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6/21/2025, 5:47:06 AM
>>57927266
As he's used to only the highest quality dining, Gio would clearly be irritated. But he's a business man and has no plans to burn bridges over a simple omelet. He doesn't say anything—good or bad—upon receiving the omelet, but his displeasure is clear on his face. He takes a few, small bites before stating that he's full and excusing himself. He then promptly books a meal at a nicer restaurant.
If you were a chef working for Team Rocket, he'd have you demoted to a lower position, but he'd only do this a few weeks later so that the incident that caused your demotion is unclear. If this was at a third-party restaurant, he would simply try and avoid visiting that restaurant again unless absolutely necessary.
If I were there with him when he was served the omelet, I'd probably try and fail at stifling a giggle. I'd be laughing at his reaction, not at you, but you wouldn't know that. I'd probably teasingly ask him what's wrong, and he'd insist everything is fine while poking at his food, clearly dissatisfied. I'd have lower standards than him and be a bit of a glutton, so after he excuses himself, I'd quickly eat whatever he left behind before chasing after him. Honestly, I'd also likely be excited over getting to eat something his mouth (or at least the fork that had been in his mouth) had touched, so I'd gladly eat his leftovers regardless of how bad the meal was. I'd then use his dissatisfaction to push him into taking me on an impromptu dinner date that evening.
>>57927548
Honestly, I feel like he's the type who will constantly forget to eat breakfast. Due to a combination of regularly waking up late (he does a lot of his work under the cover of night, so he often sleeps in) and being lost in work, he'll forget about breakfast unless me or another TR member brings it to him, and he'll often not eat until dinner time. So he probably wouldn't feel much different than usual.
As he's used to only the highest quality dining, Gio would clearly be irritated. But he's a business man and has no plans to burn bridges over a simple omelet. He doesn't say anything—good or bad—upon receiving the omelet, but his displeasure is clear on his face. He takes a few, small bites before stating that he's full and excusing himself. He then promptly books a meal at a nicer restaurant.
If you were a chef working for Team Rocket, he'd have you demoted to a lower position, but he'd only do this a few weeks later so that the incident that caused your demotion is unclear. If this was at a third-party restaurant, he would simply try and avoid visiting that restaurant again unless absolutely necessary.
If I were there with him when he was served the omelet, I'd probably try and fail at stifling a giggle. I'd be laughing at his reaction, not at you, but you wouldn't know that. I'd probably teasingly ask him what's wrong, and he'd insist everything is fine while poking at his food, clearly dissatisfied. I'd have lower standards than him and be a bit of a glutton, so after he excuses himself, I'd quickly eat whatever he left behind before chasing after him. Honestly, I'd also likely be excited over getting to eat something his mouth (or at least the fork that had been in his mouth) had touched, so I'd gladly eat his leftovers regardless of how bad the meal was. I'd then use his dissatisfaction to push him into taking me on an impromptu dinner date that evening.
>>57927548
Honestly, I feel like he's the type who will constantly forget to eat breakfast. Due to a combination of regularly waking up late (he does a lot of his work under the cover of night, so he often sleeps in) and being lost in work, he'll forget about breakfast unless me or another TR member brings it to him, and he'll often not eat until dinner time. So he probably wouldn't feel much different than usual.
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