Specks of Doubt (Monsy)
Posted: Thu Oct 03, 2024 11:19 pm
Je Sun Hee didn't often curse. Such "crude" behaviors had been squeezed out of her as a young girl in the way one might wring out a washcloth. But as she gaped at the bank teller device in front of her, Hee uttered a quiet but ire-filled "fuck" and looked over her shoulder to see if anyone was listening to her. No one was listening. No one was even waiting to use the same device since it was too early in the day for much of anyone to have been off work and withdrawing money. But three people had used the device to her right while she had been standing there, and Hee, sporting a casual blouse and shorts, still couldn't get the machine to spit her card back at her. She pulled on it again, hoping magic had released it. It had not.
Hee couldn't remember the last time she had set foot in a bank, much less used anything within one. Her father had managed his daughters' finances with an eye for detail reserved for brain surgery. During her recent travels, she had her agent deal with moving her finances when needed. In Japan, she wanted to establish her independence and take care of these small (presumably small, until now) matters on her own. She needed a few yen to pay for groceries at some smaller market stalls that didn't accept cards over the coming week, and she had thought she would step into the bank to get it. Ten minutes, tops. A woman liberated.
She didn't claim to be a fool despite her lack of experience with something so basic; everything up to this point had been easy enough for a five-year-old. The money was given and in her purse. She held a receipt. She understood plenty of Japanese and certainly more than enough to comprehend that the machine had reached the point where it wanted her to do... something before it let her have her card. But she couldn't understand for the life of her what that something was. She tried hitting a few buttons again.
And she would not be wandering away to ask anyone. She was, for one, too paranoid about leaving her card since it could have been snatched by someone capable of using the machine unlike Hee herself. Secondly and most importantly of all, that would be admitting defeat.
So she cleared her throat and tried to eye the actions of the person at the next booth, but his child stepped in the way. Hee rolled her eyes, licked her lips, and pulled at the card again. This was the one time she preferred having daddy do everything for her.
Hee couldn't remember the last time she had set foot in a bank, much less used anything within one. Her father had managed his daughters' finances with an eye for detail reserved for brain surgery. During her recent travels, she had her agent deal with moving her finances when needed. In Japan, she wanted to establish her independence and take care of these small (presumably small, until now) matters on her own. She needed a few yen to pay for groceries at some smaller market stalls that didn't accept cards over the coming week, and she had thought she would step into the bank to get it. Ten minutes, tops. A woman liberated.
She didn't claim to be a fool despite her lack of experience with something so basic; everything up to this point had been easy enough for a five-year-old. The money was given and in her purse. She held a receipt. She understood plenty of Japanese and certainly more than enough to comprehend that the machine had reached the point where it wanted her to do... something before it let her have her card. But she couldn't understand for the life of her what that something was. She tried hitting a few buttons again.
And she would not be wandering away to ask anyone. She was, for one, too paranoid about leaving her card since it could have been snatched by someone capable of using the machine unlike Hee herself. Secondly and most importantly of all, that would be admitting defeat.
So she cleared her throat and tried to eye the actions of the person at the next booth, but his child stepped in the way. Hee rolled her eyes, licked her lips, and pulled at the card again. This was the one time she preferred having daddy do everything for her.