Your Lack Of Two Quarters Holds No Quarter With Me
I worked in a gas station that sold regular coffee refills for fifty cents, but larger mugs or those big flask refills cost ninety-five cents.
Someone undercharged this guy’s large Stanley Cup the last time he was in, by charging him fifty cents. Of course, he noticed when I charged him the correct price.
Customer: “Hey! Yesterday, that was fifty cents!”
Me: “That’s only for small mug refills, sir. A refill for that whole cup is ninety-five cents.”
Customer: “So then someone yesterday made a mistake?!”
Me: “Yes.”
He blinked a few times, not expecting me to just come out and admit that, I guess.
Customer: “Well, then I expect the same price today!”
Me: “So you’d like me to repeat yesterday’s mistake?”
Customer: “Your prices should be consistent!”
Me: “Would you like me to add on the forty-five cents you should have paid yesterday?”
Customer: “No! I want it to be fifty cents!”
Me: “Sir, I understand a mistake was made yesterday, and I apologize if it has caused some confusion. We are human here, and we make mistakes. However, I have to charge you the correct price.”
Customer: “This is a power trip for you, isn’t it?! This is the only way someone like you gets to push around someone like me.”
Me: “Sir, there is a line. Do you want the refill or not?”
He glares at me for a little bit, fishes into his pocket, and seems surprised to find two quarters in there. This calms him down for a bit.
Customer: “I guess you don’t set the prices though, huh?”
He hands me a dollar.
Me: “No, but you still shot the messenger. Have a good day.”
He gaped at me as I handed him a nickel and his coffee, and turned to the person behind him and started helping them very politely. When he finally got over his shock that I was an actual human being that he’d just hurled abuse at for several minutes (and wasn’t going to take it), he left. I never saw him again, and I wasn’t sad about it.
