588 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
588 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
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1 If you are in need of help, you need but ask....
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2 ************************ INSTALLED: 27 MAY 85 **********************
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3 Welcome to BWMS (BackWater Message System) Mike Day System operator
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4 ************************************************************
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5 GENERAL DISCLAIMER: BWMS IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY INFORMATION
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6 PLACED ON THIS SYSTEM.
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7 BWMS was created as an electronic bill board. BWMS is a privately owned
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8 and operated system which is currently open for use by the general public.
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9 no restrictions are placed on the use of the system. As the system is
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10 privately owned, I retain thepright to remove any and all messages which
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11 I may find offensive. Because of the limited size of the system, it will be
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12 periodically purged of messages. (only 629 lines of data can be saved)
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13 to leave a message, type 'ENTER' and use ctrl/C or break to get out of the
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14 ENTER mode. The message is automatically stored. If after entering the
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15 message you find you made a mistake, use the replace command to replace
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16 The line. To exit from the system, type 'OFF' then hang up.
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17 Type 'HELP' to see other commands that are available on the system.
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18 *************************************************************************
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19
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20 how do I read the messages that are on the system?
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21 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
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22 to above: try DB, then list.
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23 Where have all these new authors come from? I'm going to miss
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24 this place when I return north.
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25 F.F. BSAL (ret)
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26 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
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27 MissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMission
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28 "Okay, now disconnect the, uh...the black thingy. No, I said the BLACK
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29 one! Now pull the little square circuit board with the resistors and things
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30 all over it." Hansen turned the diagram around a couple times. "A usual
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31 MacHinery diagram. I think I've been using it upside down, but I'm not sure."
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32 Johnson had shut out Hansen's instructions two power supplies ago.
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33 "I think I've got it all figured out, Hans. I'm just about done."
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34 "I don't care what you THINK Johnson. If we botch this job Machinery will
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35 see to it that we orbit up here for the rest of our short, miserable lives.
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36 McKane didn't design weather satellites you know. It's no accident we weren't
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37 told exactly what these things do."
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38 "Done!" Johnson proclaimed, "let's put the cover on and get out of here."
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39 Both men climbed back into the shuttle. Hansen couldn't keep himself from
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40 lecturing about the importance of the mission and about Johnson's general lack
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41 of competence. "This is more complex than a communication satellite. Remember
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42 the UPI job you screwed up? Remember your stupid response?--'I know there's
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43 some parts left over,' you said, 'but the satellite really doesn't need them!'
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44 Ha! You and your left-over parts. I just know something terrible will happen!"
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45 Just then the one-sided conversation was interrupted by an urgent message
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46 from Net headquarters. "Signaling the Deussex...switching to new scramble
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47 code...new setting is 475X-47Pj." Johnson punched in the new code. "I'm sorry
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48 HQ, you'll have to insert another-"
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49 Hansen grabbed the headset, "Come in Headquarters. What's the trouble?"
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50 "Uh...Deussex...you are ordered to refrain from any further operations
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51 concerning the objective satellites."
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52 "Who gave these orders, Walters?" demanded Hansen.
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53 "That's all I have, Deussex...you are ordered to refrain-"
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54 "Who is this? Give me Walters or somebody!" Hansen was becoming
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55 increasingly hostile. "I have to know on whose authority-"
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56 Hansen was cut off by an authoritative voice which he recognized as Net
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57 Space Agency Director Harold Pinkerton. "Be quiet Hansen. That UPI satellite
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58 Johnson tampered with malfunctioned this morning. It began sending some
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59 strange signals and then aligned itself to the Tass receiver dish. We finally
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60 had to destroy the satellite." Hansen and Johnson stared at each other in the
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61 cold silence. Pinkerton continued, "If Johnson's doing the same stuff-"
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62 Hansen interrupted, "I've been keeping an eye on Johnson, sir, we've
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63 converted most of the satellites and I think we're in pretty good shape..."
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64 The conversation continued but Johnson nemded to hear no more. As the
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65 shuttle plunged silently into the night Johnson looked at the handful of
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66 satellite parts hidden in his pocket, and then back at the satellite
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67 disappearing behind the smooth curvature of the Earth. "Oops."
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68
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69 ..........
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70
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71 Pinkerton sat behind his desk. The face of an angry Ian MacHinery filled
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72 a visual monitor on the opposite side of the room. "You tried to convert those
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73 old McKane satellites without my consent? Now what will you do, Pinkerton?"
