Target Tales are stories or poems from my observations of and interactions with fellow shoppers at the retail store Target.
"It's NOT here," shouted a woman with a voice that's seen a lot of whatever she was looking before.
"What???" questioned an older gentleman.
"I said, IT'S NOT HERE!"
I continued down the central aisle and found the source of the loud shouting, I mean conversation—an elderly couple, pushing a cart down the handsoap aisle.
"But it should be by the soap. It's hand sanitizer. Jenny told us to buy it," said the older gentleman.
"I know Bob. I heard her, too, but we can't buy it if it's not here."
Hand sanitizer was my Target list too. The hand sanitizer was hiding at the end cap of the hand soap aisle.
As their conversation continued, I tuned out and stared at the options in the bins before me. Small travel-sized bottles. Blue goo and green too. A peach variety and original unscented. I wanted to choose a scented sanitizer but decided on the generic unscented one. Why this choice? I thought ironically; the hand sanitizer would probably be the products that held the most significant number of germs on them in the entire store, with so many people picking bottles up at Target to combat the recent Coronavirus U.S. outbreak and its news coverage. I decided unscented was the best option because selecting it involved the least amount of touching the bottles.
The woman saw me and her back straightened.
"Bob. That lady over there has some."
"What?" called Bob.
"I said THAT LADY OVER THERE HAS SOME BOB," hollered the woman.
The couple shuffled over to the hand sanitizer and additional hand soap aisle.
I smiled at the couple as they moved closer to me.
The woman smiled back.
She looked up and down and noticed that there were only travel-sized bottles.
"Bob, they only have those tiny bottles. We need big ones."
"Why? We can just buy a bunch of those small ones."
At this point, I asked, "Do you need some help?"
The woman said, "No, you aren't wearing a red shirt. You don't work here."
I replied, "You're right, I don't, but I'd be happy to help you."
"Thanks, but no thanks. You've got places to go," as she turned back to discuss the bottle-size dilemma, Bob.
I smiled, and although I had no place in particular to go, said, "Well, then have a nice day."
They didn't reciprocate the farewell because, at that point, Bob had asked her what I asked his wife.
I hope they found the big bottles of hand sanitizer for their peace of mind and Jenny's too.