Daily Random Quote

  • The machine clicked and buzzed, a belt reeled around a pulley before it finally flushed out a purple gooey juice. “Mmmm, I’ve always loved this power smoothie,” said the Doctor, “Made with five different purple berries and some other secret ingredients.” He licked his lips with such greediness, he looked like a kid he might have been ... · ID #4672 (continued)
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  • #4333
    F LoveF Love
    Participant

      Finnley, who had also just then re-entered the room, saw her chance to not only get her own back on Godfrey and prove to him her meanness was not a facade, but also an opportunity to get some peace and quiet.

      “Take those two,” she said, pointing towards Godfrey and Liz. “They are bound to know something.”

      Godfrey paled and Liz let out a little gasp.

      “Finnley, how can you do this!”

      “Oh bugger it,” sighed Finnley, despondently wondering if she really was a nice person after all.

      “She’s in the attic.”

      “The attic? I didn’t know we had an attic,” exclaimed Liz. “How absolutely wonderful! I do hope you are keeping it clean, Finnley. Attics are notoriously bad for attracting dust.”

      #4329
      ÉricÉric
      Keymaster

        Not particularly pleased with himself for that inelegant distraction, Godfrey swiftly used the opportunity to usher Melon and Liz out of the way of the glass shards, and into the next room, a gloomy winter garden kept moist and dark by all the vines and carnivorous plants covering the walls.

        “Now, it makes me wonder sometimes, when I see you and the fine inspector here, you always seem to have trouble with your endings Liz’ —not that I am judging…”
        “Are we talking about literature or my sex life here?” Liz’ raised an eyebrow fine as a line in the sands of her fury.

        The Inspector, nicely framed in a corner by colorful and dangling carnivorous plants, started to lose his legendary composure by the minute, wondering if he shouldn’t hand over the case to a less interest-conflicted party.

        #4260

        You’re a fool, Olli

        His mother’s voice, even now kept haunting him. Olliver was a bit of a fool, far too credulous at times.
        People would think him a simpleton, and, at 17, he would still arch his back when he was around others, maybe a little more now that he’d grown so much, always feeling awkward and unsuitable for anything.

        He wasn’t so clear how the foolish plan had hatched in his head, honestly, he wasn’t very clever. Maybe he was guided. There was no other explanation.

        Slowly, slowly his mother Ethely would exhort him, when he struggled to explain so many things in his head.

        There was the house first. They had come early in the day, paint it with the white triangle in a circle. That meant it was to be demolished soon. The Pasha wanted to remove the ugliness of the town, the old bazar and the cows and chickens pens out of the town’s wall. He wanted a nice clean pall-mall place for his games, with boring clean white walls, and fake grass, his mum told him.
        What is fake grass made of? he asked at the time. It was all he could think of. He hadn’t imagined they could tear down their neighbourhood, or their old familiar house.

        So first, the house. Then the precious package. He liked it, the gilded egg with the strange difficult name. Rukji (that’s how he’d told him to call him, it was more easy) had left a note for him. He didn’t write much, in large big letters for him to read slowly. He remembered the stories Rukji told him about the egg. He used to forget a lot of things, but the stories were always very clear in his head, and he never forgot them.
        Rukji said the egg used to transport people and things to distant places, at the speed of thought.
        Olli had laughed when he told him that, he’d said his thoughts were not very quick. Rukji had smiled, with his nice and a bit sad smile.

        So, he’d thought, maybe the egg could send his house and mum to a safe place, before they remove the house.
        He’d tried to think of it, touch the eggs and its gilded scales, but nothing happened. You’re a fool Olli his mother said, while she was gathering their few things in a large cloth and wicker basket.

        Then there was the tower. He’d thought Rukji would be there, still. He could tell him the secrets surely. But the stern man at the clock building told him he had gone.

        Olli didn’t trust the man, and went from the back-entrance he knew about, up in the tower, to see in case he was there. But he wasn’t.

