“Well, you should have noticed the mistake earlier,” the employee says shortly. Jess wants to argue, but she doesn’t want to mess herself. The latter desire wins out.
“Bafroom,” she squeaks. With a sigh, the employee gets up from her desk and leads Jess to a door with a sign reading “Customer Services”, down a hall, and into a room whose door is decorated with cartoon characters and a sign declaring it the “Customer Daycare”. Jess spots a toddler training potty and darts over, tearing off her clothes and diaper and sitting on it just in time.
“Spend as much time in here as you need,” the employee says. “We have this room for customers who’ve turned your age to use.” She leaves. Jess looks around. This would be the perfect opportunity to get some supplies that she needs now.
Once she’s finished on the toilet, she wipes herself off, tapes her diaper on again, and redresses. Determined to get as much out of the experience as she can, Jess toddles around the daycare, grabbing toys, clothes, changing supplies, and even food, then stuffs it all into a bag.
Now thoroughly prepared, Jess leaves the daycare. She pauses for a moment to figure out where she should go.