by Minerva Agatha Zipporah on April 21st, 2012, 10:22 pm
52nd Day of Spring, 512
Tock lay on the bunk in her cabin, head hanging upside-down off the edge, her feet braced against the wall above her. She had a pair of gears in one hand, and a file in the other. One of the gears was scrap: junk she had pulled out of a broken contraption in the garbage. The other was an attempt to match the first design by her own hand. She had the gears held together so she could line up the cogs, as she filed the new one very carefully, working to match it to the shape of the other.
She blew the filings off with a quick puff of breath, and held her work up close to her eye, squinting to focus on the fine edge. The shape wasn't quite right yet. She went back to filing, humming softly as she worked. She had no idea what she was going to use the gears for yet. Rather, she had too many ideas, and couldn't settle on just one. So for now she was just shaping the components, getting them ready. Once she figured out what to actually DO with them, she'd have the parts all lined up and ready to go.
By the time the ship docked, she had the gear about the way she wanted it. She tucked the gears into her pocket and started on the next little part: a small wooden dowel the gears would attach to. It had to be sanded smooth to make sure the gears would spin right. Maybe one day it would all be part of a clock, or some wind-up children's toy. Though she was quite a ways from being able to make something that complex. Practicing with the individual components was a good start; it helped her get to know how each part worked individually. Once she knew each part worked individually, she could better understand how to make them all work as a whole.
A knock came at her cabin door. She ignored it. Another, louder knock followed. She grumbled and shouted, "I'm busy! Git!" She stayed focused on her work, getting irritated at the interruption.
A few moments later the door opened. Tock didn't bother to look up. She was busy fitting the gears onto the dowel to test out whether they spun properly. It was a bit tight... she needed to sand down the dowel JUST a bit more.
"Excuse me, Miss...?" the man in the doorway interrupted her concentration. Tock turned her head and cast a glare at him. A young boy stood behind the man, holding a broom, ready to sweep up the cabin so it would be ready for the next passenger. "We docked some time ago," the man said with forced politeness. "Surely Miss would like to disembark...?"
Tock growled and flipped herself around to plant her feet on the floor. She HATED interruptions. She considered kicking them both out of the room, but decided that would, in the long run, cost her more time than just packing up and leaving. "Oy, fine," she said, gathering up her tools. "Stupid mouser's got a schedule ta keep, aye, whatever."
Before she finished gathering up her things, the cabin boy stepped in and started sweeping up the huge pile of wooden shards and scraps that had accumulated on Tock's floor during the long trip. "Hey hey hey hey hey!" she called out frantically, waving her hands in his face. "Them's mine!" She grabbed the broom from the boy's hands and used it to push and prod the two intruders out of her space. "Shoo! Go on now, git! Tryin' ta rob a poor girl, shame on you! Git!" Tock never threw anything out. The wooden fragments could be sanded down or carved into components for a detailed device, or carved into new children's toys or something. Some of the scraps were almost as big as her finger; that might seem useless to someone who only made furniture or something, but they were the perfect size for a doll's hairpin or a toy knight's sword. And that boy was going to throw them away!
Once she had all the salvagable pieces tucked away, she took out the dowel she'd been working on and headed for the deck, not paying much attention to where she was walking. Her attention was too focused on her work.