Play Ball!: Winter JenningsChapter 8: St. Dominic free porn video

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Okay, Duke Arlington. Head Scout for the Royals. Age 43. Southern California — born and raised. Had played right field with the LA Dodgers. I read several Dodgers blogs and columns and recaps. Arlington had been what insiders called a journeyman player. Astonishingly good to make it to the majors; but merely average once he got there.

I went back to my Fount of Sports Knowledge, Pat Hodges. She glanced at her watch — I was back on the $100-per-hour clock.

She sipped Henrietta’s Own, chewed her cigar, and said, “Played right field at Chavez. Good leather, average hitter. Had a two-forty something lifetime average. Lasted eight years in the Big Show. Decent speed, good range. Trouble hitting a curve ball. Most batters do.”

“Personal life?”

“Nothing anyone is chitter-chattering about. But I could ask around.” She got a faraway look for a moment, “Didn’t get along with his black teammates all that well. And, he did have a temper, back in his playing days.”



”Oh?”


“Got tossed a few times for arguing with the ump. Was one of the first ones out of the dugout when a brawl broke out.”

“A brawl?”

“It’s mostly posturing. A few wild swings, rolling around on the ground. Not many of those guys would make it to the second round in a boxing match. Let alone MMA.”

Pat saw the look on my face and explained, “Bare knuckle cage fights.”

“That’s a thing? Never mind. Okay, Arlington was good enough to make it to the majors. And then he stayed in baseball after.”

“A lifer. Cards hired him as a coach for the Springfield Cardinals.”

I said, “Triple-A?” to showcase my insider knowhow.

“Double-A. Let’s move.”

Up out of the booth, out the door, turn left, circle the block.

“Arlington has a good eye for talent. He spotted Simmons and Rodrigues before the Cards’ own scouts.”

“Springfield Cards?”

“No, the mother ship, St. Louis. That caught Chip O’Grady’s eye. He brought Arlington in five, six years ago. Pacific Rim scout, then Latin America, then Assistant Head Scout. Last year he moved Arlington up to general manager of Scouting and Player Development.”

“Head Scout.”

“Yep. Why do you care?”

I trusted Hodges. And not just because I didn’t have much choice. She was my guide through terra incognita.

“I saw Seaver and Arlington having a ... a not-friendly discussion.”

“What about?”

“No idea, but it’s the only off-thing I’ve come up with. I mean other than the betting stuff.”

“I can ask around about Arlington.”

Yes or no? If he’s involved, I couldn’t have word of even a preliminary look-see reach him. On the other hand, Pat Hodges thrived in a shadowy netherworld of insider information. She made her living, and kept her reputation, by piecing together tiny data points of facts, rumors, speculation.

I said, “Keep track of your hours.”

“Long as your checks clear.”

I was paying her from my own business account. And, after working with Gloria Allen out in LA, I was more financially meticulous than ever. Not that Emile Chanson ever commented. He just initialed my expense sheets and I passed them on to Edna, Dragon Lady # 1.

I learned early on not to fall into the trap of equating finding a potential lead with making progress on a case. Douglas ‘Duke’ Arlington may or may not be a person of interest. But he was my ‘maybe’ and I shifted my focus to him.

Working a case like the Royals, I look for a pattern. In order to recognize a variation, an anomaly. That front yard confrontation between Arlington and Seaver might have been innocuous. But the Seavers lived in an insulated world. Nodding acquaintances with their neighbors; what little socializing they did was within the Royals family.

Arlington wasn’t a neighbor; nor was he in their immediate circle of friends.

Over spicy chicken wings at the original Peanut, the one on Main, just south of the Plaza, I sent the Sullivans into the fray. Well, into ... um, snooping around.

“I’m interested in Arlington’s finances. Income, debts. And especially anything involving gambling. Whispers, rumors ... anything.”

Jessie and Jesse wore matching bare-midriff tops. For some reason, it looked good on Jesse. Skinny jeans, gleaming white sneakers. Their faces were smeared with grease from the wings. So was mine. I ordered a second pitcher of Harp and another side of fries. The Peanut had added some fire today.

Duke Arlington lived on the opposite side of the map from Sandy and Caitlin Seaver. East of Kansas City, in Independence. Truman’s home. Handy for The K.

Arlington was single. Again. Twice divorced — first wife in Los Angeles, replacement wife in St. Louis. Monthly alimony payments of $1,400 and $900 respectively. Jesse Sullivan said, “He was making more money as a player than a coach.”

Jessie, “But he’s doing pretty well as Head Scout. Over the years he’s gone from $49,000 up to $176,000 with bonuses.”

Jesse, “As he worked his way up the organization chart. Six years in all.”

Today we were between lunch and dinner services at BEAR’S. Sipping Cáliz de Luz, a nice red from Spain. Veggies and dips.

I said, “Bottom line?”

Jessie, “So-so to okay. Rents his house — $1,400. Car payments are just under $600. Owes a little over $4,000 on MasterCard and Visa.”

Jesse, “No significant cash withdrawals or deposits.”

Jessie, “Owes over nine hundred bucks at Ollie’s Liquors. Probably a boozer.”

Jesse nodded, “Probably.”

Back home from our Alaska saga, the AKA — Also Known As — schemes were still on Walker’s mind. Vanessa alerted me and we called a family meeting. At our beloved kitchen table. Early morning coffee and juice.

