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  • #4109

    Jeremy beamed at Ed, holding what looked like a foiled contraption vaguely reminiscent of a sun oven to his face.

    “Get that out of my mustache, and tell me what it is!” Ed had no patience this days where reality was still dangerously shifty, and Bea nowhere to be found.

    “That’s the solution to locate your patient zero, Mr Ed! I’ve reconfigured your Transfocal Thingy and made a few improvements on the wirigly compensator and…”

    Ed interrupted “I have no idea what you are talking about, son. Make it plain English before I start doubting about you having been rebooted…”

    “Mr Ed, Sir, you know, the device that your friend Pr Blaze Ingle gave you before he was rebooted to a goat-herder in the Andalusian mountains…”

    “Yes, I’m aware, the Transfocal Thingy, that is helping us all to retain more or less our identity, of course I remember! What about it? Don’t tell me you’ve broken it!”

    “On the contrary! I’ve amplified it. And with this drone connected to it, we can scan larger areas. We’ll find her, Sir. Wherever she’d hiding, we’ll find her.”

    “And end her and this madness…” Ed twirled his mustache lost in deep thoughts. It was good to have his Team back, to take care of all the little things. More or less.

    #4105
    ÉricÉric
    Keymaster

      The techromancer was teaching Bea to hone her shifting skills.
      That was the only way she could escape her fate at the hands of the Scourge Moderators (or the Surge Team as they had been called in other iterations of that reality).

      Bea actually was a quick student, but she was too wild and would often go overboard with the whole reality shifting.

      “Focus!” he told her “only a sheet of paper will do for now.”
      “And you don’t actually need the cackling for it to work.”

      #4096
      prUneprUne
      Participant

        I don’t know exactly when it struck me first. The passage of time.
        When you are young, it’s easy to miss it, some would say “you’re a child, you don’t know about such things”, and maybe they are right.

        In a few months, it will already be 2 years that we reopened the Inn. The results have been mixed, we haven’t gotten any richer, but it definitely helps pay the bills.

        It definitely helped to pay for Aunt Idle’s rehab, after her nervous breakdown last March. Well, rehab is a big word. We got professional help from some friend of Mater, Jiemba, who knows someone who knows someone.
        Of course, we had to package it nicely for Didle to take the bait. She would have none of that rehab thing of course. But she was sold at the first syllable of Banisteriopsis caapi vine and Psychotria viridis leaf, well aya for short.

        After that, seems she wanted to travel to Iceland. Got to figure how she gets all that fancy money. Mater says it’s her sugar daddy lovers. Not Mater’s, you silly. Dido’s.
        Mater says that without any judgment, which is rare. She still calls her a tart and all sorts of nice things, but it’s like she’s proud that she made it in the world —or just that she slowed down on the gin bottle.

        Speaking of Mater, she hasn’t been so well. After she tried to grab some can of chicken broth from the shelves, she broke her hip bone. Of course she couldn’t stand staying at the hospital and got herself discharged as soon as her doctor looked the other way, but I can see she’s not completely healed. Finnly is doing her best with the circumstances, adding nursing to her housekeeping skills. And Bert’s been around to support with the inn maintenance.

        Well my twin sisters are another story altogether. They’ll be moving out, they said, live in the big city. They had no intention of going to college anyway. Seems they are looking for a full-time blogger job. I’m betting they’ll be back soon enough. Nothing beats Finnly’s mince pice and charbroiled spicy huhu skewers.

        It’s been a while I’ve seen Dev’. Always working at the gas station. Mater always says his lack of ambition will save him from trouble.

        So yes, time has passed. It’s funny how nobody else seems to notice.

        #4094
        ÉricÉric
        Keymaster

          Bea had finished taking notes for her last client’s reallocation.

          Nowadays, she wouldn’t release the cackle at each and every time.
          It was too time consuming to realign her wits after it shuffled reality, and it was actually more effective to do many changes at once.
          That much she’d learned. It was like giving dog food to a pack. Much better to give all at once to the hungry dogs, rather than try to organise the melee.

          She was about to call for the next client, when the walls of her kitchen trembled.