        It was only the stroke of the 7th hour. And one of the mannequins from the tower moved as he would do, four times a day. Alone, at 7 in the morning, and 7 at night, and with everyone at noon, and midnight.

        Olli had recognized the god of travel, with a funny pose on his plinth. He called him Halis. He had trouble with remembering names, especially long names. Ha-sa-me-lis. Sometimes he would say the names out of order. Like Hamamelis, and that would make everybody laugh.

        That’s when something happened. He’d prayed to the god, to help his mother and their house. But the golden egg with his scales touched the statue, at a place where there was no pigeons stains. And zap! that was it.

        Black for a moment, and then he was in the forest.
        And he wasn’t alone.

        “Free! At last!” he’d shouted.
        Then he’d said “Ain’t that unexpected rusty magic… You tricky bastard managed to zap me out of my concrete shell! now, pray tell, where in the eleven hells did you send us, young warlock?”

        What a fool you are, Olli, you got us all lost he could hear her whisper in his head.

        #4227

        When Glynis arrived at the edges of the forest, all those years ago, she really didn’t have a clear idea where she was headed. To be honest, she didn’t much care. She was exhausted and looking for a nice spot to rest, away from prying eyes.

        The shady canopy of the forest looked appealing and she only meant to stop for a short while. But it seemed the forest had other ideas as soft green moss-carpeted paths appeared before her and sunlight speckled glades beckoned to her through the trees.

        Just a little further, she would think. It’s so pretty here.

        And so Glynis just kept going, as she really had nowhere better to be, until she arrived at the deserted mansion. She liked to think she was here by invitation and the forest was her protector.

        She thought about this as she set off that morning. Remnants of a dream stayed with her and she had woken feeling heavy hearted and a little anxious about her journey. In her dream a very tall fence had been erected around the city and people with bad intent were prowling the perimeter so that the inhabitants of the city were no longer free to come and go.

        The forest will not let me pass if it is not safe to do so, she reminded herself.

        #4192
        TracyTracy
        Participant

          Bert:

          I just shook my head and carried on digging the new bed for the broad beans. Wasn’t no point in trying to tell her, just let her grumble on. Never bloody satisfied unless they’ve got something to moan about. Women! And granny’s in particular, never satisfied. She wanted the place to herself, that’s what she always said, wanted a rest from all the commotion and noise. So what does she do when she has a nice bit of peace and quiet? Spends the whole bloody time wittering on about how quiet it is.

          I’d have enjoyed the chance to get on with me gardening if I didn’t have to listen to Mater going on and on about how quiet it was. I said to her yesterday, “Aint so quiet ‘round here from my perspective, with you going on and on about how blasted quiet it is,” but she just snorted at me and carried on grumbling.

          I haven’t told her Idle called to say she was on her way back home. Let her enjoy the sound of her own chuntering a bit longer.

          Suddenly Bert saw the funny side. Perhaps it was the early morning sun turning the whitewashed walls gold that lightened his mood. Perhaps it was the birds twittering and fluttering from tree to tree. Perhaps it was the feeling of warmth as the slanting sun bathed his wrinkled brow. But he laughed out loud, for the sheer joy of it all.

          “Daft old coot,” muttered Mater, who was watching him from the kitchen window. “What is there to laugh about? Silly old sod.” She turned away from the window with a derisory little sound, but a smile was hovering about her shriveled lips.

          #4191
          TracyTracy
          Participant

            Bea ordered a cup of coffee, and twinkled her eyes at the nice looking young waiter. She twinkled out of habit, as it had been a good many months since she had felt twinkly. She wondered, not for the first time, if it was the onset of pre senile dementia, or just a momentary madness. The truth of the matter was, she had no idea what she was doing there, but had a nagging feeling that she was there to do SOMETHING. The word Witless kept popping into her head. Protection of the Witless or something…wandering while whimsically wending ones willowy way…was it about woods? Enchanted woods?