I said, “Walker.”

“What would have happened if we’d reported him to the ship? AKA?”

“What, put my hands around my mouth and yell, ‘Hey, ship, there are scams going on!’ Like that?”

“You know what I mean. Tell the money guy, the purser.”

“The pussy?”

“Winter.”

“Okay, let’s be practical. Think tactically. What, exactly, would I tell this purser?”

“Everything AKA is doing ... you know ... poker and the art bidding. And, and, that long con — the widow.”

“And don’t forget the fake accident.”

“Yeah, that too. And the stolen luggage.”

“Okay, let’s take ‘em one by one. Poker. No, wait. First thing you have to realize is that all of AKA’s crew came aboard separately. From different locations. So there’s nothing to tie them to each other.”

“So?”

“So the swindles that involved more than one person ... there’s no way to prove the scammers even know each other. Let alone worked together.”

“Oh.”

“Okay, back to poker. What do I tell this almighty purser? That a 60-year old woman won a lot of money from a guy who voluntarily entered the casino. Sat down at the Hold’em table, anted up, and played — and gambled — every night he was aboard?”

“Uh...”

“And that some of the time AKA was also playing. Did he win, lose? Break even? Did he know the winner? Also, now that I think about it, AKA would probably love to have the cruise line charge him for cheating at the poker table. That’s a lawsuit waiting to be filed.”

“Ah. So what about the lady ... the widow he was hustling?”

“Hello, Mr. Purser. I saw a guy with an elderly woman on his arm. He took her on land tours, out to dinner, dancing to one of the ship’s bands. Probably bought her drinks too. Oh, and I suspect that in a few months, he’ll be fleecing her.”

Walker frowned.

I said, “The accident? The woman with the neck brace. You can bet that a real doctor — one with no apparent AKA connection — diagnosed and treated her. Now how they’ll scam the X-rays in a later insurance lawsuit, I couldn’t say. But I will say that the purser — and everyone else connected with the ship — will want no part of challenging her injuries while she’s on board.”

“Yeah. Fuck.”

“Watch your mouth. What was the other? Oh, the art auction. The purser would be really fired up to learn someone bid on a piece and then got outbid. Dozens of people fall into that category. Happened every day on the cruise.”

“Yeah, yeah, I can see why it’d be ... pretty hopeless to report those things. Too ... vague.”

“Right. Now the one tangible act we saw was stealing luggage at the end of the trip. I suppose I could have charged after that fake bellman, yelling for the cops. Remember we were off the ship then, so it wouldn’t be directly connected to the cruise. Their liability ended when we walked off the gangplank.”

Walker sighed.

“And, if by some miracle, a cop was around, took an interest, and checked out the luggage cart?”

“What?”

“He’d find, or she’d find, a black man in a low-paying job who’d made a mistake. That he had legitimate claim checks for most of the bags.”

“Maybe I’ll become a con man.”

“Right.”

Well, another life lesson for Walker — things aren’t as black and white as they seem. What I didn’t tell him was that AKA had done Daddy a favor a little over ten years ago.

The mayor back then had appointed Homicide Captain Dave Jennings to head up a task force to catch a serial rapist who had graduated to murder during his last break-in.

Daddy had developed a network of ... cooperators over the years. Some gonifs, some jailbird rats, some favor-seekers, some con men. AKA didn’t ply his trade in Kansas City, but he owned some property, passed through a few times a year, knew people who knew people.

Most folks — men and women — who were on the con were resolutely non-violent. Brains rather than brawn. A deck of cards rather than a gun. And they didn’t like being around violent crime. Particularly high-visibility action.

AKA heard a whisper, passed it along to Daddy. It panned out and one more scrote was taken off the books. Did Daddy ever do a return favor for AKA? No idea. If he did, it would have been within Daddy’s own boundaries, his own personal code of ethics.

Which, had been bothering me lately. My own personal ethics, not Daddy’s.

Sometimes, late at night when I’m in bed alone, a visitor comes calling. Not an Avenging Angel, not exactly. But when I think of the shortcuts I’ve taken — snooping someone’s house for example — well, the Conscience of the Justice System murmurs in my guilty ear.

And Ms. Conscience would have a very large discovery motion to file in the court of ... decency.

Too often, what I know and what I can prove are unrelated to each other. And the extra-legal actions I’ve taken add up to a practice of denying a suspect his Constitutional privilege to a fair trial. Some of my transgressions, like sopping up the contents of someone’s laptop, are civil rights violations.

Now, am I able, eventually, to rationalize, to justify, my actions? Of course. I’m human, flawed, far from perfect. I was taking a baddie off the streets ... the end justifies the means ... I’ve saved future innocents from becoming victims.

Yet ... sometimes, late at night, all alone...

Ash didn’t agree with all of my two-part Grayhock plan. But half a loaf...

He called me, “Winter, we’re going to take a pass on the disinformation campaign. But we will donate the NATO ammo.”

“Thank you. The fake ancestry didn’t... ?”

“It could work. Might work. We might try it another time. But our exposure with the ammunition ... especially these days...” With the entire federal intelligence community under scrutiny. If not siege.

“I understand, Ash. What do you need from our end?”

“A coordinator. Someone behind the scenes.”