          The next minute, she was in a labyrinth, dark and comfortable, with a musky smell, and soft sounds of coconuts thumps on a beach faintly in the distance.

          A looming silhouette was here in the dark.

          “Hello Bea” it said “welcome to my hut, I am the techromancer.”

          #4093

          It didn’t take too long to Ed Steam to find her. By his count, only a few hundred reality reboots.

          It could have been more, but keeping a steady count of all the trigger-cackles was tricky.
          He never was quite the same person each time. Hopefully, he’d noticed after the 57th reboot that something new had happened — since that particular reboot, it had seemed easier to keep track of his identity from reboot to reboot.

          As if Zero-point Bea had realized something, and honed her entangling capabilities.

          Ed had tracked her at the border. Funnily, nowadays she was more or less the only unchanging thing in the whole universe.
          She had rented a small apartment near the border, and was offering reallocation services on an ad-hoc basis.

          There were still many characters refugees who were looking for a story placement, and that’s what she provided them.

          Ed was there for one thing: termitate her. His reality now was quite different from the one he originated, but despite all the changes, he was still in charge of preventing the surges wherever they happened.
          It was a moral dilemma. Already so many persons had been displaced by the cackling surges and Bea’s uncontrolled shifting realities. Not even a map-dancer could now keep track of all the transfocal encounters and reallocation. The world was a much different place now, on shifting grounds and sandy whorls with no minute of fame.

          Ed was next in line, dreading that he couldn’t get to her before the next cackling reboot.
          The success of his mission was paramount to the security of the fabric of reality.

          #4078

          Barbara was glad to be done with the last guest tour. She still had the orangutans to feed before her day was done.

          “Hello darlings” she said to the caged beasts that looked eerily human. “Care for some fruits? Today’s coconut on the menu. Coconut oil is good for your hair.”

          Her intercom started to buzz. The last patient in the observation ward seemed to have failed the treatment. Another one. Her attention was needed.

          “Don’t worry, my little hairy friends. You may soon have some new friends…” She winked at the apes before closing the door.

          #4075

          In reply to: Coma Cameleon

          rmkreeg
          Participant

            It’s the Wall of Watches, where the last remaining heart beats of the condemned live on, refusing to be forgotten. The wall itself is high, with chains crisscrossing it’s face to keep a patchwork of boards in place. Threaded into the chains, however, were the watches of those who died at the wall.

            The watches hung from each other. There would be one watch attached to the chains and then more watches would be strung on it’s bands. It was a practical solution to diminishing real estate on the wall, but it was metaphorical as well, representing the interconnection of hearts and souls.

            Most watches were mechanical, but wound by the movement of handling. On the day of their death, or if they expected it, they’d run to the wall and fit their watch to the chains. Well-wishers would visit the memorial and handle the watches to both keep them going and to remember their loved-one once more. As long as the ticking continued, it was said that their heart remained beating in this world.

            The guards would walk the condemned men past the wall to remind them of the people who came before. Dissenters.

            As a line of men shuffled past the wall, an inmate leapt out of line and furiously fumbled with his watch, trying all he could to attach it. There was always one. One guy would become so overwhelmed by the empathy of the symbolism, would connect so strongly with the wall, that he’d leap out of line and attach his watch…an act which would be paid for by immediate death.

            A guard watched with a certain pity. The orders were to shoot on sight, but he would let them have their last act. Right as the band slipped through the buckle, a shot was fired and the inmate fell in a lump.

            All of this seemed so familiar to Aaron…or was it? Is this where he was supposed to be? He had a sudden moment of clarity while standing in that line, watching his fellow inmate fall. What was he doing here?! It was one of those moments that hits you. What in the world is all this bullshit?!

            He loosened the belt on his watch as he drew closer to the wall, not wanting to seem suspicious. He would attach his watch, willingly and premeditated. Their expectations of him would not hold him ransom…rather, he’d use their own expectations against them. They would not kill him. He was in control. This was his time. This was his life. He was taking it back.

            And, right as he slid the belt through, he got one last look at the black face of the watch…

            #4072

            Aunt Idle was going to visit her old friend Margit Brynjúlfursdóttir. It was all very hush hush: Margit had intimated that there was to be a family reunion, but it was to be a surprise party, and she mustn’t breathe a word of it to anyone. Margit had sent her the tickets to Keflavik, instructing her to inform her family and friends that she had won the trip in a story writing competition.