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74 "Sir, preliminary reports show that any attempt to contact the satellites
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75 would cause a chain reaction that would most likely result in World War III and
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76 a nuclear holocaust. As you recall, McKane had planned to use the satellites
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77 to control Soviet and US nuclear launch and tracking systems. Now that they
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78 are fully active but out of control, any use of the satmllites would be
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79 disastrous. We estimate a ninety-five percent probability of nuclear war."
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80 "Again, Pinkerton, what do you propose to do?"
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81 "A specialized team could repair the satellites."
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82 "Men like Johnson?"
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83 "No sir. The satellites are more complicated than we had originally
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84 suspected. The computer has come up with the necessary team--no other
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85 arrangement will do." Pinkerton paused and shuffled some pages.
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86 "Number one: Please take note of page five. As you can see, located on
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87 the inside panel of each satellite is a code which tells how to deactivate the
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88 automatic destruct system which kicked in when Johnson revived the unit.
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89 "I can't make heads nor tails of this code." It was obviously a difficult
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90 thing for MacHinery to admit.
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91 Pinkerton continued, "It has something to do with pre-columbian art.
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92 There's only one man who knows enough about the subject to decipher this code."
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93 MacHinery smirked. "L'homme sans Parity!"
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94 "That's right sir. Now let me see -- number two: A genius who helped
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95 design the McKane satellites. He's in prison now.
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96 "What's his name?"
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97 "Well, uh...um...we only know him as Crazy Charlie...uh, he sort of went
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98 insane and killed a few people when the organization collapsed."
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99 "Number three:" Pinkerton didn't give his superior a chance to respond
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100 to the Crazy Charlie thing, but he could see that MacHinery was smiling for
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101 some reason. "Number three is a man who is indirectly related to the
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102 consdruction of the satellites. Some of the parts Johnson used when altering
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103 several of the satellites seem to have been purchased through the black market.
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104 The devices have been tracked to a disassembled automobile last owned by a Mr.
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105 Eugene Farley. Farley is the only man who intimately understands those
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106 instruments. We must be careful, though. Farley is known to be obsessed with
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107 the memory of his lost car. He could conceivably turn on the others in an
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108 attempt to recover his electronics."
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109 "Number four: Another former member of the McKane organization. He worked
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110 under Crazy Charlie and is the only other person we know of who worked on the
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111 satellite project. Aside from satellite repair, we hope he'll be able to keep
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112 Crazy Charlie calm. Charlie has a reputation of being somewhat unpredictable
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113 and we need someone who can keep him under control. His name is Petrov."
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114 "Finally, number five: The leader of the expedition is an experienced
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115 shuttle pilot named Hansen. He should be able to keep order and-"
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116 "No!" MacHinery interrupted. "The fifth member will be someone who
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117 DESERVES to be locked up with a crazy man and a kinky Russian. He's a man who
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118 shouldn't laugh at his superiors or watch idly as I fall into a swimming pool."
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119 An evil grin came across his face and he started to laugh. "I don't doubt that
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120 he'll finish the job -- it's just gratifying to know that I'll be making his
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121 life miserable in the meantime. I WANT JOSHUA."
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122 Pinkerton watched as the video screen with MacHinery's laughing face
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123 faded to blackness. "Two Net agents, two former McKane agents, and a guy who
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124 could betray them all for a few hubcaps, all trapped for a very long week in a
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125 very small shuttle." Pinkerton sighed and then hit a button on his desk.
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126 "Walters, carry on with your orders. Substitute Joshua for Hansen. At all
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127 costs you must round up L'homme, Crazy Charlie, Farley, Petrov, and Joshua.
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128 Oh, and Walters -- get my bunker ready, will you?"
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129 MissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMissionMission
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130 ............. ............. ............. .............
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131 What in Cistop's good name happened to our entries, L'homme? I think not
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132 that one's toes were to heavily stepped on. And more to the point, we
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133 left our marks with them! It's not as if any great H.A.R.M. had been
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134 done. (Although there is still the ever present 'cutsie' out there.)
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135 If all is indeed well, I shall soon set my name to flashing at the low
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136 side of your terminal when you deem the time to be right.
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137 But why do I say these things to you? To me you are only a dead man.
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138 ............. <THIS IS A REPEAT TRANSMISSION> .............
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139 04: What statistacal sheets were those? If they had contained what it
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140 was that I relayed to you via land line a short while ago, strike the
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141 remark given to say "NO COMMENT/A POSITIVE OUTLOOK"
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142 08: All is well I take it. You document awaits you. Anytime... GFI
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143 02: Will verify the file before the guide is removed. Looks positive.
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144 01: Can it be? Was that really... YOU?
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145 ............. ............. ............. .............
