The booklet cost £2.50 and I gave the lady at the desk a £5 note. A proper one with a picture of Dame May Whitty on the back of it. The lady at the desk rummaged in the coin tray for a considerable time. A good half of the tray was covered in pound coins and there was a mound of fifty pence pieces just to one side. But still she rummaged in the coin tray for a considerable time. Reluctantly she palmed a fifty pence piece then rummaged a bit more. In the end she gave me an assortment of 10p coins, some 5p coins, a twenty and the fifty pence piece. Scores of pound coins to give as change and she gave me two hundredweight of half-chewed threepenny bits. You have to wonder about some people.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
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4 comments:
Indeed. Especially the check-out chicks who get confused when you give them a big with correct change.
What was the booklet about? She probably thinks you won't be a repeat customer, so she palm her fiddling small change off on you.
She was waiting for you to say 'keep the change'.....
Strictly speaking, it was a programme. For a Bill Bailey gig.
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