanted to supply a bottomless well of faith towards Sai, there were just too many things, coincidences or otherwise, that kept lining up and making sense to her. Tenshi was no Angelique like she always wanted to be, but in the real world, Christian wasn't a terrible person to be. Self-reliant, self-sufficient, the world only ever required him to get better and better at watching his own back. That was why Tenshi's well of faith in her new Terrasphere-only boyfriend had run dry.
He had no interest in investing what was left to give from his admittedly fragile heart in anyone he wasn't absolutely positive would be there to see the end with him, and Tenshi wanted to change that.
That was why tonight sucked even worse than it already usually did, as a small mass of customers known colloquially as the 'closing rush' swarmed the counter. Impatient people trying to get home, indecisive people who don't seem to understand the definition of the word 'closing', and even regular people who are simply unfortunate enough to need a cake at such a time as five-before-ten-at-night. Every night, Christian had to close alone due to understaffing, and he was so used to it that he was fairly certain having another person would just slow him down. Sure, it would save him the sweat and the soreness, but he was used to it by now, and it was kind of like his daily exercise.
"Order for Sandy!" He called out to a customer waiting at a table.
It was worth mentioning, the place that Christian worked was actually a single department inside of a local grocery store. Each department was almost its own entity though, which had to do with the store's founding history. To keep it short, it used to only be a primary grocer with a supply for fresh dairy. Afterwards, a butcher shop was built into it. After that, produce and bakery were pretty close. Basically, it was one large store made up of many smaller stores that weren't actually stores.
That was the reason the bakery had tables to sit at, instead of a counter with a glass case full of cakes in front of you, and also just more bread and cakes behind you. It was a draw for people to come earlier in the day and get fresh baked goods while being able to sit down and enjoy their time away from work--which befuddled Christian even to this day, as one would think that these people would want to come earlier in the day, not within the last half hour of being open. Whatever, it wasn't the worst thing ever. Not usually, but tonight...
Tonight, Christian's mind was somewhere else, and he could only manage to smile for seconds at a time as he handed people their order--not so much while taking them, but he spoke as politely as he could.
"Sorry, I'm not allowed to give anything out for free."
....
"I mean, we do throw it out if it doesn't get bought, yes."
....
"Yeah, I'm sorry. I don't make the rules, I just have to follow them..."
The same. Old. Conversation. Day in and day out. Yet for the first time ever, this was Christian's paradise. Not because he wanted to be here dealing with some of the most spoiled people in California, but because it kept his mind off of Sai and Angelique. He was far too busy to pay them any mind on nights like these, and nights like these were all he had.
Unless he logged onto Terrasphere again, but he was apprehensive to say the least. That unbearable pain he had endured was beyond terrifying, but if nothing else he could call Cidney. Yeah, after work, he would bike home, call Cidney, and just cozy up in bed. No need to worry about Sai. No need to test his theories tonight.
@Sai
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