kevin_standlee: (Cheryl 2)
kevin_standlee ([personal profile] kevin_standlee) wrote2025-07-11 08:26 am

Travel Time

I'm heading to the UK (RNO-SFO-LHR) today for a week, staying with Cheryl Morgan at her place in Wales. We're attending a non-fannish function about which I might write later, but not now. In order to preserve PTO, I'll work remotely for a couple of the days I'm there, as I did last summer after Worldcon.

Normally, I don't look forward to long flights, but this time United's upgrade algorithm slipped a gear and offered a Polaris Business class upgrade for less than Premium Economy and cheap compared to them asking $500 (!) for a first-class upgrade for the roughly hour-long flight RNO-SFO, and I jumped on it before the AI came to its senses. I get what looks to be a very nice seat (left side single), along with Polaris lounge access at SFO on the layover.

With luck, I should get some valuable sleep tonight. The flight leaves in the evening and arrives Saturday afternoon local time. Given how tired I am right now, I'm looking forward to it.
djwudi: Memoji version of me giving a thumbs-up. (Default)
Michael Hanscom ([personal profile] djwudi) wrote2025-07-11 08:20 am

Worldcon Schedule Update

Me, a white man with short-cropped greying red beard and glasses, with the Seattle Worldcon logo.

I’ve had to drop one of the panels I was on, but am still a panelist on one, presenting on my own for another, and have added DJing the Thursday night dance! Here are the current details (now with links, since we’ve posted the full schedule):

Thursday Night Dance with DJ Wüdi

Events; Dance/Movement
Sheraton: Metropolitan Ballroom, Thu. 8 p.m.–2 a.m.

From dance clubs in Alaska in the ’90s to being a recent regular DJ at Norwescon, DJ Wüdi spins an eclectic mix of dance tracks from across the decades. Pop, electronica/dance, wave, disco, goth/EBM/industrial, convention classics, mashups… (almost) anything goes! Already know there’s something that’ll get you out on the floor? Send in your requests ahead of time!

DJ Wüdi

Digital Accessibility Basics for Conventions

Conrunning/Fandom
Room 327, Sat. 4:30–5:30 p.m.

Conventions are getting more used to considering the physical accessibility of their hotels and convention centers, but how are we doing with digital accessibility? Ensuring that website and web applications, email marketing, and distributed documents are set up to be compatible with assistive technology keeps our members with disabilities included throughout the year. Learn about the basics of document accessibility and get a grounding of what your publications and marketing volunteers should be aware of in order to make sure your convention’s materials are accessible to everyone.

Michael Hanscom (M)

Norwescon: Local but Not Little

Conrunning/Fandom; Local Flavor
Room 343-344, Sun. 1:30–2:30 p.m.

Founded in 1978, Norwescon (NWC) draws thousands of Pacific Northwest SFF creators and fans each spring. But did you know that NWC grew out of a desire to bring Worldcon back to Seattle? Well, we’ve finally done it, so come hear how we got here… and what’s next!

Wm Salt Hale (M), Michael Hanscom, Taylor Tomblin, Tim Bennett

Mirrored from Eclecticism.

canyonwalker: My other car is a pair of hiking boots (in beauty I walk)
canyonwalker ([personal profile] canyonwalker) wrote2025-07-11 07:54 am

Hiking Proxy Falls

Oregon Cascades Travelog #10
Old McKenzie, OR - Wed, 2 Jul 2025, 5:30pm

After hiking Downing Creek Falls earlier this afternoon we drove back up toward the Santiam Pass then south down the McKenzie River canyon. We passed a few signs for waterfalls along the way and sped past them at 60mph, confident they weren't interesting. (Ironic foreshadowing: they were totally interesting. We'd have to come back for them!) We turned west, heading back uphill along Old McKenzie, and reached the trailhead for Proxy Falls.

A rough, dry trail to Proxy Falls (Jul 2025)

The Proxy Falls trail is a loop with spurs off to two waterfalls, Lower and Upper Proxy Falls. We quickly found that our AllTrails.com map was out to lunch. It showed the first part of the trail as being downhill. You can see in the pic above that it's decided uphill. We huffed and puffed up a ridge of volcanic rubble.

Just as we were running out of steam the trail leveled off. Soon enough we reached the spur for the first falls.