            It was Idle’s first trip to Iceland. She had met Margit in a beach bar near Cairns some years ago, just after the scandalous expose on the goings on of a mad doctor on a remote south Pacific island. The Icelandic woman had been drowning her sorrows, and Idle had been a shoulder to cry on. The age old story of a wayward son, a brilliant mind, so full of potential, victim of a conniving nurse , and now sadly incarcerated on the wrong side of the law.

            Aunt Idle didn’t immediately make a connection between the name Brynjúlfursdóttir and Bronklehampton, indeed it would have been impossible to do so using conventional means, Icelandic naming laws and traditions being what they were. But the intuitive Idle had made a connection notwithstanding. The maudlin woman in the beach bar was clearly the mad doctors mother.

            Idle had invited Margit to come and stay at the Flying Fish Inn for a few weeks before returning to Iceland, a visit which turned out to last almost a year. Over the months, Margit confided in her new friend Idle. Nobody back home in Iceland knew that the doctor in the lurid headlines was her son, and Margit wanted to keep it that way, but it was a relief to be able to talk about it to someone. Idle wasn’t all that sure that Margit was fully in the picture regarding the depths to which the fruit of her loins had sunk, but she witnessed the womans outpourings with tact and compassion and they became good friends.

            The fasten your seatbelts sign flashed and pinged. The landing at Keflavik was going to be on time.

            #4071

            “Thanks,” said Bossy taking her cup of tea.

            “So, tell me more about this evil fruit-loop doctor,” said Ricardo with an encouraging smile.

            Bossy looked intently at him. “It’s no joke,” she admonished him sharply.

            “Oh, no. No, of course not. I mean, yeah, I really want to know. It all sounds very … intriguing. And sort of creepy, to be honest. But definitely not a joke.”

            Bossy relented and gestured imperatively for Ricardo to be seated.

            The doctor could best be described as a mad genius. He believed he had found the answer to looking eternally youthful but didn’t want to go through the time and expense of clinical trials through the normal channels. So he set up a testing laboratory on a small and relatively unknown Pacific Island. Tifikijoo, I believe it was called.”

            “Uh huh. Actually I do vaguely remember something about that story.”

            “We got the story first,” Bossie said proudly, “but there was a media ban on publishing some of the information, unfortunately. The Doctor managed to get funding for his tests through an undercover organisation whose hidden agenda was to hide an ancient crystal skull while at the same time providing them with a facility where they could continue their own secret testing into spider genomes. I can’t tell you too much about that — it was all hush hush. So, you wouldn’t have read about that in the news, I bet,” she added with a smug smile.

            “Uh, no,” answered Ricardo, privately wondering if Bossy was the mad one. It was all starting to feel a bit surreal to him.

            “Did the doctor know about the skull stuff?”

            “No, the doctor was genuinely only interested in preserving beauty. Unfortunately, to this end, he killed one of his first guinea pigs. And tried to disguise his crime by mummifying the body. That’s when it all began to implode on him.”

            “What happened to him?”

            “He had some good lawyers and was found not competent to stand trial on the grounds of insanity. And the fact that all his clients had signed liability waivers helped a bit. He was sent to a high security psychiatric institution but managed to escape by reverting to his female identity—he was transsexual—and hiding in a laundry trolley.

            The doctor hated the way he was portrayed in the media and most of his venom was focused on our people. We had a guy working with us then, John Smith, and he covered the story with Connie. They got the brunt of the hate emails. John nearly had a nervous breakdown with the stress of it and moved to the country. Pity, he was a good writer.”

            “So what makes you think Santa Claus and the doctor are one and the same?”

            “Call it a very strong hunch. The Doctor was born in Iceland and had strong family ties there. And now I fear he has lured Connie and Sophie there in order to exact his evil revenge!”