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146
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147
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148
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149
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150
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151 ----- Q ----- Q -----
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152 IN THE PRESENCE I FEEL AN ABSENCE... QUESTOR 200
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153 ----- Q ----- Q -----
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154 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
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155 The mind of a human is a curious mixture of intellect and emotion.
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156 Inextricably intertwined, these two forces pulse and burn, the tension of
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157 their interaction somehow bringing forth sapience. Let one overcome the
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158 other and humanity vanishes. What remains may look human, but lacks the
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159 necessary spark to set it above the beasts. Let intellect overpower emotion,
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160 and we get the Holacaust of WWII -- with emotion gone humaninty is lost.
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161 Let emotion take over at the expense of reason, and humanity is again lost.
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162 Some individuals find their point of balance, their fulcrum of humanity,
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163 closer to the emotional tides than others who find the cold tides of the
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164 intellect comfortable, but all partake of both. The piper had long been an
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165 emotional person -- oh, he used his intellect, but sparingly. In the long
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166 forest night, screaming his loss to the uncaring stars, cursing the cold
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167 moon who looked down on this tableau with an expressionless eye, the hot
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168 tides of emotion washed him off his point of balance. What toppled into the
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169 underbrush and slept an exhausted sleep was not truly human, only the shell
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170 that had at one time contained humanity.
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171 pppppppppppppppppppp
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172 actually, I find myself writing solo because no one seems to be into
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173 fantasy adventures right now. I welcome anyone else who would like to
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174 drop into this story line -- but be careful!! The piper isn't a very good
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175 companion right now...
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176 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
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177 _______________________________________________________________________________
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178
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179 Voyage
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180 Part 2
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181
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182 While most of the crew struggled to survive, recycling precious
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183 water in the ship's scrubber units, and growing small amounts of food in
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184 the hydroponic garden, the ship's commanding officer, a captain Racal,
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185 had much more to worry about than survival. The utmost thing on his mind
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186 was death, gr the inevitable death he associated with Sahara's landing on
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187 Dry Gulch. He knew the truth, that the chances for rescue were minuscule.
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188 The possibilities of the beacon's emergency signal getting to a base capable
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189 of mounting an expeditionary force were slim to none. Racal knew this to be
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190 true, but he didn't let on. It was a secret, a horror he must keep to himself,
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191 starting again due to line noise
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192 The possibilities of the beacon's emergency signal getting to a base capable
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193 of mounting an expeditionary force were slim to none. Racal knew this to be
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194 true, but he didn't let on. It was a secret, a horror he must keep to himself,
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195 lest he inject utter despair into the ranks of the crew. Sahara was so far
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196 off course, and so far away even from the ever growing boundaries of a
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197 space hungry colonizing Man, it was useless to pretend! But he must pretend,
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198 for the good of the crew, regardless of what it did to him inside. This
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199 planet would be Sahara's final resting place, and her crew's tomb for all
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200 eternity. It was only a matter of time.
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201
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202 Life went on, slowly, surely, inexorably to its logical conclusion.
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203 Txe hydroponics material was growing short on strength, and the crew found
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204 out the hard way that the planet was no farmer's paradise. The soil was so
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205 alkaline, most earth type seeds were literally dissolved. And then there was
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206 the sun, with its never ending fusillade of heat, burning whatever hardy crops
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207 that made it to the surface to a cinder. Makeshift covers did no good, the
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208 ambient temperature was too high for anything to survive outside the more
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209 controlled confines of the ship. Sahara, that last bastion of life for Man,
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210 suffered too. Hyper-tronic parts started failing first, victims of the heat
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211 that even the huge air conditioning units the engineering department converted
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212 from engine parts and installed could not keep totally at bay. With the loss
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213 of some of the more important 'tronic modules, it was impossible to keep
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214 track of the signals the rescue beacon was sending out. Soon visual
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215 confirmation became the only assurance that the small beacon still circled
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216 the planet, sending out the call for help. Help that captain Racal knew
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217 would never come.
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218
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219 The first crewman died, six weeks after setting down on Dry Gulch.
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220 He was topside on Sahara, repairing a broken solar panel that helped charge
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221 the ship's electric cells. The heat of the sun bouncing off the hull of the
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222 ship, coupled with reduced food and water rations, and the strenuous labor,
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223 caused the man to have a sun-stroke. He fell into a coma and simply never
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224 woke up. The proper arrangements were made for a burial on the harsh
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225 surface of Dry Gulch. The funeral service was naturally perfunctory. The
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226 men and women of the crew could not stay out in the heat very long without
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227 suffering the similar fate their companion had. The location was marked with
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228 a simple headstone, and the inscription read:
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229
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230 Lt. Samual Bowman b. 2213 d. 2239
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231 Dry Gulch claimed
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232 its first victim.