Lower Proxy Falls is nice but mostly shrouded from the trail... (Jul 2025)

The spur trail led to a partial view of Lower Proxy Falls. Much of the Falls, especially its base, was shrouded by dense trees down in the canyon. The trail seemed to peter out here. Keyword: seemed.

We paced back and forth a bit, peering down the little ridge we were on to see if there'd been a washout or slide that obscured the trail. Sure enough, there had been. We could see remnants of a trail at the bottom of the hill. We picked our way carefully down the hillside, then balanced on and climbed over the trunks of huge fallen trees across the bottom of the canyon until we reached the foot of Lower Proxy Falls.

Some clambering got us to the base of Lower Proxy Falls (Jul 2025)

To really get the best view of the falls we had to walk out into the middle of the creek. At first I hesitated as I was wearing my hiking sandals instead of my boots. Boots would let me step through a few inches of water without getting my socks wet. But I deemed that the weather was warm enough to deal with wet feet, plus what's beauty without a little discomfort? 😅 We walked into the creek and got our feet wet.

Some clambering got us to the base of Lower Proxy Falls (Jul 2025)

Once we were satisfied drinking in the view of the falls and soaking our feet in chilly water we scrambled across the big logs (much bigger than those you see in the photos above!) to the bottom of the hill opposite the falls. We picked a different route to the top, looking to save ourselves a few steps. I took a small spill on the way up. Again, what's beauty without a bit of discomfort. 🤣

At the top of the hill we met a pair of hikers looking for the falls. We told them about our cross-country, wet-foot expedition, and they basically said, "Yeah, no." In fact I think those were their exact words: "Yeah, no." 🤣

Fine by me if they choose to stay on the bunny trail. Me? In beauty I walk.

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-07-11 09:08 am

The Memory Librarian by Janelle Monáe



New Dawn requires only that people conform without exception or face memory erasure and worse. Yet, a minority insists on being individuals.

The Memory Librarian by Janelle Monáe
canyonwalker: My other car is a pair of hiking boots (in beauty I walk)
canyonwalker ([personal profile] canyonwalker) wrote2025-07-10 09:25 pm

Hiking Downing Creek Falls

Oregon Cascades Travelog #9
Detroit, OR - Wed, 2 Jul 2025, 4pm

After an enjoyable hike at Tumalo Falls near Bend this morning we drove back near town to get some lunch. By then it was already noon. We picked a frou-frou burger restaurant on the west side of town because it meant not having to drive all the way into town. Plus, their menu had a few not-so-frou-frou options so we felt we'd be covered. It was decent; maybe decent-plus.

After lunch we hit the road again and drove over Cascade crest to the west and halfway down toward the Willamette Valley. There, in the Western Cascades, was our next hiking destination, Downing Creek Falls. I'll start you with a video of the falls while I explain a bit more about the hike.



Finding this hike was hard. It was hard even with a good trail description and GPS maps on our phones. That's because the trail is up an unmarked dirt road. At a fork in the road where the trail notes suggested we park and start hiking, we pushed further in our car, confident of its 4x4 capabilities and my ability to use them. Our boldness in that respect was rewarded; we cut about half the length off the hike just by driving up the two-track until we reached a natural blockade where the two-track turned to an overgrown single track. We pulled on our packs and hiked the rest of the way.

Downing Falls, Oregon (Jul 2025)

The foot trail was faint and overgrown in many places. It took some wilderness skill on our part to keep heading in the correct direction. Before we reached the main falls (pictured) we saw some small cascades and a weeping wall. From there we could hear the main even slightly further up the canyon so we pressed on.

Downing Falls, Oregon (Jul 2025)

Once we reached the falls we lingered for a while at the back of the canyon, climbing around on the slick, steep ground to view the falls from different angles.

Downing Falls, Oregon (Jul 2025)

This whole time we had the falls entirely to ourselves. That's one of the pluses of sticking through to find a remote, poorly signed falls. Though as beautiful as these falls are I'm surprised the Forest Service hasn't marked or maintained the trail.

Update: on the drive back out to the road we did pass another hiker coming in. Our two vehicles could barely pass on the two-track! He deftly wedged his crossover as close to the side as he could, while I plowed our SUV about a foot into the undergrowth on the right. We passed with just inches to spare.

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
dialecticdreamer ([personal profile] dialecticdreamer) wrote2025-07-10 10:13 pm

Network Update (part 1 of 1, complete)

Network Update
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1414
[Thursday, 3 August, 2017, 12 p.m.]


