So the time to order a pizza is when you’ve had a long, difficult day at work and you feel too tired and hassled to bother cooking.
It was dark when I pulled into the council car park opposite the pizza place, blipped the central locking and was taking a few steps across the footpath when a small white missile zoomed right across my path. Inches away.
I was lucky. I caught it in my peripheral vision just in time to avoid becoming a hood ornament.
The driver sprang out, slammed his door without so much as a second thought. He sprinted across the road and disappeared into the pizza place, dangling his keep-it-hot bag.
I followed, stunned but unharmed, glad I was still upright.
I asked for the manager. He fronted. I was clearly agitated. I told him that one of his delivery people had almost run me over.
He asked me, “Which one?
“How do I know which one ?”
“What kind of car was he driving ?”
“A small white one.”
“I have several drivers with small white cars.”
“The one that just ran through your front door.”
“I’ll check,” he said disappearing inside – and not coming back out.
I was, by this time, ready to make a scene among the other customers but I could see this was going nowhere and so I paid for my pizza and decided a fair thing was to re-arrange the careless driver’s windscreen wiper, not seeing he was following me closely with his next delivery.
Now it was his turn to hit the roof, “What are you doing?!!”
“You almost ran me over.” I think I pointed out that he was careless, had unmarried parents and that he was lucky he was not explaining a downed pedestrian to the police as well.
“You vandalised my car. ”
“Let’s talk to your employer about your insurance and your driving record.”
We marched back into the shop.
I handed the manager the broken windscreen wiper, admitted my misdeed and asked him what he was going to do now. He refused to accept any responsibility for his employee and left us “to sort it out ourselves.”
I vaguely remember him asking me to not swear in front of the other customers.
By this time, the driver was really upset. He wanted all kinds of compensation from me. I flatly refused.
He chose more abuse as his preferred option and slammed his door. “I’ve got your number,”he yelled.
“I, have yours too” I said, taking his picture as an afterthought.
He screeched off – driving over the gutter and banging the front of his car on the road.
I wasn’t proud of myself, but I did learn some basic truths – the importance of accepting responsibility, the utility of a simple apology, how poorly some pizza chain managers understand customer service and the superior value of petty revenge.
And then, after cooling off, I felt a modicum of remorse for having taken my anger and frustration out on some poor bastard who relied on a crappy job rushing around, risking his life and mine too – delivering pizzas for a pittance for a manager who wasn’t worth feeding.
First published amazingly, over at the ABC – https://open.abc.net.au/projects/500-words-caught-out-28dn4ay/contributions/breaking-through-the-thin-crust-19nq5te

I’m sorry to have thought of this Emm. But you could call for a delivery pizza and pay him a dollar for every minute he’s late.
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I’m mostly a ‘deep pan’ man, myself…
😉
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Therese Trouzerzoff, you are a man of rebellion unmasked. Rebel with a Cause. How astounding. I notice regardless you ordered and bought a pizza. Indicated by “I paid for my pizza”. The manager was not worth feeding.
Well done. You had calmed down (and not neglecting eaten the pizza). Come to a valuable realisation. Numero Uno but. 🙂
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Love your work, ‘Shoe 🙂
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Credit where credit’s due, Emmjay. 🙂
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That ABC Open is an interesting place isn’t it. They had a Story their recently about a Servo cum General Store near Margaret River, whilst I haven’t been there for many years I knew of it and its reputation in the area.
You could tell the same story about Taxi drivers. Good yarn Emm.
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C’mon Emm, break through that thin crust. Take an envelope with a bit of money back to the pizza shop and give it to someone who isn’t the manager to give to the lad. Maybe he’ll appreciate the message a little more. Last week I frightened a poor young gangly boy taking up the old people seating and an old man sitting nearby laughed and laughed. But I’m still not sure what he was laughing at.
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I felt a little premature, is what. I may not be actually qualified for such actions yet. How old do you have to be to be silver? Or is it a hair thing.
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Probably when you start getting aches and pains for no apparent reason. They come and go without warning. A lot of people go grey haired well before they are elderly but they spend money getting it dyed regularly. I have an 84 year old neighbour who is finally acting a bit elderly but still drives her car way too fast, just like she did when she was 20, 40 and 52. She now has a young chap (he is approaching 80) to do odd jobs around the property.
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Speaking of pizza delivery though, have they figured out which lady is going to be Secretary? Of the State, I mean.
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No change so far. Ms Clinton will probably hang in there a bit longer.
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Lehan, I agree. It’s the right thing to do – repay the lad. As for old and grey. I started going grey when I was 24 ! White when I was 40. Now, I’m the age when my Dad kicked the bucket. His nickname at work was “Snow”. So you can see that I’m clearly Aspenrational.
I have had the first indiginity bestowed on me a while back when a young girl got up and offered me her seat on a train. I thanked her and took it to avoid highlighting the indignity by refusing and creating a scene. Oh, the callousness of the young !
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Yes, but I offended a woman by offering her my seat. I’m just wondering when it will be reasonable to start expecting their seats. Hello, I’m old, do you mind? I’m quite excited about it.
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Now imagine she’s holding that windscreen wiper in her hand instead of the microphone.
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and the ice on the windscreen is really building up.
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Lesley Pizza Deliveries at your service. Two speeds. Flat out and nothing. Nothing. That’s between deliveries. Yes, Lesley coulda been an ag.man at a pinch. Lesley’s chosen pizza delivery. However she likes. Am I readin’ you, Lehan. Come in Lehan. Gosh the ice might build up on that windscreen before Lesley gets the next pizza out. No matter. Lesley’ll take a bus. Pity. Pizza will be cold but what the…
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But since you asked, shoe, here’s the manager
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2FT4FprxDg
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Oh, Sorry Shoe. I was checking in on Lesley, the voice of youth. Gave me some insight into the plight of the manager. Which gave me some insight into the plight of the delivery boy. All of which made me want a cup of tea.
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So that’s where I was, you see. Having a cup of tea.
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Think I’ll have a cup of tea, Lehan Ramsay. No milk. Have to get on some clothes over pyjamas and go to shop. Here I go. Humming. I’m just a sole whose intentions are goode please let me be understoode. Humming. 🙂
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I think we all have nasty encounters like that and hopefully not too often.
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Nice one from Emmjay. I looked at some of the other stories, there were some familiar names, but then there are many people with same name and surname….
This is a good place for us piglets to tell our stories of ‘ breaking through the thin crust’.
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Thanks, H. Lovely to hear from you.
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