A woman
at a Sunset Strip hotel had seen a doctor for an allergic rash, and now she
wasn’t feeling right. Rashes are easy, and her symptoms were probably
medication side-effects, so I expected no problem. That seemed to be the case,,
and she agreed to stop the medicine.
She
handed me her credit card. I took out my cell phone, dialed the credit card
company’s computer, and entered a series of numbers at its request. It denied
approval. This is often the result of a typing error, so I entered the numbers
again. Another denial.
In
the distant past, guests would apologize and promise to send a check once they
returned home. Some kept the promise, but I soon decided it was better to
collect on the spot.
The
guest seemed genuinely puzzled. She wondered if the hotel was responsible. At
check-in, a hotel often places a hold on a large sum from the guest’s credit
card to ensure that it gets paid. She wondered if this exceeded her limit. She
phoned the front desk, and this proved true. There followed a long series of
calls, referrals, consultations, and arguments before hotel management agreed
to remove the hold. It worked. The computer reversed itself and approved.
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