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233 He died so others
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234 could live.
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235
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236 The crew's moral sank rapidly from this time on. Instead of the
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237 rallying affect Racal thought Bowman's death might have on the crew, just
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238 the opposite happened. Racal had hoped the death would bring the crew around,
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239 give them something to fight againsth, and something to fight for,
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240 life, no matter how short that life may be. Unfortunately for all, this
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241 did not occur. Men and women who worked side by side for these many weeks
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242 started to withdraw. Fights broke out over the smallest of reasons; an
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243 extra glass of water or a forgotten duty call. Most of the crew lost
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244 interest in betting on the arrival of the beacon, their one last connection
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245 with the worlds they knew and loved beyond. The feelings of despair were
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246 a tragic consequence of the death, but they were also a realization of the
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247 true situation they were in. Interstellar personnel were intelligent, highly
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248 trained individuals. The epiphany of their plight was certain to dawn on
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249 them sooner or later. Talk about never getting off the planet was heard for
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250 the first time throughout the crew. It seemed no one was safe from the lost
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251 feelings; the entire ship's complement seemed to give up at once, suddenly,
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252 but with inescapable certainty.
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253
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254 A Story Teller
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255 _______________________________________________________________________________
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256
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257 ch /gr/or/ ch /txe/the/ add line feed after /bowman/ take out the form feed
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258 I'm really sorry about the mess. The line noise seems to be back in force.
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259 ________________________________________________________________________________
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260 RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY
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261 FMDC_ LUDCZ AL[_P EDNCV CYRA_ DXMDJ ACIFL ZDPTF EHB@C JA[D@ K_\FE EFXL@
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262 [KLD@ _VRAC EADNX L@PCN P@DFC L[\D_ @FPHB FEL[E _PD_L A@N@A EECJU DPX_D
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263 @PARR D\ADS TXDUX GDC@J A@[LH @B_YG PDFD_ SXGRI DRFOA DPXDO LXSDF MD\F[
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264 _EEFX LDFEH B@CLD XGPEF IAJDX JDLXP [MHBD
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265 RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY
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266 ANY AGENTS/OPERATIVES UNABLE TO DECODE LEVEL 4 ARE TO USE SECURE MEAN
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267 TO CONTACT HQ. IMMEDIATE RESPONSE REQUIRED! NET HQ OUT
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268 RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY
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269 /\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\
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270 The susurations of the dream reality are trapped within my ear's
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271 cavity, echoing untouchable thoughts until at last they gain solubility.
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272 Submerged in blindness and obscurity, I begin to float like wafts of smoke.
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273 The smoke curls up the staircase to the sky, a gray line masked on blackness.
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274 Slowly, the blackness divulges from the clouds and pours its liquid color into
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275 my mind. Slowly, the strangeness of the dream fades, transforming itself into
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276 my reality.
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277 Thoughts flow in my head as my imagination reates them. The dream
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278 frame and the waking frame become inseparable, I exist in both of them or
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279 none at all. A bird circles over head, and two gray figures talk in the
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280 distance. I lay silent, a weak form, below the flapping wings. Words sing
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281 past me, although they have been captured in my memory.
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282 I feel my mind and body giving away, I'm melting into the gray misty
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283 floor. As my spirit, my life's vitality, begins to fade waway, a strain of lost
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284 hope returns. It's only one silken thread but a strong one. One hand, either
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285 of exterier forces or of my own, reaches into my mind. I feel the strength
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286 rekindling as the weakness melts into the mist.
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287 /\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\/\\ eidolaz /\\/\\/\\/\\/\\
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288
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289 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ( )
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290 The Innkeeper ver casually made his way around the tables after the Inn
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291 had once again closed its doors for the evening. Much to his suprise, there
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292 really wasn't that much to pick up after this time. It seemed that there
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293 were a few of the patrons that had done him an extra favor of not only cleaning
|
|||
|
294 up after themselves, but after a few of the others as well.. This had been
|
|||
|
295 a more common occurance of late, but this time it allowed him to pay special
|
|||
|
296 attention to the condition of what it was that he was cleaning up from.
|
|||
|
297 As he reached a back table that received very little use recently, he
|
|||
|
298 began to wipe of the tables and chairs just for good measure.
|
|||
|
299 "And what's this? How odd, it could have been sitting here for some time
|
|||
|
300 considering the dust that's settled.. [I know - no real dust ever accumulates.]
