633 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
633 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
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1 If you are in need of help, you need but ask....
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2 *************************** INSTALLED: 4 MAR 86 *********************
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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 the right 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 @#@#@#@g$%$%$%$%^e^%^%^%^^&^&^&^&N&*&*
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21 I believe the words to say are "AT
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22 THE TOP!!"
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23 @#@#@#@##$#$ TANK @#(#@$@#$#@$#%$%$
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24 Right! And for me, "Almost made it..." [*=*] DELTA FIVE [*=*]
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25 \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\THE DESTROYER\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\46
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26 Marannon Qoasis xennon-Silmarilyn stepped fully out of the shadows. She looked about fifty or so (she had to be)
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27 and there was a merciless hardness to the lines of her face. James knew instantly that nothing would ever touch this
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28 woman. Any humanity in her had long died out. He tried to struggle to his feet but failed. His wounds were healing
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29 incredibly fast, but not quite that fast. "You set this all up, didn't you?"
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30 She paused for a moment before answering. "You are rumored to be quite intelligent. Why don't you tell me what you
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31 think happened."
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32 "Okay, I will. This was a power play. A coup. You couldn't destroy the circle on your own, so you decided to bring
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33 in some outside muscle. Me. Of course to lure the right fish you need the right bait. You did something to cause
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34 Tariya to become restless and leave her home. And by some means or other you guided her to the Inn, where I was,
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35 though God knows how you knew. You kept an eye on us while I tried to go about my quest. Unfortunately, we kinda got
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36 sidetracked." He coughed into his hand. No blood. He was healing. "It took you a while to find us again. By then you
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37 had gotten impatient. If you didn't get me soon, you wouldn't need me at all. So you sent bounty hunters after me.
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38 They watched until the right moment, and grabbed me. I'll bet you weren't counting on Tariya coming along to rescue me
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39 or us busting loose and getting away." He saw from her expression that he had hit a bullseye.
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40 He continued, "I didn't get really suspicious until Tariya announced that you had the means that I had been looking
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41 for to cure myself for so long. Sure, coincidences happen, but that was a bit much for even me to swallow. Only three
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42 of those gems exist, and one suddenly, conveniently surfaces... Anyway, what clinched it was the news that you had
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43 seceded almost the day she had left, knowing it would lead to war. After hearing that, I asked myself a few hard
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44 questions about everything that was going on. I'd have to be an idiot not to see it. Tariya was supposed to bring me
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45 here, and the gem was a bargaining chip, a lever to get me to do what you wanted. Only it turned out you ddn't need
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46 it. Did I leave anything out?"
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47 Marannon clapped her hands. "Amazing. You are as intelligent as they say. You only missed one point. I didn't do
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48 anything to make Tariya leave. She volunteered."
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49 He felt a chill run through him. "What?"
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50 "Your book," she explained, "is very widely read. Somehow she got ahold of a copy over a year ago. Ever since then
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51 she has been obsessed with the Destroyer."
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52 "With... me?" James said in a small voice.
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53 "She thought I didn't know, and I let her play her little game of secrecy. I saw no harm in it and it mattered
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54 little. But I suddenly saw a very important part for you in my little coup. I asked her if she would meet you to bring
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55 you back. She jumped at the chance."
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56 Now he was confused. "But why did she go along with me when she could have brought me here?"
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57 She suddenly looked troubled. "I... don't know. As far as I could tell, she didn't want to return. She is very
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58 adventuresome. As I once did. Though she is my last, she is still my favorite." She caught the angry gleam in James'
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59 eye and, a little nervously, asked, "What's the matter?"
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60 "You-you..." He was so mad that it took him a minute to calm down enough to speak. "She was adventuresome, all
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61 right. And she always got into trouble." He had to cough again. This time there was blood. "She... got... DEAD! And
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62 it's all your fault!"
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63 "My fault?" Marannon looked genuinely confused.
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64 "You let her go knowing full well what could've happened! I did everything in my power to save her, but finally it
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65 wasn't enough! You could have done something! But I'm going to do something. As soon as I get up off this floor, I am
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66 going to slice you to pieces!"
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67 As if lecturing a little child, she said, "In the first place, you don't have the power. What little you DO have is
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68 engaged in keeping you alive and will be for quite some time to come. Second, I know of your feelings for her. And she
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69 loves you very deeply. Why would you want to hurt her by murdering her mother?"
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70 James slammed his fist into the floor, which stubbornly refused to break. Tears were streaming down his cheeks.
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71 "Stop it! Stop talking about here like she's still here! I can't hurt her any more because she's dead!"
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72 In a matter-of-fact voice, Marannon said, "But she isn't dead."
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73 \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\THE DESTROYER\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
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74 HUH? DID ANYBODY UNDERSTAND THE ABOVE ENTRY? I'M FINDING IT HARDER AN HARDER
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75 TO CARE WHAT HAPPENS IN THIS STORY. ANY PROGRESS ON THE PIZZA PARTY?
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76 \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
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77 @#$@#$@#$@#%#$%#^$%^$%^$%&^%%&^*^&*^(*&(&&)*()*_)*_*)&((&(*&^(^&*%&%^&^%&^%
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78 Good work DESTROYER!!! Please keep it up.
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79
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80 @$@#$@#$@#$#@%#$%$#%$#%#$%$#%$#^&$^$&%^&%^&^%*^&%*^&*(^* TANK ^$%^$#^#$%^%$^%$
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81
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82 O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+
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83 Ditto on TANK's comments. Do I sense a major plot twist here?
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84 O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+ POPPING IN O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+
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85
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86 :::::=====:::::=====
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87 Rabbitlurk.
