Waiting Read Online Xavier Neal

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Erotic, Insta-Love Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 70
Estimated words: 67733 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 339(@200wpm)___ 271(@250wpm)___ 226(@300wpm)
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“Mighty craic?”

“Fun.”

The translation encourages her to smile again.

“Most days what I do is fun for me, and I love having fun.”

“You’re also very good at what you do.”

“I am good at quite a number of things, álainn.” The wiggling of my eyebrows gets her girlishly giggling once more. “Should I be late for work and remind you of them?”

Her slow headshake isn’t nearly as convincing as she believes it to be which is how I end up on top of her and ten minutes late for training.

The early part of my class is a lot of bookwork bullshit. Testing us on how to spot fake-ids while simultaneously warning the eight of us in the course how more and more advanced they’re becoming. We practice deescalating patrons, each of us taking turns to pretend to be different types – me naturally getting the drunk sorority girl celebrating her twenty first birthday – and end the first half of our lessons reviewing important parts to the law as it pertains to serving. Pizza lunch is provided and the conversation we freely engage in is my favorite part of the session so far. Learning where the others work, where they’ve previously worked, and how many of their places I’ve been to or have friends who have been to them is rather reassuring. Not only because I know they’re putting in the work for their work, giving us more than just ringed-in bullshit, but because we all work somewhere near enough to A2 that we understand some random shite that outsiders don’t.

Performance is the only thing the second portion is devoted to. Easy shite like properly showing the label of a wine bottle during the pour or cleverly dabbing the drops away is followed swiftly by the way to cut a pour itself, something that easily transitions us to the showcasing our free pour abilities with liquor. There are some major cockups from those that are newer yet some admirable moves from those with veteran status. The status of most is evident in the way they complete a task or grow fearful over someone else’s fucking up a move that contain a lot of flair.

During my particular set of orders – third from last – I do my best to cover a wide range of tricks to demonstrate my knowledge as much as my willingness to take risks.

Shaker tosses from one hand to the other are simple but adding it around the back and widening the catch range convinces you they’re much more difficult than they truly are.

And patrons love shite that they don’t think is easy to do.

Large fluid gestures with the bottle going around my head to then roll it down one arm to pour into the shaker I’m holding looks complicated to those that don’t realize it’s just an illusion created by a clever sleight of hand.

For my own added amusement, the second time I execute the move, I give it a slightly different take, letting the bottle rest on my shoulder and ear during the pour while I pretend to be telling a friend who rang I’m too busy to talk.

Our female instructor chuckles like I hoped alongside a couple of the other women in the training.

I let my arrogance run wild with my final demonstration. Whether it’s because of the argument with my girlfriend or because I have – admittedly – begun to wonder lately what would bring me greater joy in this aspect of my life or a combination of the two that convinces me it’s a good idea to go all out is unclear.

But I do it.

Bottles are spun on the tops of shakers back and forth. Tipped precisely from one point to another to be caught and tipped for using. Twists and flips of stirring sticks and strainers are enough to warrant the wide-eyed gaze of the onlookers, yet it’s the fruit, fire pairing that puts everyone over the edge of impressed.

The instructor devilishly smirks, winks her approval, and moves onto the next student leaving me to join the others at the tables for observing.

I’ve just settled in the seat beside Geoffrey Winslow, a full-time dark-haired bartender who’s probably closer to Harper’s age than mine, when he playfully pokes, “I know the Irish drink more than we do, but you do not have to also serve it better than us.”

His Doctenn accent is now much clearer to me than it was earlier in the afternoon. “We naturally do everything better than you lot. It’s the Irish way.”

He lightly laughs under his breath and leans in a bit closer to continue the conversation without interrupting the class. “I wish I could argue with that, however, based on my very limited experience in what I am assuming by your accent is your native land, you are absolutely bloody right.”


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