Neither Professor Finch nor any of her bridesmaids had had yet to emerge from wherever it was they had gone to make the bride's final preparations. And no indication of just what it was that Flurry has spotted could be seen from where you currently stand. There was something that you were able to see as you searched though. A young boy of about eight or nine years of age had noticed the rather unique appearance of your canine companion. And it seemed like a distrust of necromancy had yet to be instilled within him. As rather than looking upon it with fear or trepidation, he looked at it like it was the most amazing thing he had ever seen. It wasn't long before he ran off into the crowd though, so you didn't really make much not of it before going back to your search. But now, as you begin to thing about concluding your search, the boy has returned. And he brought other children with him to see flurry as well. They mostly looked to be about the same age as the boy who led them here, and each of them seemed to be just as impressed by the sight of Flurry as well. So much so, in fact, that one of them wasn't content with just looking. [b]"Dogie!"[/b] The youngest of the assembled children, a little girl who looked to be around three or four broke away from the group and began moving towards Flurry with a slightly unsteady, yet none the less excited gait and both arms extended in front of her. [b]"Pet the dogie!"[/b] The girl exclaimed happily. Flurry enjoyed such attention in life and had no strong feelings one way or the other about it in death. But as a result of the reanimation process you used to pull him back from death, petting him in the wrong place could lead to a most unpleasant electric shock. And between the girl's angle of approach putting her squarely in the wrong place to pet zone, as well as the haphazard way in which most small children handle anything that interests them, it is a safe bet that letting the girl do as she pleases will not end well. What do you do?