32nd Day of Summer, 512 AV Tock hated kids. Really, really hated them. They were loud. They were smelly. They were always sticking their hands where they didn't belong. They ran around, getting underfoot, knocking things over, making messes, crying, and generally disturbing the peace every chance they got. They never seemed to do any work. By the time Tock was old enough to walk, talk, feed herself, and hold a tool, she'd been working. Her Granddad had had the perfect solution for a whining little child that was getting underfoot: put a tool in her hands, and put her to work. She'd loved it. It had defined who she grew up into. Yet kids around Zeltiva didn't seem to know the first thing about working hard, earning their keep, or making themselves useful. And yet despite that, she couldn't seem to get away from the little buggers. Every time she found herself anywhere near the Infirmary, they tracked her down. She'd made a name for herself among the children with her animated crutches, and then the mundane crutches she'd made for a lot of the children that same week. Then she'd made more of a name for herself with the puppet show she'd put on with Satevis. So when she'd cut her arm on a stray nail today, she really hadn't wanted to come anywhere near the infirmary. She'd have preferred to just bandage it and call it a day. But the nail had been jagged and especially sharp, and as much as she hadn't wanted to, her boss had insisted that she go get stitches. And while she was sitting there, getting stitched up, a group of kids tracked her down and started hounding her. "Tock, Tock, Tock!" a group of them were calling out. Thanks to her dear Satevis some of the others were insisting on calling her, "Miss Zipporah." She hated that, and she intended to get revenge on Satevis for it, one way or the other. She rolled her eyes as the kids swarmed about her, groaning and covering her eyes with one hand. "Tock can we have another puppet show!?" the kids asked. "Please can we can we can we? Can we Miss Zipporah? Pleeeeease!" They started tugging on her clothes, whining, and begging, until she just couldn't take it anymore. "Oy, fine!" she said, just to shut them up. Of course the kids couldn't tell the difference between a glad agreement and an irritated submission to constant badgering. Either way, they got what they wanted. And so it was, with her cut freshly stitched and bandaged, she found herself setting up at the stage she'd built outside the infirmary. She had no idea what kind of show she was going to put on, since Satevis wasn't here today to narrate and write the script. So she'd just have to improvise something so the little monsters would leave her alone. |