Wednesday, September 26, 2007

"Drama at the Big Box" aka "That evening at Home Depot"

The Scene: Me shopping at Home Depot. Just after 5pm on a Monday.

The Players (In order of appearance):
Me
The P.A. Voice
Home Depot Girl
Blake
My black Mazda B2300 truck
The Two Youths: Tall Blonde and Short Darkie
Cart Guy
Mandy: My-ageish assistant manager
Fale: Confident and intimidating manager

Setup:
What follows is a true story. No names have been changed. I've condensed a few of the interactions for brevity.

Me: (wondering around store, gathering up items. Wishing I'd picked up a cart) Thinks "Is the 15 foot cat5 cable going to be long enough..."

The P.A. Voice: "ClickPssshhffft. Would the customer with Maryland plates please come to the customer service station? The customer with Maryland plates to the customer service station please. Clonk."

Me: (Walks to front of store) "I'm the Maryland Guy"

Home Depot Girl: "Hi, Your car was just hit in the parking lot."

Me: (Sarcastically) "Yesssss!"

Home Depot Girl: "This guy saw it." (points to Blake)

Blake: "Yeah, some kids in a white truck hit a cart going 20 or 30 mph, and it smacked into the back of your truck. It was intentional. Here is the plate number" (Hands me a slip of paper)

Me: (Outside at truck now) Thinks to himself: "Phew, the truck is not totaled. Oh look, it's just a little dent. I have tons of those already. Good, nothing to worry about. Oh, yep, there is the white truck. I wonder what I should say to the kids. We don't need any trouble. Hmmmm..."

Me: (Waits for kids to emerge from HD. Approaches the already on-guard kids, meeting them at their truck.) Says to Tall Blonde: "Hey man. Looks like you guys hit my truck with a cart, right?"

Blonde: "No. I didn't."

Me: "Are you sure about that? Do you want to take that back?"

Blonde: "No. Dude, I didn't hit any carts."

Me: "We saw you."

Blonde: "Oh, were you like sitting over there watching!?"

Me: "Yes."

Blonde: "...Ok, I did hit your truck."

Me: "So what's your plan? Were you going to tell me?"

Blonde: "It didn't even make a dent, it doesn't matter. Geez dude! (expletive)."

Me: "Well, you did make a dent. You damaged my truck, so what do you want to do about it?"

Blonde: "(expletive). Get off me man. You can't even see the dent, and your truck is beat up anyway. This is ridiculous. . You can't prove it anyway! It's your word against mine! (expletive)."

Me: "I think you're getting mad. I'm the one with the damaged truck. Why are you getting mad?"

Blonde: "
(expletive). (expletive)(expletive). I'm outta here."

Me: "I think that maybe you should give me your insurance information."

Blonde: "I don't have insurance.
(expletive)"

Me: "Shall I call the police then?"

Blonde: "(expletive). Go ahead
(expletive)!" (Blonde and co-hort start to walk away, heading for store.)

Me: (Raising my voice as the youths retreat) "Hey man, if you'd have come clean at the start and apologized, we'd be done here. In fact, if you come back right now and stand in front of me and apologize, it'll be done. Come back, and it'll be over man." (Kids continue walking into store (assumed expletives).

Cart-guy: "I'm calling a manager"

Mandy: (Emerges looking nervous. She approaches me as the youthes re-emerge from the store, and stand next to their truck.) "Can I help you sir?"

Me: "Hi Mandy. My name is Matt. I'm not mad, but keep talking to me."

Mandy: "What a relief. So what happened."

Me: "Keep talking to me, and look worried and upset. I'm going to pretend to make a call on this phone. Those kids (Matt Relays story). Lets keep talking, and make them sweat. They won't leave because they don't have insurance, and think I'm going to call the cops. I just want them to learn a lesson."

Mandy: "Yes. Ok. I'll use my walkie talkie like we're getting the authorities. Lets keep talking."

Me: "Lets go inside, and let them stew for a while."

Me: "Okay, now lets watch from the window. Yes, they're still there. They're not going anywhere. Lets let them stand there for a while. "

Mandy: "What should we do? Lets get Fale, the manager. He can talk to them, adn shake them up a bit."

(Manager arrives, situation is conveyed, he agrees to let them worry for 10 more minutes, and then goes out to talk to them.)

Me: "Mandy, lets watch from the window. Look, they look mad. Yes, they're arguing and flailing arms. Fale is talking now. Now they look defeated. It's working."

(Kids leave, Fale comes back in)

Fale: "They were punks. But they agreed that they did hit your truck, and that they said some mean things to you, and that you were trying to be cool. They offered to come in and apologize. I told them they had better just leave"

Me: "Did they get the point?"

Fale: "Yep, they were scared stiff. They know you still have their license written down."

Me: "Great. Where do you keep the stain pens?"

Moral of the story
Don't lie and get insurance.

10 comments:

Lili and Jeff said...

Matt... that was the coolest thing ever. If it were I, I would have totally would have called the cops just to make them super mad. Especially since you had so many witnesses. You act so calmly is such situations! Like the Harry Potter Theater incident! So cool. Those guys should have been totally grateful that you were so awesome, and not yelling at them...

Cami said...

Good moral. I can't believe so many people were in on your plot! That's awesome. Nice job.

Jonny said...

I love this story! Like I told you before, there is no way I could think so fast to say the stuff you said. You're a quick thinker.

Amber said...

That was AWESOME!(inflection like Tommy Boy) What on earth? I hope Jordan doesn't grow up to be a punk like that. Kids don't have any respect for authority these days, AND they are idiots!

melody said...

Punks for sure. Too bad they wouldn't even apologize - especially after you were being so very civil. Well, I just hope they really did learn a lesson. It seems that is the case. Good Work!

Lili and Jeff said...

I am still laughing about that...

Unknown said...

You are one cool customer. . . Call the cops.

Anonymous said...

Lol, pretty sure that your cool attitude drastically improved my sad HD shift that day, and I wish more customers were like you. I'm sorry that lil' incident had to happen, but at least we both got something good out of it: you an awesome blog, and me a big smile on an otherwise mundane orange apron day... and kudos on remembering my name! Keep smiling :)

~ Mandy

Emily said...

I am so behind. I keep thinking you are going to show up on bloglines. I guess you don't so I forget to look.

Grrrrrrreat story. I loved it. And I can't believe Mandy actually commented. She's practically a celeb. I need to act like you when I have times like this.

KC also wants to know if you've actually started working yet.

Janice Graham said...

Wow. what a great story. I can't believe how cool you take these
things. and how you really cared about the punks. How did you get that way???

I think you need to start an advice column . . .

Dear Matty,
The other day dad and I were playing tennis and these two teenage boys- complete strangers -walked by and every time dad was preparing to serve they made a loud rude noise to mess him up. Even when he waited for them to walk far away they watched and yelled when he served. What would youadone?