Hotel Management
Requires our staff to serve with the absolute best of their abilities.
Sanji re-read a sign he'd seen many times in the kitchen. He wasn't new to the Hotel, he's been working there almost as long as the manager has. However, this sign held plenty meaning to him, as though every time he saw it, it was the first time he read such a thing. He always did just that though: serve to the best of his ability. He was the head-chef, and though stern with his co-workers, every female that walked into his section of the hotel was treated like gold. People who weren't worthy of respect were dealt with, to whatever extent Sanji saw fit, but every woman was certainly a princess.
A bossy gal named Nami was usually stalked by him in the kitchen (with good intentions, mind you) she worked with the Hotel for a long time now, longer than Sanji, but she wasn't one for cooking. It didn't suit her, and it certainly wasn't her passion, but she stayed. Wether it was for the sake of her close friendships she had with the rest of the staff, or because she just didn't have another place to go, no one knew.
Their most frequent guests were fellow staff of the Hotel. The manager and the security worker would often clean out their own supplies. The security worker was always caught with a bottle of sake in his hand, but due to a close friendship, the manager Luffy would never consider firing him, even when encouraged to do so by higher-ups.
It was a quirky hotel, but going there was like visiting family. Wether you were talking to repairman Franky, librarian Robin, musician Brook or doctor Chopper, you were talking with one of the outgoing, loving, and notorious Hotel workers. But our story is more about the head-chef, and a certain customer. Of course, Sanji eyed up almost every customer, but even he knew the difference between attraction and magnetism. Attraction is the look of something, the feel, the smell, it's nice and pleasant. Magnetism is involuntary. It's unstoppable, unavoidable; it's unconditional and absolute. That's why when Sanji initially felt this "magnetism", he was frustrated, to say the least.
And I think that's where this story begins, with frustration.
