Nell was perhaps about halfway back to her home when she encountered a rooster. He seemed surprised to see her- perhaps because of the lack of laborers returning home from the upper class at this hour- but perhaps because they had nearly run into each other. Nell, too, was focused more on what her afternoon would hold and the dream of a second job than where she was going. Not to mention that she was used to the street being empty at this hour.
"Sorry, sir," she responded, before even processing the rest of what he had said. The man was a splash of color in the otherwise gray world, between his plumage and the flower that he held. A flower stall might be a nice place to work for a few months? Though the resources that it took to grow such flowers in the cold probably did not leave much in the budget for employees.
She moved her eyes up from the flower, pausing on his badge, and met his eyes with a smile. "Aye, sir, I'm on my way home. I'm a landscaper for the fine folk you serve- but no one myself for you to worry yourself about." The badge made it clear what the rooster was, and Nell liked to think that she knew better than to bring a cop to her street. Even if none of her neighbors were, to her knowledge, breaking the law, no one liked a cop sniffing around- you never knew if you'd get a bad one who needed another collar for their record.
That his offer was bordering on an instruction didn't faze Nell. One perk of being able to eavesdrop on upper classers as they passed through their gardens was being able to learn the way that they graciously turned down unwanted proposals. If he insisted, though, she was uncertain how she would tell him no so politely again, and might have been forced to accept. Nothing good came from making cops upset, after all.
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