“Already in place.”

“Who?” Ash wasn’t going to approve a campaign like this without knowing all the players, all the details.

“Emile Chanson. He ... works with Bulldog Bannerman.”

“Bulldog.” Name carried some weight, even back in DC.

“Yes. And Mayor Lynch bought in. He’ll play his part.” Turning down the ammo donation because of its unsavory history. White nationalists.

Ash said, “And you’re staying out of it?”

“Yes. Promised my family.” Fingers weren’t crossed either.

Once he had given me the go-ahead, Ash said, “Deep background. Confidential.”

“Understood.”

“The Bureau is coming under increased scrutiny. Some influential congressmen are sharpening their knives.”

Right-wing antigovernment zealots. Ms. Inside the Beltway. Oops.

“During the last administration — Obama — and the current one, we blew it on domestic terrorism. After 9/11 ... well you know what almost all our focus was on.”

“Islamic jihadists.”

“With good reason. But we basically ignored the growing ranks of domestic terrorists.”

Like Aaron Grayhock.

“Winter, in the last fifteen years, the United States spent almost three trillion dollars on counterterrorism. From 2002 through ... let me see... 2017, Muslim extremists have killed about one hundred people in the US. Right-wing haters — white supremacists and the like — have killed around four hundred in the last ten years. And that’s just an estimate.”

“Why?”

“We, the federal government, we don’t even have a ‘domestic terrorist’ statute. And there’s a law enforcement failure all the way down to the city level to recognize white supremacists as a threat to society.”

“It that why local and state police sometimes just stand there and watch both sides fight it out?”

“Partly. And partly many cops see the antifa side as illegitimate. An out of control mob. A problem.”

“Oh.”

“But it’s even more of a concern here in DC. We simply don’t track hate crimes. We can tell you how many bank robberies there were, but we just don’t keep the stats on domestic terrorists. In 2016, almost ninety percent of the agencies that report to us, showed zero hate-crimes.”

“Is that changing?”

“A little. But we’re not keeping up. These days, the Internet is a boon for both the leftwing nut jobs and the far right. But especially the haters. Militia recruitment and paramilitary training videos are all over. Bomb-making.” He sighed, “Once Obama got the nomination ... things took off. Like, Stormfront drew in over thirty thousand new members after the inauguration.”

“The first major white-nationalist site.”

“Right. And that’s one we do know about. What we don’t know ... well, we don’t even know what we don’t know. Plus there are major civil liberties issues with surveilling social media. There aren’t that many pro-iSIS posters, but there are millions of haters out there. Racists, anti-Semites, homophobes, xenophobes...”

Ash was talking over the phone to me, but it sounded sort of like an internal dialogue with himself at the same time.

“Another concern the FBI has is in-house. Our counterterrorism units see domestic terrorism as a backwater. The glamour, and the advancements, come from international terrorism cases.”

Ash was telling me, without telling me, why he was authorizing the Kansas City operation. One reason, anyway.

Bulldog allowed me to sit in on the one Grayhock meeting that the mayor attended. The two weeks of prep time that involved the J. Edgar office, Sandra Fleming, and Emile Chanson had flown by. It seemed to me that the planning had been rather casual.

But Daddy told me, “They know what they’re doing. This is small potatoes to Emile. And it’s strictly a sidebar issue to the Bureau. If it works, fine. If Grayhock doesn’t bite, or if it goes south ... well, the federal connection will be so tenuous...”

“Deniability.” Like with the long-ago raid on the Gunther compound. No provable link back to Senator Wainwright nor to the FBI.

The mayor of Kansas City — Tom Lynch — was running for governor. He’d win the Democratic primary easily. He’d been a pretty popular mayor and there was no serious opposition. A couple of perennial candidates and one half-hearted write-in. None had a chance.

The general election would be a completely different matter. Tom was running in an increasingly red state. Not so red as Kansas, fucking Kansas, but Missouri was growing more conservative each year. Like a lot of the country that didn’t butt up against one ocean or the other.

So a lot of what the mayor did was filtered through a statewide political lens. He had studied the NATO ammo scenario from every angle. I hadn’t been there, but Bulldog had obviously given it a thumbs-up. If it worked, the anti-supremacist action would play well among suburbanites and other moderates. Some independents too.

The Neo-Nazis and their supporters wouldn’t vote for him in any case. If they even voted.

If my plan got fucked up — and what complicated scheme doesn’t have glitches? — the mayor’s original anti-ammo stance would have been reinforced. Or at least his political team and the generally sympathetic media would spin it that way.

Tom’s parting comment was directed to Emile, “Make it happen.”

Bulldog answered, “We will.”

Left unsaid at every meeting and conversation that I was part of ... the entire operation had been my idea.

Phase One of Operation Ammo went well. The mayor’s local political opponents fell for it. Rushed eagerly into the trap.

Sandra Fleming, representing the Federal Bureau of Investigation, held a well-attended eight o’clock press conference on a sunny Monday morning. With 500 or so stacked cartons containing a quarter of a million cartridges — NATO 5.56 rounds — as the backdrop.

“This ammunition was seized from a Neo-Nazi compound. Haters of democracy, haters of decency, haters of America. We’re pleased to donate these cartridges to the Kansas City Police Department for practice and training.”