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88 :::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==Zephyr====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====
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89
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90 {||{{|{}|||||{||}||||||||}||||{||}|}}{|}}}|||||}}||{{||||{}|{|}}||||{}|}{||||||
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91
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92 is it only me or was tanis a lot like this? it always was like something to do
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93 on a warm summer evening. an adventure without quality. writing without too
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94 much quantity. is it only me, or could it be the weather?
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95 |||{||||}|||}}|{|{||||||||{|||||}||||||||{|||||||{|||||{||||||||}||||{|||||||||
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96 yech! I jus hate it when dat happenz.
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97
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98 DESTROYER:
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99 Carry....on.
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100 Capt. Nemo.
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101 ______________________________JD 2446494.7091______________________________
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102 .-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.RabidLurk.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.Emu
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103 PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
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104 #$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$
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105 The Hell Machine
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106 (2)
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107
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108 Not quite meanwhile:
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109 "He was supposed to be here half an hour ago!" Frank Lindstrom paced restlessly around the basement lab of the
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110 Mechtronix, Inc. Portland annex. He couldn't pace far, as the room was all but packed with sophisticated equipment. He
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111 managed a circle maybe five feet in diameter. It distracted the others.
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112 "You know Roy." Replied Jean Lambert. She was sitting at Frank's monitoring station, trying to make sense of the
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113 screens. A physicist she wasn't. "Responsibility is not his forte."
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114 "Tell me about it." Frank sighed. "But he sounded so worried. He made me promise to postpone until he got
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115 here."
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116 Norbert Howell looked up from the X-men comic he had been reading at his station, "Well, we can't postpone much
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117 longer. The capaciters won't hold this big a charge very long without burning up something expensive. If we don't start
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118 in the next few minutes, I'll have to shut down. It'll take at least a week to clean up and restart the
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119 reactor."
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120 "Damn." Frank muttered.
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121 Jean got up and went down to the lower level where the fourth member of the team was sitting. "Douglas? How are you
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122 feeling?"
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123 Douglas Everett looked up from the photograph he was holding. "O-okay, I guess. I'm... I'm still ready to try, if
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124 you are."
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125 "Good." She was worried about Doug. He was emotionally unstable and lightly retarded. He had been married until
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126 about a year ago, and then his wife, Alice, had left him for another man. The shock put him in an institution, from
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127 which he had only been recently released. Alice had contacted him not long after about the possiblity of a
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128 reconciliation. Doug had been overjoyed. Alice was the only light in an otherwise dismal life. Then, about two days
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129 ago, he recieved news that she had been killed in a skiing accident on Mt. Hood. He did not lose his grip on reality
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130 again, as everybody feared he might, but something in him had definitely changed. There were those who thought it might
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131 have been better if he had lost it again.
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132 Frank sat down in his chair and scanned the readouts. "Everything's peaked for the conditions. It'll take us more
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133 like a month to recalibrate." He looked around at them. "If Roy's not going to show, then I can't take his warning very
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134 seriously. He is prone to exaggeration. I say we go ahead. Any objections?"
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135 There were none.
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136 "Stations, then." Frank said. He started the videotapes. Norbert stashed his comic and began tuning the reactor
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137 controls. Doug pocketed the photograph and sat back as Jean placed the electroencephelagraphic helmet on his head. The
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138 entire experiment hinged on Doug. He had been long ago tested and found to have very strong psionic abilities. He
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139 couldn't conciously read minds or bend spoons, but the potential was there. That potential was what made it possible
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140 for the helmet to read images from his brain. Those images were comverted to computer impulses and fed into the heart
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141 of the experiment, the Genesis machine.
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142 The Genesis machine was a small cube, about two inches on a side (Norbert, with his comic-book humor, had dubbed it
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143 the 'Cosmic Cube'). It was mirrored-silver and consisted of a non-conducting alloy formed around highly complex
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144 circuitry. It hung suspended behind thick glass at one end of the room with wires attached to each of its six sides.
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145 The processes in the Genesis machine were far too complicated to explain, but its theoretical purpose was to convert
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146 energy to matter. Norbert's fusion plasma reactor would supply energy in abundance, and the images from Doug's brain,
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147 far more detailed that anything a computer could generate, would provide a pattern for the forming matter. Assuming the
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148 whole thing worked, which was iffy. Frank controlled the link from his console. Jean's task was to coach Doug and watch
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149 his condition.
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150 Norbert called out, "Output: seven point three two five gigavolts. Reactor at optimum."
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151 Frank answered, "All components read good. Temp on capaciter bank four is a little high."
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152 "Told ya."
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153 "Jean?" Frank called down.
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154 Jean looked at Doug. "Now remember, just like we practiced. Visualise the cylinder. Concentrate on its every aspect.
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155 Concentrate."
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156 "I've got it." Frank watched as a computer enhanced image of a cylinder appeared on his screen. He made some last
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157 minute adjustments. "All readings within safe limits. Voltages consistant, feed noise point oh oh oh four. Looks good,
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158 folks." Excitement surged though him. The greatest scientists in the world hadn't even dreamed of something like
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159 this...
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160 A platform rested at the opposite end of the room from the cube, hidden behind lead shielding. It was where the
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161 object was supposed to materialise. Frank said, "Vector coordinates," and read out a series of numbers. Norbert read a
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162 list of numbers off an auxiliary screen and concurred. Frank transmitted the numbers to the cube, in essence telling it
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163 to focus its power on the platform.
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164 Jean watched Doug's vital signs on a monitor. They showed he was as excited as the rest of them. Completely
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165 professional now, she coached Doug verbally while continuously taking readings on his brainwaves. The peaks and valleys
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166 were greatly exaggerated, which was normal for him.