|
|||
|
301 And by the looks of it, it is surely something that someone would miss.."
|
|||
|
302 He set the object on the table while he finished the chores he had set out to
|
|||
|
303 do before retiring. Once completed, he picked up the object and headed back
|
|||
|
304 to the counter and placed it up on a shelf where the owner would be sure to
|
|||
|
305 find it upon their return -- hoping they would return.
|
|||
|
306 "I think I just might have a hunch to whom it belongs, but the last time
|
|||
|
307 I saw it was quite some time ago..." The Innkeeper's words faded within the
|
|||
|
308 emptied building and went to the back where he could enjoy his rest alone.
|
|||
|
309
|
|||
|
310 The light of a single unextinguished candle found its way to that object
|
|||
|
311 on the shelf and made it glisten. The glow that surrounded it made the
|
|||
|
312 figurines winged image seem amost surreal.
|
|||
|
313 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|||
|
314 I think I shall hasten my return.
|
|||
|
315 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ --->the Guardian 148:16 (I'm late!)
|
|||
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316
|
|||
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317 -04-04-04-04.
|
|||
|
318 KOSTA:wrong NET agents in transmission above. I own the documents, 08 talks
|
|||
|
319 to you on the phone. Gray count noticed. response when able.
|
|||
|
320 -04-04-04-04.
|
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321
|
|||
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322
|
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323 :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP:
|
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324
|
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325 Do any of you know why the radio staions like Z100 and MAGIC 107 havent begun
|
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326 to play STIR IT UP yet? STIR IT UP is my favorite song,its on the soundtrack
|
|||
|
327 for the BEVERLY HILLS COP,and is found in the movie when Eddie is driving
|
|||
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328 his car through beverly hills,and at the end where they are listing the
|
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329 names on screen. When i called up the radio stations,they said they didnt
|
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330 hear of the song yet.
|
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331
|
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332 THEY ARE OBVIOUSLY CRAZY.
|
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333
|
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334 later dude,
|
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335
|
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336 THE MUSCLE-BOUND HULK
|
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337
|
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338 :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP: :STIR IT UP:
|
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|
339
|
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|
340
|
|||
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341 exit
|
|||
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342 stage
|
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343 left
|
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344 THE DOG CATCHER==>
|
|||
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345 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
|
|||
|
346 Dogs? What dogs?
|
|||
|
347 Storyteller: Boy, am I depressed. It takes alot to really depress
|
|||
|
348 me. Keep it up (if there is anything to keep up).
|
|||
|
349 I also thought that there was a lacking in Net Stories as of late. I
|
|||
|
350 obviously (to my delight) was wrong. I love the mission entry. I'd love
|
|||
|
351 to put something of my own here, but 1) I'm leaving town for three months
|
|||
|
352 on saturday, and 2) I really can't hold a candle to some of the stuff here.
|
|||
|
353 Bummer for me.
|
|||
|
354 Fast Fred
|
|||
|
355 BSAL (Ret)
|
|||
|
356 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
|
|||
|
357 1313131313131313131313131313131
|
|||
|
358 CORRECTION NOTED.
|
|||
|
359 HOPED YOU`HAD NOTICED THE DECENDING ORDER
|
|||
|
360 OF LAST TRANSMISSION.
|
|||
|
361 OPERATIVES WERE IN ORDER EVEN IF THE
|
|||
|
362 NUMBERS WERE NOT.
|
|||
|
363 01: ALTHOUGH COMSET IS OPERATIONAL,
|
|||
|
364 TRANSMISSIONS ARE DIFFICULT AT BEST.
|
|||
|
365 (AS YOU MAY HAVE NOTICED.)
|
|||
|
366 131313131313131313131313131313q313
|
|||
|
367
|
|||
|
368 Don't feel too low, Fast Fred. You used to shake a pretty mean Bolo back in
|
|||
|
369 your heyday, too
|
|||
|
370 :::voyeur:::sans border:::
|
|||
|
371 BRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHT
|
|||
|
372
|
|||
|
373 Excuse Me...
|
|||
|
374
|
|||
|
375 Has anyone seen any of those toothy-fangy creatures
|
|||
|
376 around that are laughingly refered to as Grelims?
|
|||
|
377
|
|||
|
378 Oops got to go ... someone just spilled a glass of
|
|||
|
379 water on me!
