The jar is made of frosted glass, thick enough to survive a fall onto a marble floor, and topped with a gold-plated lid that carries the heft of a small paperweight. It sits on the glass counter like a holy relic, catching the overhead halogen lights of the department store.
To a casual observer, it is merely a container for a “Global Rejuvenating Cellular Serum.” To the girl standing before it, it is a preventative strike against a future she has been taught to fear before she has even finished her first semester of chemistry.
Her skin is at its absolute peak-elastic, hydrated, and thick with the kind of collagen that the woman on the other side of the counter would spend a mortgage payment to reclaim. Yet, here she is, sliding a credit card across the glass to buy a product designed to jump-start dormant cells that are currently firing at full capacity.
The assistant, a woman in her with eyes that have seen ten thousand such transactions, knows this. She knows that this girl needs nothing more than a gentle wash and perhaps a bit of protection from the wind. She knows the “active” peptides in this jar will likely do nothing but irritate the girl’s
