Logan laughed as well, “ Okay, I’ll change my attitude to a positive one and see how far I get.” he teased back, continuing to eat what was currently still on his plate. He gave her an amused look, “ Let lightning strike me down if I don’t bring your tupperware containers back.” he said, chuckling, “ Don’t worry, I’ll get all your containers back to you Kay, and I’ll even bring them back washed and everything.” he said, wiggling his eyebrows at her playfully, “ Scouts honour.” he teased, shooting her a cheeky grin.
Logan smirked and shook his head slightly, “ As long as we’re both on the same page about this.” he stated simply. He turned his attention back to his now empty plate and leaned forward towards the table, loading his plate up with more food. He glanced at her as she searched for the remote, “ Well, I personally think that the people who work at movie theatres are trained to talk up all movies that come through in order to sell tickets, but sure….” he said, shrugging his shoulders. He looked around the room from his spot on the couch, plate in hand, trying to help her find the remote and even shifted about to see if maybe he was sitting on it, he wasn’t. He looked up at her, hearing her proclamation, and saw that she had found it, “ Great, lets do this.” he said, getting comfortable once more, he dug into his second plate of food.
Kayleigh turned to Logan, fork out like a sword she was threatening him with. “You promise? I’m holding you to it, and you know what’ll happen if you don’t.” What would happen, in all likelihood, was a polite text reminder, and then she’d give up and buy new tupperware--Kayleigh was non-confrontational at heart--but she hoped the threat would help. “Oh! And tell me what the other guards at the barrack’s say! You know how I love to be praised.” With that, she put the fork back down on the table and resumed eating her mini sandwich.
Logan was probably right. Kayleigh had never worked at a movie theater before, but she’d worked as a waitress talking up dishes she’d had one bite of, and as a retail associate, talking up clothes she couldn’t afford or weren’t her style. Surely, movie theaters were the same. “I like the idea that they’d tell me the truth,” she admitted. With that, she found the movie on her TV and hit play.