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167 Jean said nothing to them, which Frank took as an all clear. He flipped a final switch. Now Doug was linked via
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168 computor directly to the cube. The Genesis machine was ready. All it needed now was power. "The cube is primed." Frank
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169 said. "It's all yours, Norbert."
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170 "Voltage seven point four oh five. Transmitting... now." Norbert snapped a single large black switch, feeding the
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171 full output of the reactor (enough power to incinerate a small town) to the Genesis machine. For exactly one second the
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172 cube shone like a miniature sun.
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173 And then all hell broke loose...
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174
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175 (To Be Continued...)
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176 #$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$#$# J.D. SILVERMAN $#$#$#$#$#$
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177
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178
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179 -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+-
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180 "No one admires the flame so much as the fool that has been burned." -PT
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181
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182 So much have I come to realize lately that it just makes me want to
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183 cry. Cry out, cry out load... Nah, bury my head and cry.
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184 You know who you are.
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185 -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -JUGGLER- -+- -+- -+- -+-
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186 [00%] 186. 0305 0229 [00%]
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187 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
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188 The piper found himself at the end of a very large empty hallway. It seemed
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189 to receede behind him into the infinite distance, and before the same. He
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190 was walking, slow even steps that raised no echoes down the softly resilient
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191 floor, past miles and miles of blank corridor.
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192 The changes came subtly. He could not even notice when they first began.
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193 First, slight shadows marked the endless walls of the corridor. At first
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194 they were imperceptable smudges, barely darkening the glowing walls, then
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195 they sharpened into barely visible objects. Some miles down the hallway,
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196 the piper could discern that the objects were gathered into groups, each
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197 object and each group growing more distinct as he traveled.
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198 He was tempted to stop and puzzle out the objects, but found that hurrying
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199 down the hallway to the next group brought more information. Subtly, they
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200 sharpened, taking clearer and clearer shape. When, at last, he could see
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201 clearly what lay before him, he reached out toward a shelf full of scrolls.
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202 He was unable to touch them, his hand passing through them as though they
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203 had been painted in the very air before him. Shrugging he continued down
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204 the softly glowing hallway, now lined with tables set along the right side
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205 (the left side was still featureless). As he walked, he brushed his hand
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206 along the side of the hallway. At first, he felt no resistance as he passed
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207 by a table full of scrolls. Later, a whisper of sensation as his hand
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208 penetrated the seeming reality, intensifying as he moved on, made him pull
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209 back to the center of the corridor.
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210 Again, just when it became apparent escaped his notice, but far ahead of
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211 him the corridor showed a change. Far ahead desks began along the left
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212 hand wall of the corridor, and the right hand wall became blank. The
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213 piper hurried down the hallway until he stood between the last desk on
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214 the right-hand wall and the first desk on the left-hand wall.
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215 He reached to the desk on the right hand wall and lifted up one of the
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216 five scrolls that lay on its surface. It had a reassuring solidity, the
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217 twin handles seemed polished by long use where they extended from the
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218 two cylinders of rolled material. The material of the scrolls was soft and
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219 flexible, somewhat like an extremely thin white leather. Somewhat clumsily,
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220 the piper grasped the handle extending from the right of one cylinder in
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221 his right hand, the left handle of the other with his left hand and rolled
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222 the two cylinders apart on the desk surface.
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223 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
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224 \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\marker\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
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225 ______________________________JD 2446495.5641______________________________
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226 Attention: PorSFiS has moved it's meeting place! Meetings are now in the BPA
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227 Auditorium. The address is 1002 NE Holladay, entrance is on 9th between
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228 Holladay & Pacific. Doors won't be open 'til 1:30.
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229 Most likely after-meeting pub is someplace called the "Backstreet" at 7th &
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230 Irving.
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231 Meeting this Saturday...
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232 ______________________Leonard_JD 2446495.5840______________________________
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233 \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
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234 ((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
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235 PIPER, I HAVE READ YOUR WORKS FOR QUITE SOME TIME NOW] I HAVE
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236 NOTICED THAT YOUR QUALITY IS GOOD, BUT INCONSISTANT. SOMETIMES
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237 YOUR STRUCTURE AND STYLE IS QUITE GOOD, ALMOST PROFESSIONAL.
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238 OTHER TIMES IT IS CLUNKY AND DIFFICULT TO READ SMOOTHLY, AS A
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239 STORY SHOULD BE. PERHAPS YOU SHOULD TAKE A LITTLE HARDER LOOK AT
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240 YOUR WRITING BEFORE PUTTING IT ON THE BOARD. THIS LAST ENTRY IS A
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241 GOOD EXAMPLE. THE 'RIGHT-HAND LEFT-HAND' STUFF IS DISTRACTING AND
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242 MAYBE A LITTLE SILLY. IT COULD HAVE BEEN DONE MUCH SMOOTHER.
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243 PLEASE DON'T BE OFFENDED BY THIS, I AM JUST TRYING TO OFFER A
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244 HELPFUL SUGGESTION. LOOK ON THE BRIGHT SIDE. AT LEAST YOU'RE
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245 MUCH BETTER AND MORE CONSISTANT THAT SOME I COULD NAME BUT WON'T.
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246 ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))[[[[[[[[freddy[[[[[[[[[[
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247
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248 ^!@$!$*#(*!$!#$@!@$(*($!#$#$!@#!@#@#$%@#(*@%#@&%&%$@$$%&%$%(*&*((&#@$#@$@%$*%$%@#$%*$#$#@%!^
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249 Ah, but great meaning may be heralded within every message, Intentions not yet known to those that only look so far
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250 as the surface may assuredly exist.