Most of the questions were about the white supremacists and Sandra fielded them smoothly.

A small, sort of feel-good story.

Mayor Tom Lynch called his own press gaggle for 3 that afternoon. Plenty of time to make the six o’clock broadcasts. The mayor’s PR people had whispered in enough ears that word spread — something was up.

The mayor stood tall on the steps of City Hall, looking ... well, mayoral. “I thank — the City thanks — the FBI for their generous contribution. They do standup work, day in and day out. Most of us never hear the details of their heroic efforts in keeping this nation safe.”

Just as I was starting to think ‘too thick’, Mayor Lynch pivoted, “But Kansas City will not, can not in good conscience, accept ammunition tainted by its association with Neo-Nazis.”

He ignored the several shouted questions, “I thanked Special Agent in Charge, Sandra Fleming, for her charitable gesture. She and I agreed that Kansas City and the FBI will continue to work in harmony to make our communities the safest we can.”

The online reaction was almost instantaneous.

‘Mayor snubs FBI.’

‘Lynch administration turns back on police.’

‘How many will die when cops run out of ammo?’

The mayor and FBI let the pot boil all day Tuesday. Then held a joint press conference at City Hall on Wednesday. The president of every police organization in Kansas City and Jackson County stood on the steps. In solidarity. The KC Police Officers Association. FOP Lodge 99. Altogether, six independent organizations.

The City message — reinforced by the presence of the police — was clear. Mayor Tom Lynch has been an avid law enforcement supporter from his first day in office. Over both four-year terms, the annual police budget had increased by 37%. The largest of any major US city in a comparable time period.

Four of the six organizations endorsed Mayor Lynch for governor that day. The other two remained — as they had for decades — neutral.

Sandra Fleming expressed understanding and appreciation for the mayor’s stance. “Amnesty For All has agreed to take possession of the NATO cartridges until an agreement is reached with some other police department.”

The money shot: a smiling Sandra Fleming shaking hands with a beaming Tom Lynch.

The footnote: The ammunition would be temporarily stored in a warehouse in the Northland.

In bed with Vanessa, I was cradling her from behind. Both hands on her luscious breasts. I licked the back of her neck, whispered, “I almost lost it with Walker. On our cruise.”

She whispered back, “You mean... ?”

“Yeah, I almost let him. Wanted him to. In the moment.”

“I’m glad you didn’t. For his sake.”

I kissed her again.

She said, “But if you had, we’d have fixed it. Worked it out with Walker.”

I said, “Good thing I’ve been setting aside money for his future therapy bills all these years.”

Vanessa giggled.

Following my phone conversation with Ash, I consulted the Oracle. “Talk to me about criminal justice reform.”

“Front-end or back-end?”

“Huh?”

Gertie stirred her Tanqueray with her middle finger, “Okay Congress and the administration are talking about reform again. May just be lip-service, but at least they’re having Committee meetings.”

“Front-end reform?” Ms. Slow To Catch On.

“Some of both. As usual, the House and Senate aren’t in sync. Democrats, Republicans, Independents, doesn’t matter.”

“Okay.”

“The House is looking at the existing prison population — improving conditions, recidivism rates. The back-end. After they’re already in jail.”

“Well, that’s good, right?”

“Maybe. Depends. But they aren’t addressing draconian sentencing laws, the front-end. Here, the Senate is looking at a more sane approach.”

“Like what?”

“Reducing mandatory sentencing guidelines for some drug crimes. Giving judges more flexibility with nonviolent criminals.”

“Think anything will happen?” I refreshed her drink.


“I’m cynical. Like most folks. But the Fraternal Order of Police is in favor of legislative changes. Also the International Association of Police Chiefs, National District Attorneys Association. And other law enforcement organizations. The system is fucked these days, but maybe something will finally happen.”

Aaron Grayhock allowed Channel 4 an exclusive interview. White Patriots Day was a week from Friday. The television copter filmed around the perimeter of his farm — over a hundred men in paramilitary uniforms were marching, firing at shooting ranges, attending outdoor lectures. Most had brought wives or girlfriends. And children.

Hundreds more would drive to Kansas City from Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, and Nebraska on that Friday. The parade permits — KC, Independence, and Kansas City, Kansas — banned all weapons. That was true for all demonstrations, parades, festivals, but Aaron Grayhock played into it.

“Discrimination. Police state. You can look it up.” Bib overalls, plaid shirt with the sleeves rolled up. Old Testament beard. Wad of tobacco.

Sandra Fleming told Daddy and me, “Grayhock plays the bumpkin, but he’s smart. Cunning. Media-savvy.”

And, Grayhock was a large man; six-three, almost three-hundred pounds. The cute blonde reporter, Cathy Cates, seemed tiny as she held her mic up to him. That massive billboard with a new sign from The Messenger:

‘Freedom Rises — White Patriots Day’. At the bottom, ‘Genesis 4:15’.

Cathy asked him the key question, the planted question, “What do you think about the mayor turning down all that FBI ammunition?”

“It’s not FBI ammo! It was illegally seized from private citizens. You can look it up. Deep State.”

“What sort of turnout are you looking for on Friday?”

“Just a few dozen. God-fearing Americans exercising their God-given rights.”

Sandra said, “He’s playing it down. Wants to make the demonstration seem massive. And spontaneous.”