            She bit into the doughnut and the custard filling gushed forth, filling her mouth with it’s cool creaminess. Custard. Custard. She stopped chewing, lost in thought, the custard dribbling down her chin unchecked.

            #4188
            ÉricÉric
            Keymaster

              There has been a satisfying sense of getting back to normality, after Bea had moved into her personal equivalent of a Witsness Protection Program. (She had to keep the typo for clueing value).

              That satisfying feeling did last, for somewhat longer than she had expected at first. Not by minutes, actually, but by months, if the old calendar was to be trusted.

              She had swept a lot of the strange, mildly irritating, or concerning, or revolting occurrences under the carpet, like the old dust mites and bunnies, and discarded graham cracker’s packages. She didn’t mind the crunchy sounds of her carpets.
              So, she would have been hard-pressed to tell what was the event that made her realise something was not as it should have been. There maybe wasn’t an event at all, maybe it was just the subtle movements of the heart itself.

              At first, she had discarded the parting words of the techromancer as another type of mess-with-your-head mumbo-jumbo.
              It was only last night that she had remembered something about her youth —she could hardly tell if it was a memory of an alternate timeline, or a true event, that really didn’t matter. For a little while, she had been drown into the feeling of innocence, kindness and expansion, the taste of which she had not felt for very long.

              Out of the unexpectedness, out of the emptiness, she remembered the poem of Custard the Dragon. She was suddenly struck by an entire dimension that was opened through reminisced words “But Custard cried for a nice safe cage.”

              Where had her inner dragon gone? Where did The Custard that gobbled a pirate go?

              #4187
              prUneprUne
              Participant

                “Sometimes you don’t know who you really are, but your story does.”

                That was a strange fortune sesame ball. Janel’s parents had brought us to their favourite restaurant in town. Well, apart from Bart’s, it was the only other restaurant in town. The Blue Phoenix had this usual mixture of dimly lit, exotic looking run of the mill Chinese restaurant. But the highlight of the place, which surely drove people from miles here, was its owner. She liked to be called The Dragon Lady with her blue-black hair, slim silhouette, and mysterious half-closed eyes, she was always seen scrapping notes on bits of paper, sitting on a high stool at the back of the restaurant, near the cashier, and a tinkling beaded door curtain, leading to probably even darker places downstairs.

                “How did you like the food kids?”
                Janel’s father was nice, trying his best. I confectioned the most genial smile I could do, not my greatest work by far, “it was lurvely!” was all I could get out in such short notice.

                The Dragon Lady must have felt something, she had apparently some extrasensoriel bullshit detector, and moving unnoticed like a cat, she was standing at our table, already not mincing words. “What was it you didn’t like with the food, young lady?”

                She managed to cut all attempts at protest from the clueless adults with a single bat of an eyelash, and a well-placed wink of her deep blue eye.

                For worse or for worst, the floor was all mine.

                “Are glukenitched eggs even a real thing?” I managed to blurt out.

                “Oh, my dear, you have no idea.”

                #4167
                F LoveF Love
                Participant

                  MATER

                  The room was dark, save for a sliver of light coming in through the curtains where I had not quite pulled them together. The rain started this evening bringing much needed coolness with it. I lay in bed and smiled thinking of the funny twists and turns life can take.

                  I had asked Corrie a few more questions but they were more a formality to reassure my brain that I was not going crazy. In my heart I knew. It is hard to find the right words to describe the state which came over me while Corrie was talking; it was as though the air around me had become lighter — so much so that I could almost see it shimmering — and a great … peace … I think the word is peace … had enveloped me.

                  I just knew it was them.

                  What a remarkable coincidence!

                  No, no, not coincidence. I know better than that. It’s magic!