:: Several people work together to follow up on the problem that LaQuinta discovered. Part of the Unfair Trades arc in Mercedes, within the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::




“Cash, I know how to drive a car, not how to do more than change the oil or a tire. Why is this part making you so jumpy?” Doctor Elisabeth Finn asked as she passed the platter of deviled eggs to the right.

He accepted the plate, sighing. “It’s the engine control computer, but it’s supposed to be shielded from electromagnetic pulses.” Cash took a careful, too-slow breath. “It’s also made in China and not meant for export.”
Read more... )
rocky41_7: (Default)
rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote2025-07-10 05:28 pm
Entry tags:

Recent Reading: The Tyrant Baru Cormorant

Today I finished the latest book in the Baru Cormorant series (fourth book remains to-be-released), The Tyrant Baru Cormorant. Y'all, Baru is so back.

! Spoilers for books 1 & 2 below !
 
If you've looked at other reviews for the series, you may have seen book 2, The Monster Baru Cormorant, referred to as the series' "sophomore slump." I disagree, but I understand where the feeling comes from. The Monster feels like a prelude, a setting of the board, for The Tyrant. The Monster puts all the pieces in place for the cascade of schemes and plays that come in The Tyrant. They almost feel like one book split into two (which is fair—taken together, they represent about a thousand pages and would make for one mammoth novel).
 
If you felt like Baru was too passive in The Monster and that there wasn't enough scheming going on, I can happily report those things are wholly rectified in The Tyrant. Having located the infamous and quasi-mythological Cancrioth at the end of The Monster, Baru wastes no time in whipping into full savant plotting mode.
 
The book starts off strong, with a clever framing: Baru is recollecting her encounter with the Cancrioth and what came after to a troublingly gentle Farrier, who is probing her for certain specifics.  (And by the way, Dickinson takes the cake for the most creative use of cancer I've ever seen in a fantasy novel.) This, combined with the occasional flashback continuing the story of Prince Hill, make for a beautifully chronologically 3D  look at our story, as past, present, and future all orbit around each other until they finally connect fully. 
 
Here we really see Baru and Yawa's rivalry take off, and it's delightful to watch these two go at it: the young upstart savant and the time-tested, battle-scarred old schemer. Even when they're aiming for the same goal they can't help but be at odds! And Dickinson never lets either of them slouch to give the other an easy win: he continues to excel at making sure the players around Baru are working actively towards their own goals, presenting reasonable challenges even to Baru's quick mind.
 
Tau-indi continues to be a standout character for me, and I'm not convinced their take on the world won't win out in the end. As they continue to press the importance of personal connection, and Baru questions who she's helping (or hurting) with her plans, and what the real victory will be, everyone around can't seem to stop themselves from wondering if Tau has a valid point about trim. This is perhaps nowhere truer than in the final reveals that bring the full story of Farrier, Cosgrad, and the Prince Hill trio into the present timeline. These interpersonal relationships formed when all these people were much younger are still echoing around Falcrest, the Mbo, and the Ashen Sea as a whole. 
 
The Tyrant perhaps more directly than the other two novels asks Baru what she is willing to sacrifice to destroy Falcrest. Already she has given up Tain Hu, her first love, to wield power as an unbound cryptarch. But in The Tyrant, Baru is confronted head-on with the civilian cost of taking Falcest out at the knees. Not of members of Falcrest's ruling class, but the everyday people both of Falcrest and of the other parts of the empire—of Aurdwynn, of Taranoki, of the Occupation. The Tyrant makes Baru confront whether she considers those lives a necessary loss to ensure Falcrest's downfall. In this way, the story never loses sight of the stakes, which Baru is constantly weighing—on one hand, the suffering and death caused by Falcrest itself, and on the other, the suffering and death which may result from knocking Falcrest out of play entirely. Dickinson balances them well. 
 
Baru underwent a lot of change in The Traitor, but remained largely static throughout The Monster. Her character is much more dynamic in The Tyrant, and she undergoes a lot of character growth both within and in how she relates to others, and even in how she processes the memory of Hu. She's forced to confront parts of her past that drive her reckoning towards the above question about sacrifice, and I got the feeling by the end that Baru had finally truly positioned herself, clear and steeled, for the fight with the empire. 
 
Also, we finally get a masquerade party—and really, how could we have a series called "The Masquerade" without having at least one masque? It goes just as well as you might imagine.
 