Then Grayhock seemed to go off script. “I’m not an extremist. Take lynching. It’s illegal and should be.”

Cathy, “Really?”

He nodded that massive head. “I’m not filled with that kind of hate. I’m a segregationist — it’s God’s will and nature’s law. Keep the races separate. Separate but equal.”

“Nature’s law?”

“Negroes should have their own towns. Mexicans too. Like that. Chinks. But we can still work together, do a bit of this, a bit of that.”

Little Cathy stood taller, “Be out of my town by sundown?”

“Race mixing is unnatural. That’s why God gave us different skin colors. It’s nature’s way. You can look it up.”

Someone muttered, “Fucker.” Daddy patted my knee.

Amnesty For All was a recently formed splinter group. Started by the same leftwing factions that wanted to eliminate ICE. Well-intentioned? Maybe. Rational? Not very. Practical? Not in the slightest.

But they leapt at the offer to take possession of the NATO rounds. Free publicity for their nascent organization. Probably just local coverage, but that was better than nothing. And, if they could, they’d destroy every cartridge rather than let it ‘contribute to the unending cycle of violence ravaging our cities’.

Emile played their National Director like a ... well, violin. Mamie Travers would have been an anti-Vietnam protester had she been of age back in the day. But she didn’t dress like a hippie. The Boston native — parents were both professors at Taft University — dressed as if attending a Board meeting. Serious Hilary pantsuit, blouse buttoned to the neck. Flats.

Tortoiseshell glasses, although she didn’t need them. She wanted to project an air of authority; instead the 28-year old looked like a little girl playing dress-up. Earnest, solemn, scholarly. She wasn’t a poster-wielding shouter; Mamie was filled with intellectual rigor and fueled by unflinching righteousness.

Neither the mayor’s office nor the Bureau had had any previous interaction with the solemn, committed young woman. Nor with Amnesty For All. So they would, in theory, have plausible deniability.

Emile drove Mamie Travers across the Broadway Bridge, past Wheeler Airport, through North Kansas City, into what locals called the Northland.

She brought along two young men, a videographer and a publicist. The three of them probably formed a significant portion of the entire LA-based Amnesty For All personnel.

Emile unlocked the single pedestrian door to the smallish warehouse. “Henderson Storage has been family-owned for 37 years. They’ve agreed to store the ammunition for free. It shouldn’t be here that long anyway.”

Mamie, looking at the video camera said, “It should be destroyed. Let the people have their precious guns. See what good that does them without any bullets.”

Her PR guy yawned; a tired old argument.

Emile said, “Security is handled by NorthTown SafeGuards. They drive by every half hour or so.”

Mamie placed her hand on a carton. Still looking at the camera, “How many lives will be lost?”

Emile, staying out of camera range, pointed to the two roll-up doors on the loading dock, “The Hendersons added chain-lock security for the ammo. Usually they only store cleaning products.”

No one asked about alarms. No one noticed the extensive system of hidden video cameras placed inside and out. Covering the front and rear entrances as well as the four streets surrounding Henderson Storage.

Aaron Grayhock hit Henderson Storage on Sunday night, five days before White Patriots Day. The temptation — two pronged — was too much for him to ignore.

> Provide free practice ammo to the four-state visitors. Showing off, knowing word would spread to other compounds around the country. Grayhock was one survivalist whose actions spoke for the cause.

> Liberate property illegally seized by the fucking Feds.

The lookout for our side made the call at 2:14 in the morning to Emile Chanson and Sandra Fleming. “They’re inside.”

Of course it wasn’t Grayhock himself. A driver, four loaders, a two-and-a-half ton truck — Emile called it a deuce and a half. He had told me, “Each case has 25 boxes. 20 cartridges per box.”

I reached for my cell. Calculator. Emile said, “500 cases.” Fifty of them containing a surprise.

Later, at 1300 Summit, I watched the action captured by the interior cameras. The four men were efficient. Formed a line, passing each case from one to the other like a bucket brigade. The driver stacked them in the back of the truck. Eighteen minutes, plenty of time to miss NorthTown SafeGuards. Or for the security guards to miss them.

Sandra Fleming, video in hand, appeared before U. S, District Judge Elmer Hastings at 10 on Monday morning. He’d already been alerted and the search warrant was issued by 10:30. It was good through Thursday, one day before White Patriots Day.

Emile updated Daddy and me, “The FBI will wait to raid Grayhock.”

Daddy nodded, “Exploding dye packs.”

Emile smiled, a small, hard grin.

I said, “Any chance of legal blowbacks? A law suit?”

Daddy glanced at Emile; they both seemed amused. Daddy said, “Sandra and Ash would love for those scumbags to sue. Complaining that stolen goods didn’t meet expectations.”

He thought some more, “And to the FBI this is just a little neighborhood sting. Remember ABSCAM?”

“I think I read about it. Politicians?”

“Right. Compared with other FBI stings this is like a kindergarten kid snatching a ball during recess.”

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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 5 NATO

I eyeballed Sandy Seaver two different ways. From the stands in The K and by tailing him. My first time in a baseball stadium. It was a revelation. An expensive revelation if I’d been paying for everything. Parking, tickets, food, beer. The little magazine that tells you ... um, baseball stuff. And, if I’d had little kids ... all those treats and souvenirs and whatever else they needed. I bet a family of four couldn’t get out of the park for under a couple of hundred bucks. But the scene...

