
That day I entered Metro like a man possessed. I was in a big hurry; I had to get out and get home because there was company coming and I needed to start cooking right away.
I looked through the double metal doors but didn’t see him. Good, I thought, Bagger Bastard’s Day Off. Someone else will bag my groceries. It was like a tire filled with gasoline had been removed from around my neck.
Still, I was wary. He could be on break. He could be in The Back, through those double doors that all the stock people and loaders came out of. Yes, indeed, I thought, as I fondled a pineapple, he could be there.
But it was comparatively quiet. I’d picked the time specifically for it to be quiet. I didn’t know his hours or days, but I knew that this was the time that blue-hairs came to shop.
I was hunting through the jumbo shrimp when I heard the dreaded “Sylvain, please come to the cash.” Could his name possibly be Sylvain? Nooo, that was such a common name here. Anyone could be a Sylvain. But I stepped up my pace. Jumbo shrimp, $9.99 a pound. Excellent deal. I shoved a bunch into the provided plastic bag. Wine. I had to get the wine. But what if I encountered him on Aisle 8? Was it worth going through the extended hunt-and-peck scenario of looking through the advertised specials? The pull-out coupon section had corn two for one but I wasn’t in the mood to tear the coupons. I hurriedly pushed the cart through Aisle 4, left it there and went and grabbed the first wine I could off the shelf. It turned out to be a Christophe D’Albray. I’d scored! $7.99 for two. Well, one was going to have to be good enough.
I slunk through the cereal and breads section. I wasn’t taking any chances. I kept glancing at the double doors of The Back. People came and went, but they were stockers and grocery clerks. Not Him.
Okay. I held my breath; it was time. It was time to go to the cash and pay. I was instantly seized with a dilemma: should I go to cash number one, because I had less than eight items? Or cash number four? The cashier on four was usually Manon, the only cashier whose name I knew. But would she be there? Would she protect me from
Bagger Bastard?
I moved somewhat surreptitiously down the oils and spices aisle and pulled up my collar. Out I came into the space between the aisles and the cash. Quick look: Bagger Bastard was nowhere to be seen.
I decided quite arbitrarily to go to cash number 6, because it seemed a new guy was working. He’d give me no trouble. So I lined up behind a blue hair and kept my head down. She did the usual, counting out her purchase with pennies, so I was ready to rumble. No bagger at all! I’d bag my own! She finally counted out the pennies and the cashier took it. “Safe!” I exulted. “Safe!”
I was lifting the garlic out of the cart when the shadow fell across the conveyor. It was Bagger Bastard. Where? Wha . . .? How? My mind raced.
“Can I Put This in a Bag for You Sir?” came the dreaded words. I quailed, reeled as if physically assaulted. “Yes, please,” I said meekly — too meekly. But he’d won again.
Just as the cashier rang me up, Bagger Bastard got a sudden call from one of the head counter workers. He calmly walked away and left all the groceries on the conveyor. All my hard-earned groceries would yet again not be bagged. Foiled! By Bagger Bastard!
I swear I’ll get him next time.