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251 Once again it comes time for the monthly meeting of the Portland Computer Society. I'm affraid that I'll have to bow
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252 out from making a personal appearance this time due to reasons, and distances, beyond my control.
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253 __Leonard__: Please be sure the disks I gave you get to the intended parties. I believe they will be present. As for
|
|||
|
254 that compilation you mentioned, perhaps I might give it a glance this weekend. The moving of PorSFiS' meeting area
|
|||
|
255 makes it questionable, though.
|
|||
|
256 ^*(_%$#@!%%@_@#@!!#$%##_(!#@%$#^ L'homme sans Parity ^?&$%#&%&%$#@(*%(&%%#*$(*&!$#%#!#(!%^
|
|||
|
257 PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
|
|||
|
258 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
259 As the scroll opened, the piper's attention focused on the surface that
|
|||
|
260 slowly became revealed. The symbols were unfamiliar, but seemed to hold a
|
|||
|
261 meaning. For long moments he pondered, then, as though a switch had been
|
|||
|
262 thrown in his mind, he saw/felt/smelled/heard himself back in the inn.
|
|||
|
263 He was simoultaneously experiencing the moments when the innkeeper had
|
|||
|
264 disappeared, feeling the shock and dismay, feeling his own recklesness and
|
|||
|
265 disregard for his own safety, and reading a scroll. Reading the scroll,
|
|||
|
266 he both participated in the action and observed the action. He looked
|
|||
|
267 closer and saw the tangled motives that had led to disregarding his own
|
|||
|
268 safety, and more important, disregarding the safety of the others that might
|
|||
|
269 be foolish enough to follow his rash example.
|
|||
|
270 He saw the pressures of dark loss... loss of the one creature that had given
|
|||
|
271 him unreserved love, the loss of the pegasus. He saw the loss of the woman
|
|||
|
272 who had reached deep within his vulnerable heart, the woman who had held
|
|||
|
273 him on that dark plane between realities, who had wounded him much deeper
|
|||
|
274 than the wound she had inflicted on herself with his knife, wounded him
|
|||
|
275 in his image of self-worth. She had not inteded to wound him... she had
|
|||
|
276 only wanted to return to her home and family... she had felt nothing more
|
|||
|
277 than a vague liking, and he had not attempted to win a love that he felt
|
|||
|
278 for her.
|
|||
|
279 He saw the dark depression that he had harbored within him, building,
|
|||
|
280 festering, eating at the roots of his soul. He saw the dark, self-destructive
|
|||
|
281 urges that were building, pressuring him to turn away from friends, ignoring
|
|||
|
282 the helping hands that others had extended.
|
|||
|
283 He saw the vanity, the foolish pride that had brought him here.
|
|||
|
284 He was humbled.
|
|||
|
285 Slowly the piper set the scroll down, looking first one way down the vast
|
|||
|
286 hallway, looking at the records that faded into the past, then looked down
|
|||
|
287 the other way looking at records fading into the future.
|
|||
|
288 A mirror of yourself can show a cruel reflection. It can show the weaknesses
|
|||
|
289 and vanities that we try to pretend are not there. It can show the strength,
|
|||
|
290 the goodness, also -- but the small cruelties, the petty crimes against
|
|||
|
291 ourselves and others, the unreasonable vanities, somehow seem to weigh
|
|||
|
292 much heavier. The piper looked at himself, dropped his face into his hands
|
|||
|
293 and cried.
|
|||
|
294 Some time later, the piper gained a grip on himself and realized that in
|
|||
|
295 his awful egotism he had endangered the person that he had ostensibly gone
|
|||
|
296 to "rescue." In his mad dash, he had endangered a friend -- not gone to
|
|||
|
297 recue him, but gone to seek death himself. In doing so, he had fouled up
|
|||
|
298 any legitimate rescue attempts, and perhaps suceeded in killing himself as
|
|||
|
299 well as the innkeeper.
|
|||
|
300 With a heavy heart the piper yielded to the gossamer tug of the line that
|
|||
|
301 connected him to his body. He no longer tried to avoid the pain of the
|
|||
|
302 return, he welcomed it as punishment for his foolishness, at the same time
|
|||
|
303 despising the impulse that caused him to want to punish himself.
|
|||
|
304 Scenes began to flicker as the silver cord that bound him to his body
|
|||
|
305 began to thicken. The gentle pull became greater, the speed increased,
|
|||
|
306 increaseing the pull and thickness of the cord.
|
|||
|
307 Suddenly, the universe seemed to *snap* around him. He was in his body
|
|||
|
308 again, cringing against the expected pain as he drew a breath.
|
|||
|
309 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
310 Freddy - thanks for the good words. I don't write before I log onto
|
|||
|
311 BW-- what you see here is "first-draft" stuff since I don't know where
|
|||
|
312 the story has gone since my last entry. In a multi-author setting, I might
|
|||
|
313 have a story line worked out mentally, but find the situation completely
|
|||
|
314 changed when my chance for an entry arises. I do work out the broad outlines
|
|||
|
315 pretty carefully, and often toss it totally out when it doesn't fit.
|
|||
|
316 Also, I use a terminal, not a computer -- and with ENTER ONLY there's no
|
|||
|
317 chance to fix a typo in a previous line...
|
|||
|
318 I agree, polishing would help, but then there probably wouldn't be any
|
|||
|
319 entries, either...