                  Magic. I smiled again into the darkness. One needs to be reminded of magic at my age, where with every creaking, aching joint one can no longer be distracted so easily from the steady and inevitable propulsion towards death. A sort of reassurance in the presence of supernatural forces and perhaps a hint that there may be a purpose to my small little life. Dare I believe that I am worthy of magic?

                  Ah, perhaps I have not explained that well. Is it love? Is love the word I am looking for? When I felt the lightness, the magic, I felt expansive and loving. All the irritation of the morning was gone. And I felt loved in return by forces I could neither see nor explain. Not in my head, anyway.

                  Yes, and it was even nice to see Idle, though she was so full of rambling talk about Iceland and her trip that I had to excuse myself on the pretext that I had laundry to get in before the rain started. One can only take so much chatter.

                  #4166
                  TracyTracy
                  Participant

                    Aunt Idle:

                    One of the best things about going away is the pleasure of coming home. Never in a million years would I expect to miss dust, or overflowing ashtrays, but it was so good to see that familiar layer of dust all over everything.

                    I cut Maters grumbling short and lugged my case up to my bedroom, calling “Jet lag, speak later” over my shoulder. What was she on about anyway, two more twins from the past? It rings a bell, but I’ll think about that later. I hope she’s preparing a bit of dinner, some of that food in Iceland was ghastly, especially if you’re not a fishy sort of person.

                    Now all I want to do is get out of these clothes and into an old tattered T shirt ~ the oldest favourite, the black faded to greenish grey ~ and sprawl back on my bed smoking. Dropping ash on the bed cover watching the smoke and dust motes dancing in the shaft of warm sunlight. Stretching my limbs out unencumbered with layers of clothing and feeling the air on my skin.

                    Iceland is very nice in many ways, I took hundreds of photographs of the scenery and all, but shivering outside while quickly sucking down a lungful, or leaning out of an open window in the arctic blasts is not my idea of a relaxing holiday. Not that I went there to relax I suppose, which is just as well, because it wasn’t the least bit relaxing.

                    I drifted off to sleep, contentedly gazing at the stains on the ceiling that looked like maps of other worlds, vaguely recalling some of the names I’d made up for the islands and continents over the years, and woke up later dreaming of Fred, of all people. For a minute when I woke up I could have sworn he was standing right there next to my bed, watching me sleep. I blinked, trying to focus, and he was gone.

                    #4154
                    TracyTracy
                    Participant

                      Clove realized that she wasn’t going to get very far with her investigations if she didn’t gain the family’s trust and an amicable footing in the household.

                      On impulse while wandering around a discount shop in the high street she decided to buy a couple of packets of gaily coloured plastic clothes pegs to replace the old wooden ones that had been marking her laundry with mossy green stains. Next she put a pack of bright poppy motif table mats in her shopping basket to replace the dowdy stained hunting print mats to brighten up the kitchen table. A tall shiny emerald green pepper mill caught her eye next; that would look nicer on the table than the Titsco powdered white pepper container that the Smith’s made do with. She would pick up some black peppercorns in the health shop when she got the organic oat cakes. They’d like a change from cream crackers all the time, she was sure. The final impulse purchase was a couple of balls of sustainable organic hemp string, which Clove thought would make a nice change for Sue to crochet with.

                      The house was empty when Clove returned. She unpacked her shopping bags and distributed the new things around the place with a satisfied smile on her face. The old table mats she put in a bag next to the rubbish bin: Sue might want to keep them, although Clove doubted it. But better be on the safe side, she thought. The pegs went straight in the bin, and the hemp string into Sue’s crochet basket.

                      #4150
                      TracyTracy
                      Participant

                        The door to the living room burst open startling Sue whose teacup rattled against the saucer. John merely glanced up with a frown, and pointedly stared at the tv screen.

                        “Anyone want to join me for a walk?” Clove asked brightly, perhaps even a little feverishly.

                        “When, dear?” asked Sue. “I’m washing the curtains tomorrow.”

