55th Day of Spring, 512 AV
Minerva was on her way home, her nose buried in a pile of notes, as usual. She wasn't paying any attention to where she was walking, as usual. She wasn't even listening to the noise made by the passerby, as usual. Thus, she was caught completely off guard when she was nearly run over by a passing wagon.
"Look out!" the driver shouted. Minerva didn't bother to look up. People were always shouting things like 'Look out' at her. Usually, it meant that the person shouting wasn't watching where THEY were going, and bumped into her. It was so rude! So she kept walking, keeping her face in her notes, looking over the numbers she was working on.
It wasn't until she heard a loud crash that she looked up.
The wagon was out of control, and had just crashed through a market stall, sending pottery flying everywhere. The driver was desperately trying to rein in his horses, but having no luck at all. And he was about to run over Tock.
"Eeep!" she squealed, leaping out of the way at the last second. She pressed herself against the nearby building, and the wagon rolled past, skidding to a halt just a few feet past her. The driver, stiff with nerves, just sat there for a moment shaking. Then he heaved a sigh of relief.
Minerva looked over, glancing up and down the wagon. It had a loose hub cap on the wagon wheel, and the wheel itself was now broken after the collision. She leaned down and looked underneath, and saw a crack in the axle, too.
"Hmm," she tapped a finger to her lips, studying the damage. She didn't notice the yelling behind her, as the owner of the market stall was stalking over and shouting at the wagon driver. He was waving broken pottery around, and screaming for retribution. Tock tuned it all out, kneeling down and looking more closely under the wagon. The damage was pretty bad, but not completely beyond repair.
She was still under the wagon a few minutes later, when the wagon owner finally finished getting yelled at. "My last mizahs..." he muttered, stepping around the wagon and scowling at the broken wheel. "Stupid, worthless!" he kicked the wheel, then cursed when he hurt his foot.
After a few more minutes of cursing and bemoaning his poor luck, he noticed the redhead under his wagon. She was lying on her back, measuring the axle. "Umm... Miss?" he asked, leaning down to peer under the wagon at her.
She ignored him. She was busy.
"Miss...?" the man asked again, tapping her on the foot. She kicked his hand away, checking the measurements of the axle and adding up some numbers in her head.
Finally, the merchant grew frustrated. He grabbed Minerva's ankles and pulled her out from under his wagon. "Now listen, young lady!" he said in frustration. "That there's my wagon, just what in sam hell are you doing?"
Tock blinked at him, ruler in one hand, hammer in the other, and replied, "Working?"