|
|||
|
320 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
321 ************************************************************
|
|||
|
322 Piper: chicken soup waiting at the INN
|
|||
|
323 Prometheus: see bottom of drive b.
|
|||
|
324 *******************************************kD************************
|
|||
|
325 The Soviets won't have to hit the U. S. with 100 hydrogen warheads to destroy
|
|||
|
326 us--all they'll need to do is explode two or three bombs high in the atmosp
|
|||
|
327 here. The result? The electromagnetic pulse generated by the bombs will wipe
|
|||
|
328 out virtually every computer record in the country. Only a few data banks in
|
|||
|
329 sheilded command cneters would survive. Private and public records, financial
|
|||
|
330 transactions--all would disappear. No industrialized nation coulc survive such
|
|||
|
331 \\\\\\\\\\now tell us something we don't know...\\\\\\\\\\mark\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
|||
|
332 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
|
|||
|
333 BEEN A LONG, LONG TIME. I RETURN WITH NEWS OF A GREAT MULTIUSER BBS UP NOW.
|
|||
|
334 CALLED THE M.U.X. SYSTEM, IT CAN HANDLE 36 LINES AT ONCE (PHONE LINES). TRY
|
|||
|
335 IT! 231-xxxx FROM 8PM-10AM, FULL DUPLEX.
|
|||
|
336 HIT ONE <RET> FOR 1200, 2 FOR 300. AT THE PROMPT, TYPE THIS EXACTLY :
|
|||
|
337 LETMEINYOURBBS
|
|||
|
338 (NO LEADING SPACE). USE <RET> FOR I.D.
|
|||
|
339 NUMBER AND "GUEST" FOR LOGON IF NEEDED UNTIL YOU ARE VERIFIED FOR A PASSWORD.
|
|||
|
340 HAVE FUN, JCP1
|
|||
|
341 BEEN A LONG LONELY LONELY LONELY LONELY LONG TIME-----ZEP
|
|||
|
342 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::>>::::::::::::::::::::::
|
|||
|
343
|
|||
|
344 HI, DOES ANYONE ELSE OUT THERE HAVE
|
|||
|
345 ANY REAL ESTATE SOFTWARE? CALL GARY
|
|||
|
346 @ 778-xxxx DAYS OR 629-xxxx EVES.
|
|||
|
347 BYE
|
|||
|
348 ______________________________JD 2446496.7795______________________________
|
|||
|
349 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|||
|
350 Sleep pulled at Milchar incessantly, attempting to lure him away from what he
|
|||
|
351 felt was his duty, to watch Piper. It was becoming harder to fight it off, and
|
|||
|
352 once Milchar had dozed off for a few seconds athen snapped awake.
|
|||
|
353 Usually it was possible for a mage to use a sleep-surrogate spell when it was
|
|||
|
354 necessary to remain on watch for an extended period, but Milchar dared not risk
|
|||
|
355 dipping any deeper into his shallow pool of magic reserve. He had not felt
|
|||
|
356 this drained since he had been placed under a dampening field during the Ruby
|
|||
|
357 Valley adventure.
|
|||
|
358 The Ruby Valley... it seemed to have happened only a few days ago. Perhaps
|
|||
|
359 the best thing that had happened there, aside from the saving of the people in
|
|||
|
360 the Sapphire Valley, was Piper's meeting Peg. Milchar wondered if Piper
|
|||
|
361 and Peg would meet this day.
|
|||
|
362 Cragmore's voice broke through Milchar's wall of thought. "Something's
|
|||
|
363 happening."
|
|||
|
364 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Milchar ++++++++++ 06 Mar 86 at 11:02pm +++
|
|||
|
365 \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
|||
|
366 If anyone out there tries to get on the MUX bbs mentioned above, either success-
|
|||
|
367 fully or not, please report on the results.