                        “Now!” Clove replied. “A nice moonlit walk to the park! It’s a lovely evening,” she added hopefully.

                        “Steady on, old girl,” said John. “We’re watching the telly.”

                        “Things like that need to be planned, Clove,” Sue said. “And besides, we’re watching tv now.”

                        “You can’t just go out walking in the dark, haven’t you read the papers? Streets are full of yobs after dark, it’s not safe.” John shook his head and tutted. “Things aren’t like they used to be.”

                        Sue agreed. “No, times have changed. You don’t want to be out after dark, not nowadays”

                        “But if we all go together it might be fun!” Clove was feeling desperate. “It’s fun doing something spontaneous, just getting up and doing it!”

                        John appeared to give this some consideration.

                        “No, I don’t think so,” he said, shaking his head again. “No, that would never do.”

                        “Things have to be planned,” Sue agreed, “And besides, we’re watching the telly now. I know, how about a nice cup of tea? I’ll go and put the kettle on.”

                        #4121

                        Corrie’s findings from elsewhere:

                        “You can’t leave without a permit, you know,” Prune said, startling Quentin who was sneaking out of his room.

                        “I’m just going for a walk,” he replied, irritated. “And what are you doing skulking around at this hour, anyway? Shouldn’t you be in bed?”

                        “What are you doing with an orange suitcase in the corridor at three o’clock in the morning?” the young brat retorted. “Where are you going?”

                        “Owl watching, that’s what I’m doing. And I don’t have a picnic basket, so I’m taking my suitcase.” Quentin had an idea. “Would you like to come?” The girls local knowledge might come in handy, up to a point, and then he could dispose of her somehow, and continue on his way.

                        Prune narrowed her eyes with suspicion. She didn’t believe the owl story, but curiosity compelled her to accept the invitation. She couldn’t sleep anyway, not with all the yowling mating cats on the roof. Aunt Idle had forbidden her to leave the premises on her own after dark, but she wasn’t on her own if she was with a story refugee, was she?”

                        ~~~

                        “Seeing Dido eating her curry cookies would turn Mater’s stomach, so she went up to her room.

                        Good riddance she thought, one less guest to worry about.
                        Not that she usually thought that way, but every time the guests leaved, there was a huge weight lifted from her back, and a strong desire of “never again”.
                        The cleaning wasn’t that much worry, it helped clear her thoughts (while Haki was doing it), but the endless worrying, that was the killer.

                        After a painful ascension of the broken steps, she put her walking stick on the wall, and started some breathing exercises. The vinegary smell of all the pickling that the twins had fun experimenting with was searing at her lungs. The breathing exercise helped, even if all the mumbo jumbo about transcendant presence was all rubbish.

                        It was time for her morning oracle. Many years ago, when she was still a young and innocent flower, she would cut bits and pieces of sentences at random from old discarded magazines. Books would have been sacrilegious at the time, but now she wouldn’t care for such things and Prune would often scream when she’d find some of her books missing key plot points. Many times, Mater would tell her the plots were full of holes anyway, so why bother; Prune’d better exercise her own imagination instead of complaining. Little bossy brat. She reminded her so much of her younger self.

                        So she opened her wooden box full of strips of paper. Since many years, Mater had acquired a taste for more expensive and tasty morsels of philosophy and not rubbish literature, so the box smelt a bit of old parchment. Nonetheless, she wasn’t adverse to a modicum of risqué bits from tattered magazines either. Like a blend of fine teas, she somehow had found a very nice mix, and oftentimes the oracle would reveal such fine things, that she’d taken to meditate on it at least once a day. Even if she wouldn’t call it meditate, that was for those good-for-nothing willy-nilly hippies.

                        There it was. She turned each bit one by one, to reveal the haiku-like message of the day.

                        “Bugger!” the words flew without thinking through her parched lips.