4 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 11 Promethazine

Two of the FBI’s Chicago agents arrested Duke Arlington late on a Tuesday afternoon. Charge: murdering Gustav Hindenburg in Ft. Payne, Alabama. It was a quiet bust, no media alerts, no perp walk. It turned out that Gustav Hindenburg, had been a DEA snitch. I would later learn that he hadn’t been particularly reliable. He lied repeatedly to his handler. But he had provided one key lead regarding the Opium Highway from South Florida through Georgia and the Carolinas on up to the Washington DC...

3 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 14 Tongue

The pale November sun was brightening Caitlin Seaver’s kitchen. Or maybe I was imagining that as her tears dried up. As she gathered herself, resigned that the worst had happened — her secret was out. Hers and Sandy’s. Speaking in a monotone as if she were in a courtroom being judged, she said, “Arlington played for the Dodgers, but that was before my time. He was from Santa Ana and came back to visit. Family, I think, and friends. I’d seen him around Orange County, he liked bars.” I...

2 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 12 DNA Doe

Walker said, “So what will happen this morning? During the preliminary hearing.” “Hyder could ask for a continuance. But I doubt that he will.” “Why not?” “Because the case is going to be bound over for trial anyway. And Hyder will get a look, a sense, of the People’s trial strategy. He probably won’t even cross-examine the prosecution witnesses.” “Why not?” “You’re full of questions. And that’s not all you’re full of.” “Winter.” “Think cui bono.” He frowned, recalling an earlier...

4 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 10 ldquoNor innocence sufferrdquo

It didn’t really register until I’d seen the second brochure on our kitchen counter — “Faith-Based Assisted Living Facility”. I’d meant to ask Vanessa about the one from yesterday — “Crossroads Manor Nursing Home”. Then it hit me. I whirled around. There was Walker trying to look po-faced. Innocent, but concerned about his decrepit mother. Little fucker. Vanessa was trying to keep a straight face. Hobo was looking off into the distance as if he weren’t an unindicted co-conspirator. I...

4 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 13 The Panic Room

Walker: “We don’t serve time travelers in here.” Pilar: “A time traveler walks into a bar.” Saturday morning breakfast, sun streaming in our Main Street windows. Pilar glanced at Walker’s face, looked under the kitchen table, sighed. “Vanessa, what would our family be like if Papi were ... like, normal?” Vanessa laughed, “Well, we’ll never know, will we?” I shook my head, “A mother’s burden...” Pilar held out her hand, “Come on, Papi, I’ll take care of it. Again.” Gregory stood, “No,...

2 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 2 Breton

Walker, pimp-rolling, “You feel me, dawg?” Vanessa, glorious smile, soft fist-tap, “Dawg.” Clint called me, right before I left for work. The kids were on the Max, heading for their schools. Clint’s calls weren’t frequent, weren’t annoying. Steady, that was the word. Having earned a Ph.D. — with Honors — in Men, I suspected gonadal twinges. “When are you coming to New York?” “Short-term memory loss? I have a wife. A family. Career.” “When are you coming to New York?” “Hit the...

4 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 6 Thermoheat

Pilar: “E-flat walks into a bar.” Walker: “Sorry, we don’t serve minors.” I could get used to Clint. Am getting used to him. Even his ... um, equipment. And he’s getting used to me. Not just my body, but my ... temperament. What I like, the pace, the intensity. The follow-up cuddle and conversation. Of course that was true with most couples. Wait. Were Clint and I a couple? Maybe. I needed to think about that. There’s so much about him I didn’t know. Like our first time together in...

2 years ago
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The Bastien of Winter

‘Mmm, Bastien…’ Sebastien Byrne looked down in dismay, watching as his new bride lovingly faked her way through another orgasm. She was very good at it—soft and sweet, and imminently realistic. No glass-shattering screeches, or siren-like banshee wails. In fact, if he hadn’t been inside of her when it happened, he would have sworn that it had been real. His pleasure greatly diminished, he rolled over onto his side, and pulled her body tightly against his. Winter wrapped her arms around his...

3 years ago
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East of Nowhere Part 4 Meeting Winter Revised

The wagon finally pulls up to the shop, Grayson immediately jumps down and embraces his family in a huge hug, exclaiming “How I’ve missed you!” as he kisses his wife quickly and hugs each of his kids. Turning, he motions towards Sasha. Sasha then turns to the girl, and says “Wait here, I’ll be right back.” As the girl is waiting next to the back of the wagon, Sasha walks over to Grayson and he introduces her to his family. “This is Sasha, she’s the knight who escorted me all the way here.”...

4 years ago
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The Goddaughter Winter Part Three

Winter and I played in the bathtub together. Our fingers,lips and tongues,teased and caressed each other,until the water took on a chill and the bubbles from our bubble bath were almost gone. I drained the tub,turned on a warm shower and as we rinsed off I could not help but notice how beautiful she really is. Winter will grow to be be a stunningly gorgeous woman. I am sure of that.Once again I wrapped her in a towel and carried her back to the bed. She, snagged another towel from the rack as...