|
|||
|
368 ----------------------------------------- P. V. Jeltz ----------------------
|
|||
|
369
|
|||
|
370 WHY?
|
|||
|
371 :(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(
|
|||
|
372 YOU KNOW, I THINK THE MAIN PROBLEM THAT I AM HAVING WITH THE
|
|||
|
373 MULTI-AUTHOR STORY, ASIDE FROM THE SLOW PACE, IS ALL THIS PSYCHIC
|
|||
|
374 STUFF. JUST LIKE THE LAST STORY, MOST OF THE TIME IS SPENT STUCK
|
|||
|
375 IN ONE PLACE WITH ALL THE CHARACTERS CONCENTRATING ON ONE
|
|||
|
376 CHARACTER. PERSONALLY, MIND-READING, TELEPATHIC COMMUNICATION,
|
|||
|
377 AND MENTAL SURGERY (LIKE WAS PERFORMED ON TRAINOR) IS REALLY
|
|||
|
378 QUITE UNREALISITIC AND HARD FOR OTHERS TO RELATE TO, MAKING
|
|||
|
379 A DULL, PLODDING STORY. (I KNOW THAT'S NOT ENTIRELY THE CASE
|
|||
|
380 HERE BUT YOU GET MY POINT) PIPER, AT LEAST, IS TRYING TO
|
|||
|
381 BREATHE SOME LIFE INTO THE STORY WITH AN APPARENT UPCOMING PLOT
|
|||
|
382 REVELATION THAT MIGHT BE INTERESTNG. MORE OF YOU SHOULD TRY THIS.
|
|||
|
383 BRING IN SOME OUTSIDE INFLUENCES. INTRODUCE A MAJOR VILLAIN (IF
|
|||
|
384 NOBODY ELSE WANTS TO TRY THIS, I AM WILLING. THE VILLAIN ROLE
|
|||
|
385 SEEMS TO SUIT ME). GET SOME A*C*T*I*O*N GOING. NOT MENTAL ACTION,
|
|||
|
386 BUT PHYSICAL. MAYBE EVEN SOME CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT. YOU SEEM TO
|
|||
|
387 HAVE SOME WEL-DEVELOPED CHARACTERS, BUT FOR THE LIFE OF ME I
|
|||
|
388 CAN'T SEE HOW, IF ALL THE STORES THEY WERE IN WAS LIKE THIS ONE.
|
|||
|
389 PUSH THAT PLOT FORWARD! PUT SOME L*I*F*E INTO THAT STORY. I KNOW
|
|||
|
390 YOU CAN DO IT, I'VE SEEN IT DONE. DON'T BE SO AFRAID OF USNG OTHER
|
|||
|
391 PEOPLE'S CHARACTERS, OR TREADING ON THEIR TOES. EVERYBODY HAS IDEAS
|
|||
|
392 ABOUT HOW THEY WANT THE STORY TO GO, BUT MAYBE SOME OF THESE IDEAS
|
|||
|
393 NED TO BE SACRIFICED IN FAVOR OF ONES THAT WILL MOVE THE STORY BETTER.
|
|||
|
394 OTHERWISE, YOU ARE LIKE A BUNCH OF PEOPLE TRYING TO MOVE A HEAVY
|
|||
|
395 LOAD BUT EVERYBODY IS ON A DIFFERENT SIDE, PUSHING IN A DIFFERENT
|
|||
|
396 DIRECTION. YOU WASTE A LOT OF EFFORT AND GET NOWHERE.
|
|||
|
397 AGAIN, DON'T TAKE OFFENSE. I AM JUST TRYING TO CONSTRUCTIVELY
|
|||
|
398 CRITISIZE. I KNOW NEGATIVE CRITICISM IS NOT POPULAR HERE, BUT
|
|||
|
399 SOMETIMES A BOOT IN THE BUTT WORKS MUCH BETTER THAN SOME WELL-
|
|||
|
400 MEANING BUT UNDESERVED KIND WORDS. AND I THINK YOU WOULD ALL LIKE
|
|||
|
401 TO IMPROVE, OR YOU WOULDN'T BE TRYING.
|
|||
|
402 :(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(freddy:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(
|
|||
|
403 -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+-
|
|||
|
404 freddy: Not ALL the stuff that goes on here must be hack'n'slash
|
|||
|
405 material. I find it quite interesting to read of a story dealing
|
|||
|
406 with what people are Thinking about rather than the fact that they go
|
|||
|
407 all over creation and muck it up.
|
|||
|
408 L'homme: Sorry to have let you down. I had something ready for you but
|
|||
|
409 things just didn't work out. The plan was there, but the actualiza-
|
|||
|
410 tion never happened. Will tell more later...
|
|||
|
411 -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -JUGGLER- -+- -+- -+- -+-
|
|||
|
412 PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
|
|||
|
413 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
414 Freddy -- feel free to join in-- it IS a multi-author story, after all, and
|
|||
|
415 the plot twists that someone else adds is a lot of the fun. Please be
|
|||
|
416 cautious, however, about playing someone else's character. We've found that
|
|||
|
417 too many hard feelings come about when someone has not thought through how
|
|||
|
418 another person's character would react to something their character did.
|
|||
|
419 For example, I'd get pretty mad if someone caused the piper to come off
|
|||
|
420 his sickbed swinging his skean dubh and cut Milchar's throat. It's out
|
|||
|
421 of character, and doesn't fit the motivations of the character. It would
|
|||
|
422 be easy to put words or actions into another's character to move into a plot
|
|||
|
423 twist that you want to see. Usually, the others will ignore an entry of
|
|||
|
424 that sort. (By others, I mean other authors, of course.)
|
|||
|
425 It does get slow, sometimes, but that's the hazard of communicating only
|
|||
|
426 on the BBS through the story itself. If you want to join, please do so,
|
|||
|
427 come in with a different point of view, but communicate with your actions
|
|||
|
428 and from your own viewpoint. Let us react to you just as we would in
|
|||
|
429 "real" life. If it's convincing, you're part of the story. If not, you're
|
|||
|
430 in your own reality, divorced from ours. You obviously are not within
|
|||
|
431 the bard's transporter with the rest of us, but this reality is almost
|
|||
|
432 totally unexplored. If you wanted to postulate a chlorine-breathing,
|
|||
|
433 slime-covered, farmer whose crops were sessile stomaches...
|
|||
|
434 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
|||
|
435 :::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====
|
|||
|
436 Piper: Can I join in on the story? I've got an idea for a character that
|
|||
|
437 just MIGHT work out!
|
|||
|
438 :::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==Zephyr::=====:::::=====:::::=====::::z=====
|
|||
|
439
|
|||
|
440 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
|
|||
|
441 The Former came from under a pile of leaves. The horse and rider were
|
|||
|
442 now trotting down the path. The trees dropped leaves and thin lines of sun on
|
|||
|
443 them as they went on their way. The Former scrambled from the leaves and into
|
|||
|
444 the road. No other riders were coming down the path.
|
|||
|
445 A warmth spread over the Former. The source was a ditch the trees had
|
|||
|
446 poured leaves into. The leaves were orange and red. There were spots where
|
|||
|
447 the leaves had fallen through. As if there were holes. The Former leaned to
|
|||
|
448 look at one of them.
|
|||
|
449 The legends always said there was a place in the forest.
|
|||
|
450 A leap into the ditch resounded with a shout of pain. The Former
|
|||
|
451 decided to silence himself and look again into the pits. Radiating warmth
|
|||
|
452 swept into him as if it was an invitation. The Former dropped himself down
|
|||
|
453 one of the pits like a child drops himself down a slide.
