Note: Sequel to "Z to S"
"Order for table 2, Vernie!"
Vern heard Tilly's chipper cry, rolling his eyes, adjusting his apron to take two tall orders of beer in hand to deliver.
"Yes Miss Tilly. But it's Vern, or Vernon, Miss Tilly," complained in a pleading tone.
"Sure thing Vernie," she winked at him, the knowing smile growing as he turned with the beers, uttering "Yes Miss Tilly" without thinking.
It became one of the many constants since Vern's European excursion detoured for an extended period of time in a sleepy village somewhere in the U.K., with the main attraction for him being a feisty, confident, argumentatively compelling barista he mostly affectionately referred to as Miss Tilly. She insisted on being called that, like she insisted on a lot of things. It was already easy to insist on things since she ran the bar while her aunt took a vacation and left things in her niece's capable hands, including hiring some help every now and again. If the psychology field ever fell through for her, there was always a place for her running the bar. Combining the two made for a very interesting summer for Tilly, and even more for Vern.
The first time they met, after a somewhat competitive discussion about territorial English language, she argued how objectively better and proper British English was. Vern, the academic American-English major, took that as a direct challenge, and let her make a case for why she was right.
Somehow, through her misguided lecture, Tilly actually made a compelling case for why she was right. From their first talk, and all the way to his summer internship of helping out at the bar and receiving further lessons, Vern had been trying to gauge the substance of her arguments. The logic behind her conclusions was always impressive, but examining the details that led to those conclusions registered to his mind differently. They weren't complicated; in-fact, they bordered on simplicity itself. Questioning her felt like questioning 2 + 2, because even that could equal "Miss Tilly is right." And the harder he tried to go over all the words she spoke that should've amounted to something not simple, how she said it, the sexy accented cadence and sound of her voice was more important than the words. Whatever she said, Miss Tilly was right, and felt so good to hear her say it.
The two beers were handed to the patrons who smiled at Vern, happy to have a visitor spend time in their town that had very few reasons for tourists to stick around, and totally amused at how a yank was serving them, with drinks or with humor. They all vaguely knew about the talk Tilly had with Vern, and how he found himself linguistically converted. They enjoyed hearing about all the English differences between the two countries, but also when it came to asking which version was 'right,' Vern deferred to the establishment boss. Business had picked up a bit since Vern started waitering at Tilly's bar, a self-fulfilling issue since he became the attraction. No one ever seemed to question how Tilly did it; she was just that one special girl in town with the persuasive touch, and not just cause she distributed liquor to the community.
"So how's Miss Tilly been to work for? Not mistreatin' ya, is she?" The older gentlemen asked with a less-than-covert twinkle in their eyes.
"No, she's treating me fine, guys. Thanks for asking. As usual."
"Of course, things have been more interesting around here with you. Gotta make sure we've got a good hostess for visitors on our hands."
"I heard that Paul. You insinuating I'm not a good hostess?" Tilly asked behind the bar.
"Would never insinuate such a thing, what do you take me for?"
"A man with an open tab, for one thing."
Vern laughed along with most of the bar, leaving the men to their drinks, and making another run to the next table.
"Hey Vern, how's it going tonight?"
"Fine, Ashley. How about yourself?"
"Pretty good. Tilly still giving you those English lessons?"
"Yes, Miss Tilly is still helping me out with those. She's a great teacher."
"Is it true that you're a teacher yourself?"
"Heh, not really. Going to school right now. The plan is to be an English teacher someday. Hopefully I'll make it."
"I'm sure you will. Keep working, keep your ears and eyes open, you'll be done just like *snap* that."
Vern smiled at the patron's warm sentiment.
"I appreciate that, though sometimes it would be nice if it could all be over in a finger snap."
"A what now?"
Vern looked as confused as the older woman he just served.
"...a finger snap?"
Confusion persisted on her face.
"You know, *snap*."
"Oh, you mean clicking your fingers."
"'Clicking'?"
Ashley smiled silently herself while Vern was momentarily in his own space, having encountered another jargon difference. Ashley looked in Tilly's direction who caught her gaze. Ashley's eyes subtly shifted to Vern, and then winked at Tilly, who smiled and winked back. Tilly's silent reputation around the small town of being especially persuasive while attending university was pure speculation or just a clever attribute, depending on who you asked. Most were willing to think of it as a silly rumor, fits of wild fancy from the inebriated. Others, like Ashley, believed more that Tilly had quite a bit up her sleeve that she was learning, but very good at. The older woman felt privileged enough to see her use some of her conversational skills in playful ways, sometimes diffusing situations in her family's bar. She enjoyed seeing what Tilly could do, especially with someone like Vern, who seemed to be getting a special dose of Tilly's skills.
"Vernie, can you get the special order for me in the back?"
"Sure, Miss Tilly," Vern called back. He left a smiling Ashley to head back to the small storage closet somewhat hidden behind the bar. There were a few small supplies kept there, napkins, toothpicks, peanuts, common bar essentials that weren't liquor. He preferred retrieving the special orders from this closet instead of lugging liquor up from the basement. The special order Vern was used to was a chair facing a wall. Lighting the overhead light, he stared at the wall forward. Taped to the wall was a line of speech Tilly had lectured him on.
colonize
analyze
modernize
prioritize
hypnotize
capitalize
tranquilize
mesmerize
finalize
He read the Americanized words, spelled with a z, carefully, his eyes remaining open despite his posture sluggishly kept up only to continue reading the same words in their more British form.
colonise
analyse
modernise
prioritise
hypnotise
capitalise
tranquilise
mesmerise