3 years ago
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The homeless and poor peoples winter feast

The homeless and poor peoples winter feastBy RotnebSynopsis: Every year there was organized a charity festival in the village hall for the city's homeless and poor people, a feast where all the poor once a year get filled stomachs and amused. This year will be something special when Lisa and eight other young women voluntarily donate their naked meat to the feast banquet and to entertainment for the homeless and poor. The story is only fantasy.The meats The first Sunday in February came the...

4 years ago
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Young girl extreme winter nudity experience

Introduction: Story about brave girl winter walk At first I have to start with me, that this project requires to give also self-experience. I have practiced winter nudity many years, but not regularly. There have been some pauses. I have been lucky to share winter nude walk with some girls, like here: http://www.nudeimagehost.com/viewer.php?file=56243058045088081241.jpg These are my photos and my car can be seen in two photos of these series. In previous winter I began from 1st January and then...

4 years ago
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Naked girl day outside in severe winter

Marlene was a princess of the 9thB class in her school in little town of the northern country. She was an excellent student and also beauty – long blonde hair, pretty face and model-like legs. She was aware of her charm, but she wanted more. She tried to figure out, how to impress stronger. Marlene was ready to show up naked in front of the boys, but she wanted to find a good reason, which does not seem too easy. Suddenly she found a way – it must be an extreme nakedness like naked in...

3 years ago
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Young girl extreme winter nudity experience

In previous winter I began from 1st January and then every weekend, but not only the coldest (4-5 Feb), from which I wrote main story later. Longest time was at 26th February 1 h 47 min and temperature in this day about -4-5 (23-25 F), but sunny. Feeling of cold is not the same every time. Generally it can be very different. But normally after some 30-40 minutes is the warmest moment, then you don’t feel any cold. After some 1 h – 1h 15 min body started to feel colder again, but not too much....

2 years ago
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A WellLived Life 2 Book 10 BridgetChapter 20 Winter or Summer

October 12, 1996, Rutherford, Ohio Rutherford, Ohio was a relatively small town; but then again compared to Chicago, Cincinnati was a relatively small town. Rutherford was bigger than Milford, but not by a lot. It had the regional trauma center, the BMV, and the Harding County courthouse and other government buildings, as well as the Sheriff’s Department. I could imagine Milford being like Rutherford if all those facilities had been in Milford, instead of Batavia, which was the Clermont...

3 years ago
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Girl walk every day naked at severe winter

Siberia, morning of 23. December, second day of school holidays. Yulia xxxxxxx (family name secret), 11, unlike other girls, is nudist, which means, she spend holidays mostly naked. In summer it is not a big problem, only for community maybe, but here in xxxxxx (place name secret!) village nobody is complaining about matter. But now is winter. This year weather has been more severe already before winter solstice. Temperatures has been fallen below -30 and today is not an exception....

2 years ago
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Hide Seek Winter JenningsChapter 11 A Bouquet of Pheasants

On a hunch, Clint asked his Vanguard counterpart in Boise to go through the old surveillance videos before the raid on the Gunther compound in northern Idaho. A raid clandestinely approved and funded by Senator Harper Wainwright. And orchestrated by his chief of staff, Constance Grayson. And field-directed by Matt Striker. Boise called back the next day. Winner-winner, chicken dinner! Martin Folsom again. That tied him to two American Nazi compounds. And also made me start reconsidering...

4 years ago
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First Do No Harm Winter JenningsChapter 15 Eagle

I woke up in Palo Alto feeling ... refreshed. More like my old self. First time since ... well, it had been a while. Feeling morning-naughty, I sat under the shower spray and treated myself to a quickie. Dressed for success, I was checking myself out in front of the hotel mirror. Picked up my cell, “Hello.” “What are you doing in California?” I smiled, sat back in the club chair, Clint Callahan. “And this is your business ... why?” “I made it my business.” “Oooh, tough guy. I’m still...

4 years ago
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National Park Winter and Group Sex

The churning and merging is so vigorous that surrounding objects tremble with the movements, and so wet that a continuous sloshing sound is noticeable above the din of heavy breathing, rhythmic throbbing intonations and voices that betray heightened excitement and arousal. With pressure rapidly building and heat rising, the white frothy liquid reaches a point where it must burst from its dark enclosure. The bright juice sparkles in the sunlight as it is spewed, in copious amounts, into the air...

Group Sex
2 years ago
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The Necessity of Winter

The Necessity of Winter By Armond *** 1. Arthmael. I ripped the dagger from her heart... ...and held it, inches from the girl's fur wrapped chest. My hand refused to sheath the blade, pleading instead for release, to plunge it back. How I longed to; for the first time in my life, I would raise my wishes over duty to my people. Time stilled, as I fought my nature. The single movement in the room was bright red blood falling from gleaming blade.... ...one drop...

4 years ago
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Hide Seek Winter JenningsChapter 9 A Pitying of Turtledoves

The police responded in under three minutes; two ambulances right behind them. One of them said, “Gun!” and I felt, but couldn’t see, one cop grab my shoulder bag where he removed the .38. The other one cuffed me, hands behind my back. Morales and I were rushed to University hospital. I ended up on the second floor of the Critical Care Tower. Morales was in the same building, but in the burn unit. When Suzette aimed at me, I had ducked my head and squeezed my eyes shut. That helped, but my...