                        looked forgotten rat due idea half
                        getting floverley comment somehow
                        prune hardly wondered eyes great
                        inn run days dark quentin simulation

                        That silly Prune, she’d completely forgotten to check on her. She was glad the handwritten names she’d added in the box would pop up so appropriately.

                        She would pray to Saint Floverley of the Dunes, a local icon who was synchretized from old pagan rituals and still invoked for those incapable of dancing.
                        With her forking arthritis, she would need her grace much.”

                        #4104
                        Jib
                        Participant

                          “Is that lamb head on the menu?” asked Connie with a grimace on her face. “I can’t believe it.”

                          “It looks like it, dear”, retorted Sophie offhandedly. “Don’t look at me like that, I’ve seen and eaten worse.”

                          “Ewh”, said Connie, “I don’t want to know.” She was not quite honest, her reporter blood was thirsty about good and juicy stories. But she was not here to interview the temp, and the menu was leaving her perplexed. “What’s Hrútspungar ?”

                          “You don’t want to know”, said Sophie, “Trust me.”

                          Connie craved some vegan food and they didn’t seem to have any vegetables in the hotel restaurant. She pouted and finally gave up. “Take whatever you want, I’ll follow.”

                          “You like to live dangerously”, said Sophie.
                          “Whatever”, retorted Connie with a sigh. She put a hand on her round belly. “It may be an opportunity to begin that diet.”

                          Sophie snorted. She never believed in diet. She had tried them all, just for fun, but she eventually found the rules boring and just forgot about the whole diet business.

                          “Nice beehive hair Ladies”, said the waiter with an appreciative look at their heads. “What will you order?” he asked opening his small notebook.

                          Sophie smiled at the compliment and closed the menu. “I’ve been told you had a special”, she said.

                          The man tilted his head and looked at the old woman with a hint of surprise in his eyes. He shrugged as if it wasn’t his problem after all. Connie gulped, expecting the worse.

                          “Two Svið with Gellur”, he said scribbling something in his notebook. “May I suggest some Brennivín?”
                          “You may”, answered Sophie. “It can help us gulp the whole thingy”, she explained to Connie.

                          “The common error is to go for the head and dismiss the eyes”, said the waiter. “They may surprise you”, he added before leaving.

                          Connie looked murderously at Sweet Sophie, whom she would have renamed Sour Sophie in that moment. The old woman had an air of satisfaction on her face. “Why on earth would you pick that ?” asked the reporter.

                          “Oh! That was part of the instructions in the letter”, answered Sophie with a shrug that made her beehive tremble.

                          #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.

                            #4059

                            The woman sitting next to me on the plane never stopped talking, she must have told me her whole life story, Aunt Idle wrote in her diary. It was a long flight from Australia to Iceland, I’m not complaining ~ it was quite an entertaining story. She said she came from Blue Lagoon campsite in the Adirondacks originally, although that was many moons ago, as she put it. Then she joined the army, but she didn’t tell me much about that, only that she’d been posted to Kenya and had taken to the place, always meant to go back and never did. She’s been married twice, once to a northerner called Bert Wagstaff, but that didn’t last long ~ nice enough guy, she said, but a bit boring. No kids. Then to Trudell. That was another story she said, but didn’t elaborate.

                            She said something about investigating fungus but the drinks trolley appeared. She asked for Blue Sapphire gin but they only had Gordon’s, and then she started going on about when she was in India. She had a book in her hands the whole flight, although she didn’t stop talking long enough to read much, it was The Rabbit, by Peter Day, with a picture of an upright man with a rabbit head on the cover, all in white, rather surreal.

                            #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”.

                              #3943

                              In reply to: Mandala of Ascensions

                              Jib
                              Participant

                                The jiggong meditation’s end was signaled by a silent ring of the immaterial bell in between states of mind. MJ stretched his ideas and send a shepherd to gather his thoughts. Today only one student connected to the session. MJ acknowledged his presence with a slight flickr of his crown chakra and he checked his voicemail. 1223 messages from Dispersee. He let the potential irritation dissolve as it was born into existence and prepared to respond. No need to listen to the messages, it would only delay the answer.