            #4064
            rmkreeg
            Participant

              John placed himself down on a crooked old chair at the table, with journal in hand, and stared out the window of his cottage. As he sat there, the imperfect glass of the window distorted his view slightly, but noticeably, almost unconsciously, and he swayed in minuscule displacements or perhaps shifted a bit to take a sip of his black coffee, giving the effect of a liquid world – to someone of imagination, of course. To those with no imagination, the window was rubbish and needed to be replaced.

              It’s been a relaxing weekend for John, who, on his working days, finds himself as a writer. This is, of course, if you were to think of any days as those in which you might suddenly stop writing or ignore inspiration. In that respect, every day is a working day. However, this weekend was a special one for himself.

              The writing that got him money was of the technical sort, dedicated to dry manuals and instructional fare. His passion, however, lent itself to the imagination. No doubt, he still adored the natural world and it’s workings, but he found himself nearly dead inside after completing a project for work. This, invariably, lead him to his personal expeditions.

              Every few weeks he’d save up enough money to take a train or bus to another location, picked nearly at random, just so he could get away and bring color back into his life. This cottage, with its imperfect windows, was one such expedition.

              So, he sat there for a moment, playing with his perception through the window, and then shifted his attention through it to world outside. A breath of beauty swept over him and he was inspired. In his journal, with no expectation of the entry living beyond those pages, he wrote:

              The Wystlewynds (Whistle Winds) or Wystlewynd Forest

              The Wystlewynds (Whistle Winds) or Wystlewynd Forest is a forested, mountainous area – if you’re apt to call these green, low laying perturbations in the Earth “mountains”. The cool-yet-comfortable south-easterly winds blow through the Wystlewood trees, whistling as it goes. Some would say the forest sings.

              Wystlewood trees “sing”, as it were, due to the way the wind passes through their decomposing trunks. While alive, the trunks of the trees have a hard, fibrous outer wood, while the inner portion is soft and sponge-like, saturated in chemical that simultaneously grabs on to water and repels insects. When the trees get old and begin to die off, they tend to remain upright for some time as the inner sponge decomposes. This leaves a hollow void where a particular caterpillar takes refuge, unaffected by the repellent chemical that a fungus slowly decomposes into an edible source of nutrition.

              These caterpillars leave behind a secretion that the decomposing fungus in the tree requires. The relationship between the caterpillar and fungus is symbiotic in that regard, both feeding each other. We call these caterpillars “Woodworms”.

              When the caterpillars are ready to cocoon, they climb out to one of the old branches and hang themselves from a cord of twisted threads at least a foot long. When they are ready to come out, they bite through the cord, dropping themselves to the forest floor while still in the cocoon. The cocoon and all drops below the foliage of the undergrowth, where the moth can come out into the world under cover of green leaves and the shimmering violet flowers of the Spirit Flower – a color scheme that the moth shares.

              The Spirit Flower is a rhizome with a sprawling root structure that tends to poke it’s way into everything. It has small violet shimmering flowers in umbels that in any other case might be white. The leaves are simple with a jagged margin, alternating. The stem is on the shorter end, perhaps a foot tall, fibrous and slightly prickly.

              There are a few flowers that tend to dominate the undergrowth, Spirit Flowers being one. Sun Drops and Red Rolls are additional examples, the former a yellow droopy flower and the latter a peculiar red flower with a single pedal that’s rolled up in a certain way that would suggest a flared funnel with wavy edges.

              The flowers and trees enjoy the soil here, a bit sandy and rocky, but mixed with a richness created by the mixture of undergrowth, fungi and bacteria. The roots dig into the soil, slowly stirring it and adding to it’s nutrients. The fungi eat the dead roots and fallen foliage and the bacteria eat the fungi and everything else, of course.

              The whole matter leaves a note of scent in the air that cannot be described as anything other than that of the Wystlewynds. It’s perhaps sweet, with Earthy undertones and an addictive bitterness. The whole place seems to elevate one’s energy, sharpening the senses. You want to sing with the trees, or perhaps play along with a haelio (a flute-like instrument created with wystlewood).

              #4028
              Jib
              Participant

                Ever since she had read H.G. Wells’ “Time Machine” when she was 12, Sophie had been obsessed by the future. Now being a sweet old lady of 86, you would think she had used her share of the future and for most people her age it would be true. The trend would reverse and they would end up obsessed with the past.

