"Aw, come on, man, it'll only take a few seconds."
People usually didn't like candid picture taking like this, so he should have expected some resistance. With a sigh, he dropped his arms down a bit, still holding onto his camera. It was a real fine piece of equipment, and he was careful as hell with it. The photographer had a young face; he must have been in his twenties, late twenties perhaps--and his sported a skinny goatee, which wasn't quite the classiest style of facial hair in this town, but he was a photographer--this town wasn't a limitation to him.
This shot was a little too good to pass up. The camera was gently set down so he could reach into his pocket and pull out his wallet. Unfortunately for Cyril, the doorway wasn't large enough for both of them to fit through; the photographer would have to move out of the way.
"Okay, here--I'll pay you. How's that sound?" the photographer started to flip through his wallet.
As a professional, he knew not to show how much he had, tipping the lip of the open wallet towards himself. If someone knew what he was carrying on him, they knew what they could get away with. That was just how things worked in this business. It was subtle, but it showed him as more of a professional than the equipment ever could; that was a trick that took awhile to notice, after all.
"How's $30 sound?" Which wasn't bad for a snapshot. The average hot dog cost $.40, and that was in an expensive place like Chicago. No one here could ever imagine that the price of a hot dog or a hamburger would ever skyrocket to $10 a plate within the next sixty years. "It'll be a great shot, I swear. Really boost up the story, y'know?"