|
|||
|
380
|
|||
|
381
|
|||
|
382 GIZMO
|
|||
|
383
|
|||
|
384 BRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHTBRIGHTLIGHT
|
|||
|
385 h
|
|||
|
386
|
|||
|
387
|
|||
|
388
|
|||
|
389
|
|||
|
390
|
|||
|
391
|
|||
|
392
|
|||
|
393
|
|||
|
394 list
|
|||
|
395 off
|
|||
|
396
|
|||
|
397 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp no time, gotta go pppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
398 0707070707070707070707070707070707070707 007 070707070707070707070707070707
|
|||
|
399 MESSAGE RECEIVED AND NOTED. ANSWER FORTHCOMING, IT IT HASN'T ALREADY BY
|
|||
|
400 SOME OTHER GOODLY NET AGENT. NOW WHERE DID I PUT THAT COMSET?!?
|
|||
|
401 0707070707070707070707070707070707070707 10:00:00AM 05/29/85 07070707070707
|
|||
|
402
|
|||
|
403 [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/]
|
|||
|
404 The physical union of the sexes . . . only intensifies man's sence of solitude.
|
|||
|
405 -Nicolas Berdyaev
|
|||
|
406 [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] [/] THE TIN MAN [/] [/]
|
|||
|
407 010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101
|
|||
|
408 Ian: am forwarding msgs to you. They were mis-addressed. Could you
|
|||
|
409 PLEASE try to get this mix-up straightened out? I enough trouble making
|
|||
|
410 regular reports from Inisfall, without having to wade through YOUR mail!
|
|||
|
411
|
|||
|
412 Inisfall station
|
|||
|
413 report # 166
|
|||
|
414 Situation normal. All quiet here. Fast Fred passed thru yesterday.
|
|||
|
415 end
|
|||
|
416 B.E.M. (an equal opportunity despoiler)
|
|||
|
417 Head, Inisfall station
|
|||
|
418 010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101
|
|||
|
419 an agent-in-place's life is not a happy one...
|
|||
|
420 010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101010101
|
|||
|
421 FOR SALE: If you would like to get in on the 1200 Baud movement and yet
|
|||
|
422 don't have 1200 bucks, you may be interested in this. I am selling NEW
|
|||
|
423 300/1200 automatic modems. They are DATEC PAL212 modems and include
|
|||
|
424 features like auto-dial, auto-answer, 4 types of hand-shaking, soft
|
|||
|
425 selectable full or half duplex and 12 additional commands. They are great
|
|||
|
426 modems and are for sale for $375 (quantity discounts for orders of 10 or
|
|||
|
427 more.). If interested please leave your name, phone number and times to
|
|||
|
428 call and I will get back to you with answers to any questions you may
|
|||
|
429 have.
|
|||
|
430
|
|||
|
431 Walt
|
|||
|
432
|
|||
|
433 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
|
|||
|
434 Walt: Apple Compatible?
|
|||
|
435 V: Thanks. Ever since the wepons ban at the inn very few people
|
|||
|
436 remember just what BSAL was all about.
