Here’s a funny and informative
anecdote from my shop. On Wednesday, I was in the back working on a cover for
THE LURE OF HELL, when a 2007 Buick Lacrosse drove up inside my shop. Yes, I’m
63, and I no longer book myself up to my eyeballs in jobs every day. I may be a
bit guilty of retiring on the job. Anyway, I go out to greet the customer who
is exiting the driver’s side. The young lady is one of those folks we OG’s (old
geezers) have to rein in our first reaction with. She wore a black thigh high
skirt with black nylons, and black medium heel shoes. Her burgundy top was spaghetti
strapped with generous exposure. She will be known as Ms. Tat Lacrosse for this
post. Tat had tats up both arms, a nose ring, one earring, diamond stud through
her left eyebrow, and black hair tied back in a ponytail. Nails, lips, and eyes,
were highlighted in black. My guess would be Ms. Lacrosse was in her early
twenties, and around five feet, six or seven inches tall.
Look, I admit it, nothing very
much bothers me anymore about someone’s looks, except for nose rings
and tongue studs. Ms. Lacrosse smiled at my greeting, held out her hand, and
said “Hi, I’m Tat.”
She had a tongue stud. Yikes.
That’s like the daily double for me and my imagination. Naturally, I have to
take a deep breath, while blanking my mind to thoughts of having a cold with
those items in place. I may have shivered a moment before shaking hands with
Tat. “How can I help you, Tat?”
Tat gestures at the Buick. “My
headlights go off at night, and I have to switch to high-beams. It’s happened
to me three times at night, and now the low-beams are off all the time. I went
to the dealer, and they wanted a hundred and twenty-five dollars to check it
out.”
Damn it! I’m probably going to
ruin this young lady for being a good customer. I’ve mentioned in the past I
study potential pattern failures on customers’ vehicles, because then I don’t
get caught doing two hours worth of diagnostic work when the vehicle has a
weird glitch. It just so happened, I have a number of customers with late model
GM products, and I’d run across this problem in my studies. The dealer is
quoting her the standard diagnostic fee, because it’s the right thing to do.
The customer expects it. The tech who works on the vehicle has some leeway. The
vehicle gets fixed. I should be doing it the right way too. If the problem was
a check engine light with noticeable running problems, I would.
“I’ve run across this before,”
I told Tat. “There’s a relay under the hood called a headlight drive module. Your
daytime running lights and low beam operation work through it using the light
sensor on top of your dash. When it senses low light the sensor tells your
lights to come on. I have one in stock. The OEM one I have runs about fifty
dollars plus labor.”
Ms. Lacrosse gets a tight
lipped cross look on her features – not a good look for someone with a nose
ring. “Why didn’t the guy at the dealer tell me that?”
Because he’s doing business the
right way and I’m not. I save that for my own perceptive conclusion. “It’s bad
customer relations to act like we have what is referred to as silver bullets,
meaning quick pattern fixes for some problems. The customer many times leaves
expecting a magical fix every time they come in with a problem. It’s bad
business.”
Tat nods slowly, and then
smiles. I know what’s coming. “Why are you doing it then?”
Bingo! “I don’t have their
overhead to pay for, and you’re a perfect candidate because your problem is no
longer intermittent. I have the HDM in stock. Your low-beams are not working at
all now, so if I parts change the module and they come on, it means it’s fixed.
If you still had the intermittent problem, I would handle the situation
differently.”
“That’s nice of you. Can you
show me now?”
“Sure.” It only takes a few
minutes to replace the HDM, and the lights come on.
Tat claps her hands excitedly. “That’s
great!”
I write up her invoice. I
notice she’s scoping me out in that funny manner the young often do, either
because of my rather stiff mannerisms or something I’ve done they find amusing.
When I lead the way into the office to conclude our transaction, Tat hands me
her credit card while perusing my picture walls. Then she lets me in on the amusing part.
“You don’t like looking at me.”
She’s enjoying her observation, because she’s grinning away when I do look at
her without focusing on some point behind her head as I had been doing. “What
bothers you, the piercings?”
Yep. “Actually, nothing
bothers me about you. It’s just that I have an active imagination, and when I
see nose and tongue piercings the first thing that comes to mind is a cold,
cough, and sneezing.”
Tat laughs in appreciation of
my honest admission. “It’s not like you think.”
Says you. “Probably not, but
you asked.”
She nods and signs the credit
card statement. When she hands me my clipboard back Tat pats my hand. “I’ll be
back. I like you. You’re funny. I see all the pictures on the wall of your
family. I bet you’re a riot at gatherings.”
I grin at that observation. “I
have my moments.”
“I bet you do. Bye.”
I reached for one of my
business cards. “Here’s my card if you need to schedule any work.”
Tat turned and took the card
with a thank you, and continued out. I didn’t follow, because my alter ego was
already plotting a blog entry, and I needed to jot down some notes immediately. :)
One other writing item came up.
My novel PEACE has hit the good sales point where I drew two ‘Book Killers’ in
the same week. Although the one star hit pieces do hurt sales, they also mean
that I attracted the ‘killers’ due to some pretty good sales. Such is life in
Author-land. The ‘killers’ are kind of funny because as I’ve mentioned before,
Amazon gives the reader SEVEN chapters of PEACE free to sample the novel.
Believe me, if a reader reads seven chapters of PEACE, they will know whether
they are going to like it or not. :)
Great blog and a fine description of this young lady ;) not that you were looking that close. Sounds like she was flirting with you there ya big stud.
ReplyDeleteYep I'm pissed the 'book trashers' on Amazon. If your book isn't selling well there's no threat. But look at if you hit the Top 100 paid list in a genre. I know for a fact that it's jealousy. Over the last year, Amazon has caught two authors in my genre with fake accounts trashing books.
Thank God most people doesn't read reviews as they know the score.
Congrats on having Monster, HARD CASE and The Protectors in the Top 100 in Men's Adventure.... Cheers brother, RJ
I'm old enough to be her grandfather. She was just being polite with her elders, brother. :)
ReplyDeleteAs I mentioned in the blog. It's pretty obvious what they're doing because of the free 7 chapter preview. Maybe Amazon will figure out a way to thwart them in the future. I know you've really gotten smeared by these people. It does hurt the sales, but hopefully not for long.
Thanks, RJ!
She sounds like an interesting character for a story.
ReplyDeleteI think Tat will make an appearance at some point in the future, Charles. I should have been more inquisitive with her, because I wanted to ask what she did for a living. She could be a computer hacker like 'The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo'. :) I try to mind my own business, but there has to be a limited number of public occupations for the persona Tat projects.
ReplyDeleteIf she's a hacker, she could fit in along side of Jabar on the team
ReplyDeleteJafar*
ReplyDeleteThat's not a bad idea, brother. She would cause some jealousy because of Samira being married to Jafar. I will keep Tat in mind. I hope she isn't a real computer hacker or she'll be onto this stuff and my personal accounts in no time if she doesn't like the portrayal I did of her on the blog. Come to think of it, even with the change of customers' names, maybe this isn't such a good idea. I saw what happens when 'The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo' goes after someone. :)
ReplyDelete