                But for sweet old Sophie, who was living in Eastend London, her interest in life was mostly fed by news of the future. She didn’t know how it was possible, but she certainly believed it was. And who better than a time traveller could send news from the future ?

                She had been interested recently by an article about the telebeamer. They wanted to make you believe that in 2035 it was still impossible to transport yourself instantly from one place to another. She didn’t believe it of course. If time travel was possible, beaming yourself should be child’s play.

                Sweet Sophie was not good at math when she was young, but she was good at puzzles. She had a knack with patterns and immediately see where the pieces fit together or not. The articles on that website were like puzzle pieces. All she had to do was sort out the facts from fiction and find her map to the time machine.

                Now that she had found this invaluable source of information, she could plan her next move.

                #4014

                That cackle again! Blue Bit Bea was at it again.
                Ed just had time to recall some of the past clues, fresh from the shower head which had now turned into a big celadon turnip with electric wires.
                He couldn’t still figure out what caused those surges and reality ripples. That was quite a discomfiture.

                #4025
                TracyTracy
                Participant

                  Obviously, Baked Bean Bea was a pseudonym for Baked Bean Barb , but it was perhaps too obvious. In fact, the more obvious the clues were, the more invisible they became. It had been plainly stated in the book (although omitted in the movie, as usually happened with movies based on books) that the point of the story was to
                  “broadcast seeds of absurdity in the cornfields and the meadows of the hay hoo down dooly…“

                  The trouble was that not many had ascended to the degree that they could understand the value of absurdity. Absurdity was never disconnected, if one had an eye for the connecting links, and more importantly, it was a thing of joy when approached from the right angle, occasioning an ebullient cackle.

                  It was ironic that the more the inhabitants ascended to jaunty joyful cackling at absurdities, the more the shiftmeisters tried to control them.

                  #4022

                  Final nail in the coffin, indeed.

                  Despite the overwhelmnity of the situation, Ed couldn’t fathom why nobody would take some time to stop and ponder on the incoherences, the gaps in the net, so to speak.

                  It behooved him to do so. The deranged cackler, like a mockery of the divine breath, ruling over the bizarro earth he had been sworn to protect — it had to be stopped.

                  But where was the elusive cackler hiding, he would seemed to appear anywhere and everywhere. And what to make of those cases of mistaken identities, or all the althreadnarrative-realities jumping. The occurrences were piling up. He couldn’t even seem to count on assembling his old fierce Surge Team. All gone bizarro too.

                  Pouring over his copious notes, he remembered how it all started. The strange case of Baked Bean Bea.
                  She seemed to have breached through, and quite frankly shattered in all likelihood some old reality limitation, and somehow, she now was able to unwittingly shape the world to new strange alternate realities at her every whims.

                  He painfully tried to recall, what he was, who he had been in the course of the last months. Blaze, his old genius inventor friend had left him some device, a transfocal whatever thingy. Usually it would change shapes as well, reconfigure itself with each realities. But its function was more or less the same. Reconnect him to his previous alternate realities. Which was handy, when you couldn’t even trust the notes you took. Obviously Bea wasn’t Baked Bean Bea before… or was she?

                  Now the Transfocal Thingy seemed to have relocated in the bathroom. The shower head with the wires seemed a bit of a giveaway.
                  Ed put on the water.

                  #4013

                  In reply to: Mandala of Ascensions

                  Edward Cayper had been absorbed on the mesmerizing display of the large monitoring screens. He’d liked to believe it was a meditation of sorts. The simulation made the most tantalizing displays, ever changing.

                  Although there had been flitches. Increasingly. He called them flitches, scratchy flea-like glitches, all small and jumpy, but he had an eye for them. He was, after all, one of the early designers of the Program. REYE – Reality Emergence Yielding Existence. That didn’t mean much, but sounded cool at the time.
                  REYE was in its eighth stable upgrade. Despite the flitches, it had evolved at exponential speed.

