The Nation’s Jackpot Girl (BWWM)
lyn'
a look at my watch again. I sigh as
en I know that I have nothing to do. What a
s in my head without giving her any sign. I calculate the cost of everything from her hair to her g
say in
tness, and I was always a high flyer, but with the look of things now, I don'
again. She had a hot smile plastered on her face. I retake a dee
beginning to feel
f this woman. Her look and everythin
ell that she was a woman of class. I wonder why she wants to talk to me and why s
ng for me to start talking. I apologized for keeping her waiting and cursed myself for g
ered but loud enough
ughts," I say to her. She only just nodded her he
I tell her to ease a
were crossed. From the way she acted, you could tell t
flowers mixed with other things. Unlike the cheap perfumes that I used, thi
I didn't want to keep a woman in her class waiting, and besides, she might
m the very beginning. I told her how I left my mother's
d not believe when I told her he was trying to take advantage of me. I p
of my mother's house and came down here to stay on my own. I felt if my mother could no
it was right for me to go into the worl
have left. You have to fend for yourself and pay bills. I wish I could go back, but I don't want to. If I go back, th
e was following all I was saying and I was n
ack there." I was relieved to know tha
rst time, and I was already letting her in on all my life problems. Well, who knows what I stand to gain from
e house because I was rushing, so all that I had on was j
I must say, especially if you are black. People I'm the offices do not even
. All of them are just bloody racists. Don't judge me. Not like
ll of pizza filled my nose. It must be co
t she didn't hear it. I looked at her, and all she had on her
hear the tummy grow
g good to eat in a while now. It has just been junk
found a suitable job enough to take care of my bills. I rubbed my tummy, hopi
es, not one, not two, but four, and the
me, I could tell that they all den
t because they are racists, they decide to deny me the opportunity of work
ears were already building up in my eyes, and I d
down in tears, so she started searching her b
lders. I took the tissue from her and c
hold my tears in. I was soon able to get a hold
so I was outside and in a company. From my experience with its CEO, I was tem
e discriminated against the black people. He had a foul
or, so I just held on to the tissue in my hand, and
r came out as a black, but I won't. I'm proud of my heritage, and nobody, not even any circumstance, can m
It's so frustrating and annoying that people still do that in this present day and time," I finally te
at somebody cared for me in this city enough to sit down with
was highly honored, and I felt special
nd a load of documents in her hand, but she had to leave all of that to listen to me, and it made me fe
e on my issues, let alone a white person, after what I h
mes really helps; I shou