                                He felt a nudge from the student who hadn’t dissipated as he should. Some hesitation fluctuated in the energy. He turned his attention to the void and waited. His motto was to always let people ask the questions they had if they had any, and not begin a conversation if you hadn’t something important to say.

                                Master John ?

                                MJ sent some encouragement to the void where the student thought he was.

                                I can’t think of a question, finally expressed the student out of nowhere.
                                Maybe you don’t have any question, MJ said to the void.
                                The student’s energy rippled with surprise. Had he been on Earth plane, he would have had a nervous laugh.

                                Master John had already been aware that the void of the student had no question but was filled with interrogations. He was desperately trying to find something to ask in need to connect, unaware that the connection already existed and required no movement.
                                MJ sent an energy egg to the student. Let him play with that. It was crafted according to the ancient Chinese culture and hard to crack. With lots of mind knots and shiny curly clues. MJ let his pride of having created the object dissolve like squid ink in the ocean of his mind.

                                Suddenly absorbed by the illusory complexity of the egg, the student suddenly blended into the void of MJ’s mind, replaced by the myriads of Dispersee’s messages cackling simutaneously to catch his unwavering attention. He picked one of them and followed the thread to Dispersee and to a nice pique nique in the mountain apparently. Floverly was already there, sitting on a patch of red flowers.

                                You could have changed after your jiggong, she said.

                                #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.”

                                  #3897

                                  Seeing Dido eating her curry cookies would turn Mater’s stomach, so she went up to her room.

                                  Good riddance she thought, one less guest to worry about.
                                  Not that she usually thought that way, but every time the guests leaved, there was a huge weight lifted from her back, and a strong desire of “never again”.
                                  The cleaning wasn’t that much worry, it helped clear her thoughts (while Haki was doing it), but the endless worrying, that was the killer.

                                  After a painful ascension of the broken steps, she put her walking stick on the wall, and started some breathing exercises. The vinegary smell of all the pickling that the twins had fun experimenting with was searing at her lungs. The breathing exercise helped, even if all the mumbo jumbo about transcendant presence was all rubbish.

                                  It was time for her morning oracle. Many years ago, when she was still a young and innocent flower, she would cut bits and pieces of sentences at random from old discarded magazines. Books would have been sacrilegious at the time, but now she wouldn’t care for such things and Prune would often scream when she’d find some of her books missing key plot points. Many times, Mater would tell her the plots were full of holes anyway, so why bother; Prune’d better exercise her own imagination instead of complaining. Little bossy brat. She reminded her so much of her younger self.

                                  So she opened her wooden box full of strips of paper. Since many years, Mater had acquired a taste for more expensive and tasty morsels of philosophy and not rubbish literature, so the box smelt a bit of old parchment. Nonetheless, she wasn’t adverse to a modicum of risqué bits from tattered magazines either. Like a blend of fine teas, she somehow had found a very nice mix, and oftentimes the oracle would reveal such fine things, that she’d taken to meditate on it at least once a day. Even if she wouldn’t call it meditate, that was for those good-for-nothing willy-nilly hippies.

                                  There it was. She turned each bit one by one, to reveal the haiku-like message of the day.

                                  “Bugger!” the words flew without thinking through her parched lips.

                                  looked forgotten rat due idea half
                                  getting floverley comment somehow
                                  prune hardly wondered eyes great
                                  inn run days dark quentin simulation

                                  That silly Prune, she’d completely forgotten to check on her. She was glad the handwritten names she’d added in the box would pop up so appropriately.

                                  She would pray to Saint Floverley of the Dunes, a local icon who was synchretized from old pagan rituals and still invoked for those incapable of dancing.
                                  With her forking arthritis, she would need her grace much.

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