|
|||
|
437 Fast Fred
|
|||
|
438 BSAL (Ret)
|
|||
|
439 @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
|
|||
|
440
|
|||
|
441 <WELL, THAT FINISHED OFF ANOTHER CLEANING RAG...>
|
|||
|
442 <MORE LATER... >
|
|||
|
443
|
|||
|
444 353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535
|
|||
|
445 ACTUA LLYTH ISISA BOUTM OREMY SPEED IDONO TREAL LYLIK TOHAV ETOSP
|
|||
|
446 ENDMY TIMEW ORKIN GOUTT HELAT ESTIN WHATM AYBET HEEQU IVALE NTTOA
|
|||
|
447 PRIVA TEMES SAGEO NTHIS SYSTE MTHAT ISWHA TTHEO THERS YSTEM SAREF
|
|||
|
448 ORYOU KNOWB UTNON ETHEL ESSIS HALLS TRUGG LEINM YVALI ANTEF FORTT
|
|||
|
449 OPLAY THEPA RTOFT HATEL ITETE AMOFC ODEBU STERS ITHIN KTHAT ITISM
|
|||
|
450 OSTFI TTING THATI SHOUL DBETH IRTYF IVEFO THENA MEAND THENU MBERA
|
|||
|
451 RETHE SAMEY ESQUI TEFIT TINGT HIRTY FIVEI SSTOC KANDS TOCKI SMINE
|
|||
|
452 353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535
|
|||
|
453 ERROR IN ECRYPTION; CORRECT BY INSERTING "R" BETWEEN BLOCKS SEVEN
|
|||
|
454 AND EIGHT OF LINE SIX. CONSIDER THE PARODY AND YOU WILL ALREADY
|
|||
|
455 KNOW WHO I AM, PARITY. (WHEN WILL "SYSTEM" BE UP? READY TO CALL.)
|
|||
|
456 353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535353535
|
|||
|
457
|
|||
|
458 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
|
|||
|
459 ook a walk with
|
|||
|
460 that cat mehitabel
|
|||
|
461 and wothehell wothehell
|
|||
|
462 now i m caught
|
|||
|
463 in a roach motel
|
|||
|
464
|
|||
|
465
|
|||
|
466 ARCHY
|
|||
|
467
|
|||
|
468 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
|
|||
|
469 *=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*FORREST FANG*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
|
|||
|
470 Silent shapes slipped through the underbrush. Great grey silent.
|
|||
|
471 C. Lupus an emotionless emperican would call them. He was not present; they
|
|||
|
472 were.
|
|||
|
473 They did not approach too closely the still form on the forrest floor,
|
|||
|
474 the object of thair curiosity. They
|
|||
|
475 knew well the form of man. More to the
|
|||
|
476 point they knew the scent of man. It was to them the estral message of fear.
|
|||
|
477 Not without paranoia, the few small bands that had survived the centuries
|
|||
|
478 of the round eard two legged ones self-serving and vicios tales. Of course the
|
|||
|
479 four legged ones knew nothing of the telling of frightning stories to quell the
|
|||
|
480 unrulyness of cubs or to thrill and
|
|||
|
481 excite thair listeners. Yet not a one of this small band had failed to witness
|
|||
|
482 in its short lifetime the distructiveness of 'human' hate (and fear).
|
|||
|
483 Was it an ill omen or some sign of a dim passed, remembered only in the
|
|||
|
484 racial memory of the cells, when the two legged ones had not been enimies but
|
|||
|
485 companions of the hunt, learning its ways when survival was an uncertain thing
|
|||
|
486 for both. Yes even then there had been fear, but there had also been something
|
|||
|
487 else, a sort of mutual. In time, some of the two leggs had seen the wisdom of
|
|||
|
488 taking the four leggs as partners.
|
|||
|
489 Those the 'humans' had befriended had over the centuries become more the
|
|||
|
490 servants of the two leggs and less and less like thair woodland breathren.
|
|||
|
491 There was no smell of the streight black sticks that pointed at death
|
|||
|
492 about this one. It seemed whole of body and its howls had been firm. Yet
|
|||
|
493 there had been something undefinable not quite well. Was it prey? (not likely)
|
|||
|
494 Was it a hunter like themselves or was it one of those dangerous enimies who
|
|||
|
495 would reack havoc and destruction upon themselves if given half a chance?
|
|||
|
496 Forrest Fang was not the Alpha male, hauty, assured in its strength and
|
|||
|
497 mass, fallowed by all but challanged by all who would take his place; not a
|
|||
|
498 young proto-alpha eager for such a chalange nor an alfa female the most danger-
|
|||
|
499 ous of the pack in her own way. No, Forrest Fang was none of these, nor was
|
|||
|
500 he a gama eather. Rather he was the beta male. Cubhood long gone, who from
|
|||
|
501 time to time enjoied some of the power of the alpha without the constant chal-
|
|||
|
502 anges or as much defferance paid by the others, but not without some.
|
|||
|
503 It was Forrest Fang who nuzzeled the side of the still two legged form,
|
|||
|
504 then jumped back prepaired for what might come (he hoped). He half-way expec-
|
|||
|
505 ted the alpha's dissapproval for this rash act but the dominant male did not
|
|||
|
506 censure.
|
|||
|
507 Warily the all stepped back a pace as the human started to stir.
|
|||
|
508 *=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
|
|||
|
509 Piper: OK?
|
|||
|
510 All: yes its me (*=*=*=*=*)
|
|||
|
511 *=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
|
|||
|
512 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
513 Hmm -- this demands some thought. Yes, of course, OK -- more than that,
|
|||
|
514 its looking like a very fertle situation...
|
|||
|
515 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
516 ch /fertle/fertile
|
|||
|
517 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
518 B.E.M. aka Bug Eyed Monster, somebody has been reading the archives again!
|
|||
|
519 What's next? The programmer's Ten Commandments? Complaint letter to robot
|
|||
|
520 corp? DPA Exam?