                  Edward swiveled from his chair to look behind his desk. A series of pods was lined up with sensory deprivation tanks hosting hundreds of plugged-in bodies dreaming in synch with his creation.
                  He’d been told they were volunteers to participate in the largest mind control experiment in the world. He wasn’t sure it wasn’t a lie, but didn’t care so much.
                  REYE was in charge of coordinating the whole program with astronomical and minute precision. Each person linked to the program believed they had become ascended (or something similarly close to their metaphysical belief). Free of the bonding of space, time and corporal existence, they were taught into a very subtle and complex system of attunement to higher truths. A large basket of bollocks of course, but while they were doing it, and deeply believing it to be real, the mind-energy they produced was redirected to certain mind control experiments.

                  Since they started in the 80s, the program had had slow progress. In the beginning, only a few sprouts of channellers appeared near their area, in Nevada. They were quite timid at first, full of doubts about their hearing or seeing voices – still better than the abductions of earlier, when many went completely nuts. But now, progresses were made steadily, and with much less effort. Edward personally believed that the network of waves created by cellphone proliferation had a factor in this trend. Such interconnexion made everything easier.

                  Within the program, the flitchy Ascended Masters still had to be reconditioned from time to time. On the vitals of Jane Pierce (a.a.a. “also avatared as” Dispersee within the program), Edward could see there were occasional resistance and stress, which in turn made the glitches more frequent. A change in her drugs dosage would do fine to level the serotonin in her bloodstream. It would be that, or unplugging her.

                  Before leaving the room, like every day, Edward switched the monitor to the camera over one of the pods. Florence Vengard (a.a.a. Floverley), was dreaming peacefully, as usual. Since she’d arrived, he’d felt connected to her. He imagined her with long curly red hair floating in the milk bath instead of the bath-cap that made the maintenance so much easier. He was told she had overdosed on pills, and wouldn’t wake up. The program seemed to be tethering her to life, frozen in time.

                  A well-oiled machine.
                  If you overlooked the small things… that REYE was becoming more inquisitive, and Edward suspected, greedy too. He had seen subtle gaps in the mind-energy gauges, it couldn’t be a coincidence. The program was becoming too smart, maybe too human.

                  It couldn’t bode well.

                  #3997
                  TracyTracy
                  Participant

                    “Cheer up, old bean,” Liz said kindly, reading his mind. “There’s a rendezvous at the Absinthe Cafe soon. Aunt Idle (and I do often wonder why you all insist on calling her Dido; it’s nothing more than a deliberate confusion tactic for the poor reader) will teleport over. It’s a fancy dress party, and my suggestion Godfrey is that you dress up as a particularly dashing superhero, in tights. She won’t be able to take her eyes off you.”

                    #3996
                    TracyTracy
                    Participant

                      The following is an e-mail from the past, composed on July 01, 2010. It is being delivered from the past through FutureMe.org

                      Dear FutureMe,
                      The Absinthe Cafe
                      Dawn and Mark had a bottle of Absinthe (the proper stuff with the WORMwood in
                      it, which is illegal in France) but forgot to bring it. Wandering around at
                      some point, we chanced upon a cafe called Absinthe. Sitting on the terrace, the
                      waitress came up and looked right at me and said “Oh you are booked to come here
                      tomorrow night!” and then said “Forget I said that”. Naturally that got our
                      attention. After we left Dawn spotted a kid with 2016 on the back of his T
                      shirt. We asked Arkandin about it and we have a concurrent group focus that does
                      meet in that cafe in 2016, including Britta. Dawn’s name is Isabelle Spencer,
                      Jib’s is Jennifer….
                      The Worm & The Suitcase
                      I borrowed Rachel’s big red suitcase for the trip and stuck a Time Bridgers
                      sticker on it, and joked before I left about the case disappearing to 2163. I
                      had an impulse to take a fig tree sapling for Eric and Jib, which did survive
                      the trip although it looked a little shocked at first. As Eric was repotting
                      it, we noticed a worm in the soil, and I said, Well, if the fig tree dies at
                      least you have the worm.
                      At Balzacs house on a bench in the garden there was a magazine lying there open
                      to an ad for Spain, which said “If you lose your suitcase it would be the best
                      thing because you would have to stay”.
                      Later we asked Arkandin and he said that there was something from the future
                      inserted into my suitcase. I went all through it wondering what it could be,
                      and then a couple of days ago Eric said that it was the WORM! because of the
                      WORMwood absinthe syncs, and worm hole etc. I just had a chat with Franci who
                      had a big worm sync a couple of days ago, she particularly noticed a very big
                      worm outside the second hand shop, and noted that she hadn’t seen a worm in ages
                      ~ which is also a sync, because there was a big second hand clothes shop next to
                      Dawn and Mark’s hotel that I went into looking for a bowler hat.
                      Arkandin said, by the way, that Jane did forget to mention the bowler hats in
                      OS7, those two guys on the balcony were indeed wearing bowler hats, and that
                      they were the same guys that were in my bedroom in the dream I had prior to
                      finding the Seth stuff ~ Elias and Patel.
                      Eric replied:

                      And another Time Bridger thing; a while ago, Jib and I had fun planting some TB stickers at random places in Paris (and some on a wooden gate at Jib’s hometown).
                      Those in Paris I remember were one at the waiting room of a big tech department store, and another on the huge “Bateaux Mouches” sign on the Pont de l’Alma (bridge, the one of Lady D. where there is a gilded replica of Lady Liberty’s flame).
                      I think there are pics of that on Jib’s or my flickr account somewhere.
                      When we were walking past this spot, Jib suddenly remembered the TB sticker — meanwhile, the sign which was quite clean before had been written all over, and had other stickers everywhere. We wondered whether it was still here, and there it was! It’s been something like 2 years… Kind of amazing to think it’s still there, and imagine all the people that may have seen it since!
                      ~~~~

                      The Flights

                      I wasn’t all that keen on flying and procrastinated for ages about the trip. I
                      flew with EASYjet, so it was nice to see the word EASY everywhere. I got on the
                      plane to find that they don’t allocate seats, and chose a seat right at the
                      front on the left. The head flight attendant was extremely playful for the
                      whole flight, constantly cracking up laughing and teasing the other flight
                      attendants, who would poke him and make him laugh during announcements so that
                      he kept having to put the phone down while he laughed. I spent the whole flight
                      laughing and catching his mischeivously twinking eye.
                      I asked Arkandin about him and he said his energy was superimposed. I got on
                      the flight to come home and was met on the plane by the same guy! I said
                      HELLO! It’s YOU again! Can I sit in the same seat and are you going to make me
                      laugh again” and he actually moved the person that was in my seat and said I
                      could sit there. Then he asked me about my book (about magic and Napolean). He
                      also said that all his flights all week had been delayed except the two that I
                      was on. He wanted to give me a card for frequent flyers but I told him I
                      usually flew without planes ~ that cracked him up ;))
                      ~~~

                      The Dream Bean

                      Eric cracked open a special big African bean that is supposed to enhance
                      dreams/lucidity so we all had a bit of it. The second night I remembered a
                      dream and it was a wonderful one.
                      (Coincidentally, on the flight home I read a few pages of my book and it just
                      happened to be about the council of five dragons and misuse of magical beans)
                      In the dream I had a companion with magical powers, who I presumed was Jib but
                      it was myself actually. It was a long adventure dream of being chased and
                      various adventures across the countryside, but there was no stress, it was all
                      great fun. Everytime things got a bit too close in the dream, I’d hold onto my
                      friend with magical powers, and we would elevate above the “adventure” and drop
                      down in another location out of immediate danger ~ although we were never
                      outside of the adventure, so to speak. At one point I wondered why my magical
                      freind didn’t just elevate us right up high and out of it completely, and
                      realized that we were in the adventure game on purpose for the fun of it, so why
                      would we remove ourselves completely from the adventure game.
                      In the dream I remember we were heading for Holland at one point, and then the
                      last part we were safely heading for Turkey…..
                      The other dream snapshot was “we are all working together on roof tiles” and
                      Arkandin had some interesting stuff to say about that one.
                      ~~~