Based on the author's note, I'm not expecting to see book four anytime soon, but I will eagerly await it nonetheless—I absolutely must see this conclusion.

Crossposted to [community profile] books , [community profile] booknook and [community profile] fffriday 

the cosmolinguist ([personal profile] cosmolinguist) wrote2025-07-10 09:57 pm
Entry tags:

Long day but good day

Exeter was great. I saw an old friend C who I'd forgotten had moved there years ago! Lovely to see his new life: his partner and how cozily entangled their lives are, carving out queer space in a city that otherwise doesn't have much; his drag queen persona (I love trans men as drag queens so much); his new and very different career.

The meeting this morning that I was actually in Exeter for seemed to go as well as it could have.

I made good friends with my Guide Dogs counterpart for the day. He covers the southwest and we don't currently have a person to cover the southwest which is why I was there. But he lives so far from Exeter he had also traveled up last night -- we got Told that our meeting was at 10am, even that clearly wasn't ideal for either of us! -- staying in the same Premier Inn as me (it's perfect, you come out of the train station and it's right there ahead of you with a giant sign, most accessible hotel ever). We ran in to each other waiting to board the same bus to the Bad Bus Stops we were here to look at: him with his guide dog and me with my cane, both wondering if the other one was who we thought it was.

We made a good double act, backing each other up on our less well-received points. I'm sad he's so far away! But he's in the part of the southwest I'm more often visiting and I'm super tempted to invite him for a drink if I get the chance!

I had a long journey back, not as crowded or overheated as yesterday's until Birmingham, but with delays it was still two hours after that before I got home.

I stumbled in, drank a lot of ice water, had a shower, ate some dinner (lovely [personal profile] angelofthenorth had made mushroom risotto!), drank some more water, and now I'm lying in front of a fan.

I'm glad to be back home, where there are fans and ice. I bought an iced coffee this morning and there was no ice in it. It wasn't even cold! It was, like, I forgot about this cup of coffee cold, not iced-coffee cold. Ugh. I drank it anyway, but I pined for ice all day. It was 84°F in Exeter, and the first half of our meeting did involve walking up and down a road to look at its terrible bus stops (they really were terrible too -- really did have to be seen to be believed).

I've agreed to go camping this weekend, so I'm enjoying the ice and fans while I can!

At least for camping I won't have to wear my work clothes! I wore a proper shirt for the meeting this morning but immediately afterward took it off of course. I considered jettisoning the binder as well, but the t-shirt I had grabbed to change in to is a tank top and I didn't like that. The binder, my new white one, was extremely visible under the black tank top as it has a higher neckline and wider straps, but I decided that I did not care at all. It was much more comfy and it just looked like I'd layered two different tank tops. The train staff who provided my assistance and checked my tickets didn't misgender me or act weird about it or anything.

neonvincent: For posts about food and cooking (All your bouillabaisse are belong to us)
neonvincent ([personal profile] neonvincent) wrote2025-07-10 03:57 pm
innitmarvelous_og: (Dreams & Mayham Mod)
Amy Innitmarvelous ([personal profile] innitmarvelous_og) wrote in [site community profile] dw_community_promo2025-07-10 03:10 pm

New Challebge Comm! First Challenge Signups Open NOW

image host





+++
About the comm.
 
 
It's one part dream.
One part disaster.
And absolutely 100% fandom.
It's Your OTPs/Fandoms combined with our chaos.

Challenge(s) 2025:

Challenge 1: Hodge Podge A new challenge idea I came up with all sorts of things to get players rolling out the fills and scoring points!

Sign up: July 3 Rd to July 19th @
8PM EST / 12AM GTM
Opening Date: July 20
Closing Date: October 12

I hope to have a variety of challenges in this comm, but they make take some time for me to figure out as I don't want to copy other comms out there. I have an idea or two for an abbreviated challenge after this one and I'll be working on getting it ready go if you guys want to play with me again after this round

-
kevin_standlee: (Lisa)
kevin_standlee ([personal profile] kevin_standlee) wrote2025-07-10 08:29 am
Entry tags:

Dispatch from Munich

According to FlightTracker, Lisa's flight DEN-MUC landed about the time I got up this morning to start working on the Day Jobbe. A few hours later, she called me from her apartment (long-stay hotel), having managed to make her way there from the airport. (On her past trip, she arrived in Munich by train and left by heading north toward Norway by train, so she'd never actually been at Munich airport.) To her relief, the room has a wired internet connection like the one in which she stayed there last year. (It's actually the same exact room layout and location as last year, just on a different floor.) This meant she could connect her internet phone and thus can call me at no extra charge. She told me she'd go out and get groceries (she knows where the nearest Aldi Sud) is, try to stay up a little longer, then get some much-needed sleep. She wasn't able to sleep on the plane because both seats next to her filled, and worse, the couple sitting in those seats coughed the whole way from Denver to Munich. Lisa, naturally, stayed masked up with one of her N95 masks, as I will do on my flight to London tomorrow.
canyonwalker: Driving on the beach at Oceano Dunes (4x4)
canyonwalker ([personal profile] canyonwalker) wrote2025-07-10 08:06 am

Milestone 130,000

Last week our Nissan Xterra passed 130,000 miles. It was on the last of several days we spent in Oregon, just after we finished hiking at Smith Rock State Park.

Reaching 130,000 miles on a trip in Oregon (Jul 2025)

Unlike some other times we've passed a big milestone with a car I didn't pull over to take pictures. On the narrow country lane we were driving at the time there wasn't room. Thus I settled for taking a few quick pictures from behind the wheel.

Reaching 130,000 miles on a trip in Oregon (Jul 2025)

Speaking of other milestones, I don't think I've posted one of these "Milestone xxx,xxx" blog entries since we hit the 100,000 mile mark with this car. And that was nearly five years ago.

Part of the reason it's been five years between posting about milestones is that it took five years to add these 30,000 miles. We don't drive this car as much as we used to. I mean, not that this car really ever saw us packing the miles on, though there was a period of about a year when I used it for a 75 mile/day commute. That packed on the miles. But 30k in the past 5 years is an average of just 6,000 miles/year. That's less half the US average of 12-15k/year.

Why is our mileage so low? Well, it's not from avoiding long car trips. 😅 We drove 1,762 miles in 6 days on this Oregon trip. In fact big trips like this, plus medium trips where we drive 400-500 miles in a couple of days, like the Spring trip we did to the Sierra foothills in March, account for at least half of the mileage overall nowadays. Short trips around town most days of the week are the other half. What's not part of the mileage is commuting to work. That's because I've worked remotely for several years.

This car, a 2011 model, is now nearly 14 years old. We occasionally wish it had some more modern features, like Apple CarPlay, though we bought an inexpensive BlueTooth adapter for it that makes it only slightly fussy to play our tunes from our phones. We're in no rush to have a car payment again. We can imagine keeping this car for a few more years.... or until it requires a costly repair. Yes, sadly, this Nissan has needed a few $1,000+ repairs plus one $2k repair several years ago that actually cost more like $4k when including the towing costs (the car died in a remote small town) and travel costs (we were 1,000 miles from home). Thankfully our most recent spot of car trouble only cost us $150.

sistawendy: me in a Gorey vamp costume with the back of my hand to my forehead (hand staple forehead)
sistawendy ([personal profile] sistawendy) wrote2025-07-10 06:38 am
Entry tags:

*Sniffle.* *Cough.*

I spent yesterday in bed with mucus, aches, and reading material to keep me company. The irony here is that the only crowds I was around for the whole Fourth of July weekend were at Uwajimaya, and I wasn't there that long. I did go to Lambert House on Monday, and given how stuffy it was in the carriage house at St. Mark's, I'd put my money on that as the source of the ick.

Finished Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir. Pretty good characters. Action and plot complicated to the point of frenzy. It doesn't have what The Expanse has: the thing that makes me want to buy the next book right away. But I wasn't in the mood to read something challenging; see "sick" above.

Oh yeah: Good Sister texted & called me while I was in bed to give me the play-by-play on all the hot, hot real estate action. (Did I just make a sexual allusion involving real estate agents? That's so not my kink.) It's looking to me as if this might actually happen in the next few weeks, but you know what they say: never count your chickens before they rip your lips off.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-07-10 08:53 am
Entry tags:

Starling House by Alix E. Harrow



Desperate to pay her brother Jasper's way out of Muhlenberg County, Opal accepts a job at an infamously cursed mansion.