|
|||
|
454 The wetness filled the space between his hairs. Soon his fur was
|
|||
|
455 sopping in the liquid. Immersion frightened the Former and he waded across
|
|||
|
456 the water slowly. The water. The water was in the legends. Immersion was in
|
|||
|
457 the legends also and if they were true he was about to change.
|
|||
|
458 The liquid he was in was an aqueous collection of stories and legend
|
|||
|
459 and a few amino acid proteins to boot. The change would occur firstly in the
|
|||
|
460 endomorphin glands and then spread to the putuitary and learstin glands. A
|
|||
|
461 new physical form would result.
|
|||
|
462 The Former thought the process might lead him into another of the
|
|||
|
463 evolutionay stages his ancestors were lead into. Then again, it might be any
|
|||
|
464 form and there was nothing to do. The Former slept a long time.
|
|||
|
465 He woke in a dream. A strange procession of what he was startled him
|
|||
|
466 into the dream from sleep. A dove and a wolf diseased with rabies. The lives
|
|||
|
467 of animals who were not men always fascinated him. A mouse and a mouser.
|
|||
|
468 Their lives were his and he woke again.
|
|||
|
469 It was a tall tree he looked at. Standing from the roots he looked at
|
|||
|
470 it ever higher. It was a tall tree indeed. And behind it stood a fine Inn and
|
|||
|
471 a rowan tree. It took only a moment to travel to them. It was a longer time
|
|||
|
472 for anyone to notice the new apparition.
|
|||
|
473 A tall and white animal. Two people in Old English dress drew swords
|
|||
|
474 and sent them into their scabbards once they noticed where they were and who
|
|||
|
475 was in the place. An inventor studied the motions of his legs for a moment
|
|||
|
476 and then observed the same motions of spiders on his table. The rest simply
|
|||
|
477 ignored him and went on with their conversances.
|
|||
|
478 The face of a malamute and the proportions of muscularity and bones
|
|||
|
479 of one also. The animal was on hind legs and walked with faint difficulty. It
|
|||
|
480 went to a table and got a piece of white cloth from a seamstress at a nearby
|
|||
|
481 table and a few pieces of technology from a trader. As the night dawned on
|
|||
|
482 the Inn and the patrons inside it.
|
|||
|
483 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
|
|||
|
484
|
|||
|
485 ch /The legends/ The legends/
|
|||
|
486
|
|||
|
487 ______________________________JD 2446497.5822______________________________
|
|||
|
488 No time for an entry. Gotta work overtime tomorrow.
|
|||
|
489 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~BARD~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|||
|
490 go
|
|||
|
491 on
|
|||
|
492 and
|
|||
|
493 type
|
|||
|
494 enter
|
|||
|
495
|
|||
|
496
|
|||
|
497
|
|||
|
498 list
|
|||
|
499 help
|
|||
|
500
|
|||
|
501 are you there
|
|||
|
502 S
|
|||
|
503
|
|||
|
504
|
|||
|
505 X
|
|||
|
506
|
|||
|
507
|
|||
|
508
|
|||
|
509 LIST
|
|||
|
510
|
|||
|
511 HELP
|
|||
|
512 ______________________________________________________________________________
|
|||
|
513 Hack and slash had its day here, but that day was a long time ago, and
|
|||
|
514 many Inngoers have grown tired of the incessant action action action story
|
|||
|
515 and wish to read something with a little thought and a little depth. But
|
|||
|
516 people will complain if you try to put something they have to use their
|
|||
|
517 noggins on, and others will complain if you write nothing about mindless
|
|||
|
518 action. It's tougher than trying to please Siskel and Ebert. The critics
|
|||
|
519 don't seem to like dialogue. They don't like long patterns of thought. Try
|
|||
|
520 to combine the two, and you are accused of being long-winded. It's a
|
|||
|
521 blasted shame that even the alleged friendly criticism comes in the form
|
|||
|
522 of attack without alternative and tongue lashing for the sake of
|
|||
|
523 exercise. Instead of wasting 40 lines displaying questionable grasp of
|
|||
|
524 communication skills, write something yourself. Do, don't complain. Show,
|
|||
|
525 don't tell. Stop your bloody pontificating, roll up your sleeves, and
|
|||
|
526 demonstrate some of your own ability. We try not to write comic books
|
|||
|
527 here, really we do. Don't condemn us for putting a little thought behind
|
|||
|
528 what we do. Don't flame us for trying to introduce some morality into
|
|||
|
529 our story lines. Understand that we realize that death is a part of life,
|
|||
|
530 and can sometimes occur with the aid of a crooked dagger or a lighting
|
|||
|
531 bolt, or can occur from within, no physical aids needed. Your head should
|
|||
|
532 guide your actions, not some blood-lust or need for contant instant
|
|||
|
533 gratification. How hollow that is.
|
|||
|
534 ___A reader who enjoys Piper's hallway of past and future, Milchar and
|
|||
|
535 Bard's desire to keep a friend alive, Cragmore's respect for individual
|
|||
|
536 rights of choice, and the Innkeeper's realization of what caused all
|
|||
|
537 these sorrows.___
|
|||
|
538
|
|||
|
539 FLAME ON FLAIL ON WHAT ELSE CAN YOU DO?
|
|||
|
540 \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|
|||
|
541 ::::::::::::O O:::::::::03/08::::::::::::::::::::::::01:30:::::::O O:::::::::::
|
|||
|
542 CISTOP: several of the files on the last two Archive disks seem a bit damaged.
|
|||
|
543 30DEC85 - lines 248-264; 09JAN86 - 68-74; 11JAN86 - 100,435,568;
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544 13JAN86 - 397,469,561; 16JAN86 - 254,542,615; 19JAN86 - 164,237,351,428;
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545 22JAN86 - 240 it looks like the CR/LFs between the lines are missing,
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546 and the lines even more confusing than can be attributed to the corresponding
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547 entries. Was there a problem in making our copies, or are you masters that
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548 way too? [ch /you/your/]
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549 :::::::::::::O O::::::::::::::::::voyeur:::::::::::::::::::::O O:::::::::::::::
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550 HELLO
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551 HELLOHELLO
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552 -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+- -+-
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553 Know that there are others available...
