"Are you sure you're alright?"
The bespectacled librarian asked, her hands on her hips and her head tilted back to look up at a black-haired genin. Kazumi stood on a ladder propped up against a row of bookshelves, wheels on the bottom and angled so that it could slide left and right with general ease. In one hand, she carried a stack of several books, using her free hand to push and pull to move the ladder while still on it. She had been assigned a mission to re-organize a library after a particularly odd rush of people swarmed in and ended up moving most of what they pulled out of place.
“I’ll be fine! Don’t worry!” the girl replied. She had already divided up the books she needed to organize by genre and left them in a stack in their respective aisles. All that was left to do was place them on the shelves in alphabetical order. It was pretty simple, the only thing was that it was something that would take time. Long and tedious work. Nonetheless, she’d get started, the librarian only giving a shrug before returning to the desk just by the front door of the building.
After a short bit of time, Kazumi would get into a groove of the work so the speak. The further into the job she got, the faster and more efficient she became at it. It became a rhythm, glancing down at the book, shifting the ladder’s position if need be, placing it in the appropriate spot on the shelf, and repeat until she ran out of books in her arm. In which case, she lowered herself back down to the ground, grabbed another stack, and went straight back to work. Her only issue with this system was the limits in her own strength. Namely, her inability to carry more than four or five large books at once, making her wonder if she should consider working out on that aspect.
Even with her bit of efficiency, the task would still take hours to complete given that she was just one person and the size of the library itself. Half-way through, she wondered why only one person was given this mission. The only assumption she could come up with that sounded somewhat reasonable was that they didn’t want to give more than one person the monetary reward for the job. She didn’t think the economy was doing badly in any sense of the word and definitely wasn’t in a condition where holding back money rewards from soldiers was necessary or even understandable. A thought for another time she supposed.
Kazumi peered out a window by one of the tables set up to allow visitors to read inside. The sky was a vibrant orange, signifying the late afternoon. She didn’t think this would’ve taken up her whole day, these sort of missions never did in most cases. But whatever, she was done now and could go home and rest. Maybe she could put in a suggestion to give this mission to more than one person at a time if it were to come up again when she went to report on it tomorrow.
The bespectacled librarian asked, her hands on her hips and her head tilted back to look up at a black-haired genin. Kazumi stood on a ladder propped up against a row of bookshelves, wheels on the bottom and angled so that it could slide left and right with general ease. In one hand, she carried a stack of several books, using her free hand to push and pull to move the ladder while still on it. She had been assigned a mission to re-organize a library after a particularly odd rush of people swarmed in and ended up moving most of what they pulled out of place.
“I’ll be fine! Don’t worry!” the girl replied. She had already divided up the books she needed to organize by genre and left them in a stack in their respective aisles. All that was left to do was place them on the shelves in alphabetical order. It was pretty simple, the only thing was that it was something that would take time. Long and tedious work. Nonetheless, she’d get started, the librarian only giving a shrug before returning to the desk just by the front door of the building.
After a short bit of time, Kazumi would get into a groove of the work so the speak. The further into the job she got, the faster and more efficient she became at it. It became a rhythm, glancing down at the book, shifting the ladder’s position if need be, placing it in the appropriate spot on the shelf, and repeat until she ran out of books in her arm. In which case, she lowered herself back down to the ground, grabbed another stack, and went straight back to work. Her only issue with this system was the limits in her own strength. Namely, her inability to carry more than four or five large books at once, making her wonder if she should consider working out on that aspect.
Even with her bit of efficiency, the task would still take hours to complete given that she was just one person and the size of the library itself. Half-way through, she wondered why only one person was given this mission. The only assumption she could come up with that sounded somewhat reasonable was that they didn’t want to give more than one person the monetary reward for the job. She didn’t think the economy was doing badly in any sense of the word and definitely wasn’t in a condition where holding back money rewards from soldiers was necessary or even understandable. A thought for another time she supposed.
Kazumi peered out a window by one of the tables set up to allow visitors to read inside. The sky was a vibrant orange, signifying the late afternoon. She didn’t think this would’ve taken up her whole day, these sort of missions never did in most cases. But whatever, she was done now and could go home and rest. Maybe she could put in a suggestion to give this mission to more than one person at a time if it were to come up again when she went to report on it tomorrow.