|
|||
|
521
|
|||
|
522 0707070707070707070707070707070707070707070707070707070707070707070707070707
|
|||
|
523 SFRRD PAJ\F LCPAD ECLDM JCLD\ FEEFX LDCED EXXLD CEDVX EEFYR ADCLI DYADJ
|
|||
|
524
|
|||
|
525 ACIUH BMXJD LASD\ FEEFX LDCED IAENJ FYAID FLD\F EEFXL DALPJ UDXLD PTFED
|
|||
|
526
|
|||
|
527 IFEO[ \D_FD SCLPH BPXDA LIDEM DEPXJ UDCED NRACL RUDCE DVXEE FYRA[ LD_YG
|
|||
|
528
|
|||
|
529 PDFDS FRRDA LIDFP DMXJD PTAHB LASD\ FEEFX LDRXX OEDJA CRRUD ZXXI[ \D_VR
|
|||
|
530
|
|||
|
531 ACEAD JAEVX LIDFL DNXIA DFLDO FLI[\ HB
|
|||
|
532
|
|||
|
533 0707070707070707070707070707070707070707 05/30/85 15:35:26 070707070707070707
|
|||
|
534
|
|||
|
535 RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY
|
|||
|
536
|
|||
|
FDCZ_ JAADP TC[_P DLASD \FEE_ FXLDR XXOED ZXXI[ LD_@Y GP[H@ B_IXD UXGD@
|
|||
|
537 PTFL@ ODPTC PDUXG D@NCL D@OAA VDPTA @D[K_ LAS[K HB__\ F@E@E FXLDJ GLL_F
|
|||
|
538 @LZDC PDCDJ ACEXL CYR@A D@VCN A[YHB
|
|||
|
539
|
|||
|
RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY
|
|||
|
540
|
|||
|
541 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
|
|||
|
542 I've hurt her. Oh God, I've hurt her. Never did I mean
|
|||
|
543 to do that. And it hurts deep inside. The one true friend
|
|||
|
544 I have in the world, and I've hurt her. I said something
|
|||
|
545 I shouldn't, and I caused her great pain, and now that pain is
|
|||
|
546 mine as well. I've hurt her, oh God, I've hurt her.
|
|||
|
547 I opened my heart, I told her my deepest most private
|
|||
|
548 desires, and I hurt her, oh God, I've hurt her. I said the
|
|||
|
549 wrong words, I did the wrong thing, and now I would give anything
|
|||
|
550 to take it back again, I hurt her, oh God, I've hurt her.
|
|||
|
551 If only she would speak, say it's alright, but instead
|
|||
|
552 there is silence, a deep dark silence so dark. I've hurt her,
|
|||
|
553 oh God, why did I hurt her. Through my own stupidity I've lost
|
|||
|
554 my one true friend, the one I could speak of such things to,
|
|||
|
555 but I said the wrong thing, and now I've hurt her.
|
|||
|
556 And it hurts deep inside, like a knife striking deep,
|
|||
|
557 draining the life giving fluids from inside. I thought I could
|
|||
|
558 say what I felt deep inside, but I hurt her with my love, I
|
|||
|
559 said the wrong thing, and now she hates me because I hurt her.
|
|||
|
560 Oh God, why did I have to hurt her? She hates me because
|
|||
|
561 I hurt her.
|
|||
|
562 If only she would speak, say it's alright. I've lost the
|
|||
|
563 one I could talk to, I've lost my best friend. All because
|
|||
|
564 of my own stupidity. I've hurt her. Oh God, I've hurt her,
|
|||
|
565 and I've hurt myself as well.
|
|||
|
566 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
|
|||
|
567
|
|||
|
568 Hmmmm.... Seems like someone's getting the silent treatment. Stick
|
|||
|
569 it out kid.
|
|||
|
570 +_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_
|
|||
|
571
|
|||
|
572 -=*=- The Inn had emptied, the last candle had been guttering, yet -=*=-
|
|||
|
573 -=*=- one silken shape remained in the near-darkness. A speck of -=*=-
|
|||
|
574 -=*=- light reflected off the figurine she was watching, and slowly-=*=-
|
|||
|
575 -=*=- the candle's flame grew in strength, smooth and tall, bathing-=*=-
|
|||
|
576 -=*=- the ivory feathers with light until it's shape was effused -=*=-
|
|||
|
577 -=*=- with molten dew. It was a beautiful statue, liquid in line -=*=-
|
|||
|
578 -=*=- and charged with power in its design, rearing high with wings-=*=-
|
|||
|
579 -=*=- gracefully aloft, and those eyes...They glittered with life, -=*=-
|
|||
|
580 -=*=- and appeared to be gazing imploringly back at the cat... -=*=-
|
|||
|
581 ^^^^^ 'kitty': I really hate to ask, but do you recall when last
|
|||
|
582 ^^^^^ I wrote of said 'figurine'? About 111 days ago? >G
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TOTAL NUMBER OF LINES = 582
|