OOCFires...? FIRES!?! I'm offended! As if Tock would EVER!!! ...She'd use an axe to take the place down. Fire would ruin all the good salvage. "Darn right I will," Tock said to the comment about cutting off the frills. She was holding up a shirt with so much lace on the cuff that she was sure it would cover someone's hand! How could someone hope to get any work done wearing something like that. She glanced over towards another customer who was wearing a similar shirt and said, "I betcha ain't don't never lifted a finger ta does yer own work a day in yer life?" She shook the shirt at him, and then tossed it back into the messy pile. Another clerk appeared, eying the mess, and stepped up to Tock, shaking a measuring string at her. "What are you doing?" he demanded. "Are you a customer," he looked her up and down with an expression of clear doubt and disgust, "or have you simply decided to come in here and ruin all of our fine garments?" That was about the end of Tock's patience. "Oy, now yous listen 'ere!" she said, stepping up and snatching the string out of the man's hand. "I done 'ad 'nough o' 'is, aye? My friend's 'ere spendin' good money, an' it done been 'bout time someone taught ya 'ow ta pull 'at stick out yer arse!" She grabbed the man by his arm and led him sputtering and protesting out the door. "Madam, I say!" he cried out in protest. She stopped him on one of the stone steps that led up to the building entrance. "What is the meaning of this?" "What's 'is?" she asked him, kicking the step he was standing on. He looked down at it and sputtered, "Whatever are you talking about?" "'Is," she tapped the stone with her foot again, "whazzer called? What's she made out of?" The man rolled his eyes and said, "The steps? They're made of stone." "Wrong," Tock said, planting her fists on her hips. "Alabaster. I done thought you was a smart guy? Don't know somethin' simple like 'at? What's 'at made outta?" she pointed at the sign above the shop door. The man stared at her like she was crazy. "The sign? It's wood..." He clearly had no clue why she was wasting his time like this. "What KIND o' wood?" she asked, tapping her knuckles on his forehead. He batter her hand away and said, "How should I know? Oak?" "Ash," Tock educated him. "Oak's a lighter shade. 'Ow's ya s'posed ta think yer better 'an me, if'n ya can't done answer some simple questions." She shook a finger in his face and asked, "'Ow ya calculate the area o' a triangle? O' the volume o' a sphere?" The man just stared at her, his mouth working as he tried to think how to answer. "I... don't know," he admitted. "Dunno math neither?" Tock asked, throwing her arms up. "What DOES ya know? 'Istory? Philosophy? Oy, 'ow 'bout Ala'ean war practices? Rituals? Religious sacrifices?" The man seemed completely lost, but all these things had come up in Tock's University studies. She crossed her arms and stared the man down, "So what DOES ya know? Huh? Done there been anythin' what ya done knows what I don't?" She waited, while the man licked his lips and searched for an answer. Finally, after a moment, he straightened his shirt, raised his chin, and said, "I know fashion." Tock laughed so hard she nearly fell over. By now the argument had drawn quite a bit of attention from passerby. People were staring, and the clerk seemed very uncomfortable, though Tock just didn't care. She slapped the man jovially on the arm and said, "Oy, good one, bloke! Tell ya what, ya keep yer 'fashion,' aye? I'll take my architecture, engineerin', 'istory, philosophy, an' magic over 'at, aye?" Still laughing, she shook her head and stepped back inside, leaving the man there to scoop up the pieces of his shattered pride. |