Spriggel squirmed at the desk, and fussed with the stacks of papers, trying first three and then four stacks, checking the aesthetic appeal. Confirming her theory that three was the more pleasant number, Spriggel patted the papers into place, not really caring how neatly they actually were stacked and pointedly avoided the blank sheet before her.
This was the most unpleasant part of the AAMS job, writing reports, and she wished someone else could do it for her. At that thought, she jumped down from the desk and checked out the closet; she’d heard that some orc had taken up residence there, who she hoped to recruit for these unpleasant secretarial duties, but she didn’t see any evidence of him, except perhaps a pile of chicken feathers off in the corner.
She glanced around to be sure Derscha wasn’t in the office and slid the red hat with whitish (?) polka dots out of her pack, shaking her head and sticking fingers through some of the larger holes. “I don’t know if a haberdasher will be able to fix this, but I pray to the Light one can.” Girren had mentioned one Randeway, who might be able to repair this hat, but Spriggel despaired of it ever looking like its original self. And that’s the only way she could return it to Derscha and NOT returning it was out of the question. Stymied by the conundrum, Spriggel climbed back on the desk and turned to the report as the easier of two evils.
With a heavy sigh and with a last hopeful look out the front door (no such luck, Secretaries R’Us did NOT send over a temp), Spriggel sat upon the desk (kicking one of the paperstacks off onto the floor where it would just have to sit until she was finished), checked the tip of the pencil (regrettably sharpened by herself minutes ago and somehow still well pointed during the wait), picked up the paper, clipped it onto her writing board, centered the paper, moved the paper a little to the right, moved it back to the left, set the paper at a cocky angle, straightened it back up, sighed, checked the pencil tip one last time, then sighed again and resigned herself to writing.
As she rambled through her writeup, mindless of tense and proper time order (Derscha would just have to sort it out), she reflected on the quasi-success of her evening: At least she had got the hat, or at least its earthly remains . . . .
This was the most unpleasant part of the AAMS job, writing reports, and she wished someone else could do it for her. At that thought, she jumped down from the desk and checked out the closet; she’d heard that some orc had taken up residence there, who she hoped to recruit for these unpleasant secretarial duties, but she didn’t see any evidence of him, except perhaps a pile of chicken feathers off in the corner.
She glanced around to be sure Derscha wasn’t in the office and slid the red hat with whitish (?) polka dots out of her pack, shaking her head and sticking fingers through some of the larger holes. “I don’t know if a haberdasher will be able to fix this, but I pray to the Light one can.” Girren had mentioned one Randeway, who might be able to repair this hat, but Spriggel despaired of it ever looking like its original self. And that’s the only way she could return it to Derscha and NOT returning it was out of the question. Stymied by the conundrum, Spriggel climbed back on the desk and turned to the report as the easier of two evils.
With a heavy sigh and with a last hopeful look out the front door (no such luck, Secretaries R’Us did NOT send over a temp), Spriggel sat upon the desk (kicking one of the paperstacks off onto the floor where it would just have to sit until she was finished), checked the tip of the pencil (regrettably sharpened by herself minutes ago and somehow still well pointed during the wait), picked up the paper, clipped it onto her writing board, centered the paper, moved the paper a little to the right, moved it back to the left, set the paper at a cocky angle, straightened it back up, sighed, checked the pencil tip one last time, then sighed again and resigned herself to writing.
As she rambled through her writeup, mindless of tense and proper time order (Derscha would just have to sort it out), she reflected on the quasi-success of her evening: At least she had got the hat, or at least its earthly remains . . . .
Edited by Spriggel on 3/3/2012 9:20 PM PST