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554 -+- -+- -+- -+- -JUGGLER- -+-
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555 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
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556 Zephyr, and all who wish to join --
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557 Please do. It seems that we need a discussion of the appropriate rules
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558 governing multi-author stories, however. Those of us who have participated
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559 in the various story lines have worked out a set of unwritten rules that
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560 we hold to, but tend to be intolerant of those who violate our codes.
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561 Perhaps we need to talk them out and reach a consensus as to what we consider
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562 unacceptable.
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563 We've got to realize that a multi-author story will often drag. If a
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564 person, for some reason, can't make an entry, the whole story can come to a
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565 screeching halt. On the other hand, putting explicit words or actions on
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566 another character is pretty rude. You might think you're acting in character
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567 for another, but that person probably won't share that impression.
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568 I use the technique of branching off from the main story to a sub-story
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569 concerning my character to forward his development. This avoids stalling
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570 what I want to say when I have something particular to put into the story.
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571 I try to avoid anticipating other's reactions to my character's actions.
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572 It seems reasonable to use short bits of innocuous dialog to cover a
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573 conversation that happens, but *try* to keep the other's bits trivial and
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574 not something that will cause them major difficulties later. If you want to
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575 add a twist to a story, bring it in, then wait. Let the others involved
|
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576 react before you rush ahead.
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577 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
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578 The scene that met the piper's eyes in the cramped confines of the bard's
|
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579 transporter was confusing to say the least. The bard whas the only person
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580 in here when he had "left." Now, he saw the familiar face of Milchar,
|
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581 face lined and drawn with bone-deep fatigue, Cragmore standing aloof, looking
|
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582 somehow disapproving, the bard looking with concerned eyes, and the innkeeper
|
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583 kneeling on the floor in a coughing fit.
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584 The piper drew another deep breath, flinching against the anticipated pain
|
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585 that never materialized. Even the Inn's golded autumn brew could not
|
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586 compare to the sweet feeling of air, air filled with the odor of too many
|
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587 bodies in too close a space, air carrying the stench of too many trips through
|
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588 a recycling unit, air carrying the pungent odor of burned rosin from the
|
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589 bard's last attempt to force the electronics of the vehicle to perform feats
|
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590 that exceeded the capabilities of the hardware.
|
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591 He lifted himself on one elbow, reached out a hand and said:
|
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592 "Milchar -- how? Cragmore? Innkeeper! His lungs must be nearly eaten
|
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593 away from the gas!"
|
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594 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
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595 typo time ch /golded/golden
|
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596 ppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
|
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597 PsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsIpSiPsI
|
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598 Bard and Cragmore stood opposite each other, opposed in position as well
|
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599 as opinion. The Innkeeper's coughing had calmed down, and he lay on the
|
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600 floor, covered by a survival shawl that had been fetched by Bard from one
|
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601 of his ship's multitude of storage lockers. Milchar still lay quiet on
|
|||
|
602 a couch behind the other three. The piper still lay in apparent coma,
|
|||
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603 oblivious to what transpired on the ship.
|
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604 "We *must* do something!" Bard cried, taking a step toward's Piper.
|
|||
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605 "Your something would be iniquitous Bard. We must not bother Piper
|
|||
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606 now. He has undertaken a journey that only he can complete. There must
|
|||
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607 be no outside interference.
|
|||
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608 Bard seemed to ignore Cragmore's words. He tool another step towards
|
|||
|
609 the Piper; Cragmore shifted his position until again he stood between
|
|||
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610 Bard and Piper. Suddenly, the menacing tableau was interrupted by a
|
|||
|
611 voice from behind them.
|
|||
|
612 "Look! Look at Piper!" It was Milchar, who had finally stirred from
|
|||
|
613 his sleep. Bard and Cragmore had been too intent on watching each other's
|
|||
|
614 moves to notice Piper behind them. They turned on Milchar's words, and
|
|||
|
615 witnessed a wondrous sight. Piper's eye lids flickered, his chest rose
|
|||
|
616 and fell with much more pronouncement, and before anyone could say or
|
|||
|
617 do anything, he sat up, blinked his eyes, and said with a clear. resonate voice,
|
|||
|
618 "Milchar -- how? Cragmore? Innkeeper! His lungs must be nearly eaten
|
|||
|
619 away from the gas!"
|
|||
|
620 "The Innkeeper," Cragmore started, barely able to control his
|
|||
|
621 excitement, "has not been affected by the atmosphere in the way you
|
|||
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622 might think." Then turning to Bard and Milchar, a teary-eyed Cragmore
|
|||
|
623 said, "I was wrong about Piper, and I have never been so elated to be
|
|||
|
624 wrong. But he did come back on his own choosing, as any self-motivating
|
|||
|
625 intelligent creature should be allowed to do. I hope you can see my point
|
|||
|
626 and forgive my error."
|
|||
|
627 "Wrong? Forgive?" Piper's face revealed his lack of understanding at
|
|||
|
628 what had transpired in the ship, but soon it would be revealed. PsI-Cragmore-
|
|||
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|
|||
|
TOTAL NUMBER OF LINES = 628
|
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