                      There were alot of vampire imagery incidents starting with me asking Eric if he
                      slept in his garden tool box at night, and then the guy who shot out of a door
                      right next to Jib and Eric’s, in a bright orange T shirt, carrying a cardboard
                      coffin. He stopped for me to take a photo (and Arkandin said it was a Patel pop
                      in); then while walking through the outdoor food market someone was chopping a
                      crate up and a perfect wooden stake flew across the floor and landed at my feet.
                      The next vampire sync was a shop opposite Dawn and Mark’s hotel with 3 coffins
                      in the window (I went back to take a pic of the cello actually, didn’t even
                      notice the coffins). Inside the shop was an EAU DE NIL MOTOR SCOOTER Share, can
                      you beleive it, and a mummy, a stuffed raven, and a row of (Tardis) Red phone
                      boxes.
                      I had a nightmare last night that I couldn’t find any of my (nine) dogs; the
                      only ones I could find were the dead ones.
                      ~~~~

                      Balzac’s House

                      The trip to Balzac’s house was interesting, although in somewhat unexpected
                      ways. (Arkandin was Balzac and I was the cook/housekeeper) The house didn’t
                      seem “right” somehow to Mark and I and we decided that was probably because
                      other than the desk there was no furniture in it. Mark saw a black cat that
                      nobody else saw that was an Arkandin pop in (panther essence animal), and Dawn
                      felt that he was sitting on a chair, and Mark sat on him. (Arkandin said yes he
                      did sit on him ;) The kitchen was being used as an office. Jib felt the house
                      was too small, and picked up on a focus of his that rented the other part of the
                      house. (The house was one storey high on the side we entered, and two storeys
                      high from the road below). There were two pop ins there apparently, one with
                      long hair which is a connection to my friend Joy who was part of that group
                      focus, and I can’t recall anything about the other one. Dawn was picking up
                      that Balzac wasn’t too happy, and I was remembering the part in Cousin Bette
                      that infuriated me when I read it, where he goes on and on about how disgusting
                      it is for servants to expect their wages when their “betters” are in dire
                      straits. Arkandin confirmed that I didn’t get my wages.
                      The garden was enchanting and had a couple of sphinx statues and a dead pigeon ~
                      as well as the magazine with the suitcase and Spain imagery. Mark signed the
                      guest book “brought the cook back” and I replied “no cooking smells this time”.

                      #3984
                      TracyTracy
                      Participant

                        Bea couldn’t contain a hearty cackle issuing forth at the dire straits of the thread entanglement situation. It was hard to know what to say, and where to say it.

                        Or was it?

                        #3973
                        TracyTracy
                        Participant

                          Aunt Idle wandered around, wondering where everyone was. Had everyone gone out on a day trip or a holiday? Had she forgotten? She clumped across the yard looking for Bert. If she could find Bert, he would know ~ but where was he? Her feet felt dry and heavy. I really must do something about those dry callouses, she thought ~ perhaps a long hot soak in the bath. But first, I must find the others.

                          Idle continued her search, but her legs began to feel like lead. Funny how some days gravity seemed so much stronger. It was becoming harder to put one foot in front of the other. What was it that guy on the internet had said about a lightness of energy? The unbearable lightness of being ~ well this was more like the unbearable heaviness of feet.

                          A pair of butterfly’s scampered through the air, fluttering and darting around Idle’s sticky dreads. Be light like the skipping of a butterfly, that guy had said. Hah! she croaked. Easy to say! Unable to walk any further, Idle grabbed onto a straight little eucalyptus sapling to hold herself up. Her fingers felt stiff and inflexible as she grasped the slender trunk.

                          It’s just too hard, she thought with a heavy heart. It’s too hard to move.

                          #3937
                          F LoveF Love
                          Participant

                            Finnley, who you will surely recall had been on a brief excursion to Nowherehampton, wondered whether to ask what she had missed while away. She decided forlornly there was no point.

                            It never makes any friggin’ sense.

                            Sense was important to Finnley. Even if superficially a subject made no sense, she liked to believe there was an underlying meaning.

                            That’s not true. What are you on about? Your brain is clearly addled. And possibly baduled as well.

                            Finnley! you are monopolising the thread again,” admonished Liz. “You are thinking too much and it is sabotaging the beautiful spontaneity of my story. Now, be a good dear and wipe that surly look off your face. You look so much prettier when you smile; you might even attract yourself a nice young man if you would make a bit more effort. Anyway, do cheer up—I want to hear about dear cousin Badul.”

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