Starling House by Alix E. Harrow
kevin_standlee: (Kevin and Lisa)
kevin_standlee ([personal profile] kevin_standlee) wrote2025-07-09 08:22 pm
Entry tags:

To the Airport

This morning around 10:30 AM, I took Kuma Bear and Lisa in to Reno Airport to catch her flight to Denver continuing on to Munich for her European Rail Adventure. This was the first time I'd ever parked in the short-term garage at RNO.

Her flight was scheduled for 1:30 PM, and we got there a bit after 11:30 AM. We'd upgraded the first leg of the flight to first class because it was a bargain, getting her through the express check-in and also a faster Terrorization queue. The new rules on not having to take off your shoes are in effect here. I stayed with her as far as the security checkpoint, then waited here to make sure nothing went awry. They needed to go through her bag, which took a while, but eventually she got everything put back together, waved goodbye, and headed off to find her gate.

Because of a previous unfortunate experience with a train trip, it seemed prudent for me to stay at the airport until her flight departed. I therefore had lunch at the only ground-side restaurant at the airport. While I was there, she called me. (We got her a flip phone; the same model as I have.) No serious issues, although she did cut her hand somehow while repacking her bag. (One of the airport staff gave her a bandage.) I slowly ate lunch, and by the time I was finished, her flight was boarding, and I decided it was safe enough to leave.

When I got home, I did need to get back to the Day Jobbe, but the accumulated fatigue had caught up to me and I simply had to get a nap. Before doing so, I used FlightTracker to check on her flight. By then, she was out over Utah somewhere on her way to Denver. I got about a 90 minute nap, when she called me from Denver to let me know that everything went fine and that she was at the gate for her flight to Munich. From our previous checks, we know that there were a pretty good number of empty seats, and that the middle seat next to her was empty. I won't know until she gets to Germany, but I reckon there's a decent chance that she'll get at least an empty seat next to her and maybe even the entire group of three seats, if the person in that third seat in her row jumps to one of the other empty areas. I hope so; that way Kuma Bear can have his own seat.

Returning to the Day Jobbe, I worked for a few more hours before calling it a day. I need to get more sleep!
canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
canyonwalker ([personal profile] canyonwalker) wrote2025-07-09 07:39 pm

Busy, Busy at Work

I'm glad that we got back from our trip to Oregon a bit after 5pm on Sunday. Having a few hours to unpack and wind down on Sunday evening has made it easier to hit the ground running at work this week. And running is what I've been doing. I mean, not literally running; I have a desk job! But running from one meeting to the next. My calendar has been booked solid with meetings and assorted work tasks the first three days this week.

It's customary at each meeting as the first few of us join to ask one another, "How are things going?" We Americans know this is a generic greeting, a perfunctory statement of positive intent. The expected answer is an equally perfunctory, "Fine, thanks, and you?" It is absolutely not an actual question to which an actual, detail answer is expected. This cultural norm is mildly annoying  to people from other English-speaking cultures and absolutely bewildering to people from outside the Anglosphere.

Well, I've started to surprise my fellow Americans by answering "How are you doing?" and "How are things going?" with "Busy, busy!" It's a simple and true statement. And it's amusing how many people are gobsmacked by my not-"fine" response.

dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
dialecticdreamer ([personal profile] dialecticdreamer) wrote2025-07-09 09:09 pm

Parcel Out Problems (part 1 of 1, complete)

Parcel Out Problems
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1084
[Thursday, 3 August, 2017, 10 a.m.]


:: One package implies a whole lot of problems. Part of the Unfair Trades arc in Mercedes, within the Polychrome Heroics universe. ::




As soon as LaQuinta laid eyes on Loudmouth, the younger woman patted the air defensively, then had to fumble to catch the falling box. “Crap! Look, I just don’t know what’s in here and the person who hired me to deliver it isn’t particularly fond of following the law, okay? I’m probably screwed if there’s evidence of tampering, I’m definitely screwed if it doesn’t arrive in the next forty minutes, and now I’m afraid there’s a location tag in there and the person who sent it AND the person who will get it are watching the little red dot on a computer map right now.”

She wobbled as she ran out of air.
Read more... )
travelswithkuma: (Default)
Kuma Bear ([personal profile] travelswithkuma) wrote2025-07-09 03:24 pm
Entry tags:

travels

Kumas ands girls it ins thes denvers airports waitings fors airplanes. Nexts stops is munichs. Bears nots thinks muchs ofs airplanes. theys is noises ands nots builts fors bears.