2 years ago
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Hide Seek Winter JenningsChapter 3 A Pandemonium of Parrots

2019 That was then; this was now, four years later. A lot had changed in my life since I told Carol Sue Parker goodbye at O’Hare. Of course, a lot would change in any four-year period; it’s just that I ended up measuring that particular span in terms of a young woman I had thought I’d never see again. Life goes on. Walker was now 15; I was 33. I was married, deliciously so, to Vanessa Henderson. Walker had a live-in girlfriend, his second, named Pilar Paloma. I was still doing a daily...

2 years ago
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The Cave In Winter Wonderland

Chapter One“Damn it! Where did they go?” I mumbled to myself as I came to a fork on the icy path on this icy alpine mountain. Derrick, my boyfriend, thought this trip would be a great way to spend our winter break from the University we attended in Chicago.Susie, my BFF, and Sean, her boyfriend,  all were excited about the trip. I guess I was the only one who didn't like the idea. The news has a way of making the world seem dangerous. Chicago doesn't have the best reputation, but I feel safe...

Fantasy & Sci-Fi
3 years ago
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Hard WinterChapter 3 Autumn A Trip into York

We both awoke around six-thirty and we still smelt of sex, I think it turned us both on because she was soon all fours wiggling her arse and demanding, "Fuck me, come on, I'm horny!" We had a fast, furious five minutes of hard sex and we both came again. We then sat up to get our breath and Kelly said quite matter-of-factly, "What else turns you on? Would you fuck my arse, do a threesome with me and another girl? Would you tie me up and fuck me, spank me, piss on me, or me piss on you,...

3 years ago
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Big Bear and White Dove Or Winter in the Mountains

aka “Winter in the Mountains” By Louishoney This story is written for ADULT entertainment ONLY! If you are not at least 18 years old, LEAVE! She ran as fast as she could through the forest and past the pines steepled atop the golden hills of grass. She was in a panic. Her footsteps were being dogged by a band of Chippewa looking to make her their sex slave again. Four or five of them had jumped out of the forest three days ago and ran after her across the meadow while she was...

4 years ago
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Winter girl experience

Here is talking not me, but one girl about her winter nude experience.In the middle of December my friend suddenly proposed that I could ski nude. My first reaction was: what are you talking about!? But then very quickly I realized that it is good idea. I can't explain why I liked it but when that day came when we drove to the ski center, I was overexcited and I really had irresistible desire to go there nude and start to skiing. All my life I had always proper clothing according to weather and...

4 years ago
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Winter Forest

"Master, more slowly go! I pray you, less haste!" Ranulf reined in impatiently under the frost-rimed trees, brushing his red hair back from his forehead. The cold was growing more intense as they plunged ever deeper into the forest. His squire's hissing speech was slurred as the cold slowed all his bodily functions. "We'll make camp as soon as we find a place that gives us any shelter. That I promise." His voice was brusk but not unkind. The lizard man had served him well in his...

2 years ago
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TV Game Show Winter JenningsChapter 2 Riles

For some reason, crime in America follows railroad tracks. And Kansas City has plenty of both. My first, and I hope last, shootout took place near my office in the Stockyards. Besides gunplay, it involved ramming my bright red F-150 into a larger Dodge Ram. The Ford Motorcar Company told me, and I verified it through an independent mechanic, that the frame had been wrenched out of shape. It could be straightened, but wouldn’t drive the same, not really. I sat down with Vanessa and Gertie...

2 years ago
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The Weaver And The WindChapter 19 The Woods in Winter

The new year had passed long ago on Earth, but our start of the new year was just another day on Arbor. The Arborian New Year started on the first day of spring, the vernal equinox. I chose that propitious day to deal with the alaspore and its master. I wove a new trick out of something Cor showed me how to do using the wind. I wove a cocoon out of moving air as she had shown me. I was able to use it, as she did, as a method of transportation, but I couldn't become the wind as she could, so...

3 years ago
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Hide Seek Winter JenningsChapter 16 A Murder of Crows

Saturday morning breakfast, Walker and Gregory in charge of provisioning. Vanessa smiled at Pilar, “Is Walker still servicing himself?” Sucking his own cock. “Sometimes. Depends on what I’m in the mood for.” Gregory turned to Vanessa, not one whit of embarrassment, “I can’t suck it yet, but I can lick the very tip. Pilar thinks I’ll be able to if I keep practicing.” Vanessa gave him her glorious smile, ‘How often do you practice, honey?” “Every night when I’m home.” Pilar said, “I have...

3 years ago
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Wizards Apprentice 4 the Vale in WinterChapter 7

I woke late and lingered over my campfire and my breakfast. It would take only a half day's riding to get to where I was going, and anytime today would be a fine time with me. The skies had cleared again and it was nice to wait for the chill of the night to abate before setting out. Deak seemed to appreciate it, along with the relaxed pace. He tossed his head now and then and nickered at me softly when he did. Perhaps, like me, he was chasing Vulkai cobwebs out of his mind. Remembering my...

3 years ago
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180 WINTER FINDS HER PLACE IN LIFE

He smiled as the sentence was handed down, Arthur Edward Winter, you have been brought before this court, for a charge of: - Well perhaps it`s not relevant here and to spare his blushes we won`t go into it, but the sentence was seven years, that’s the bit he got loud and clear. And, it must be said, so did his wife, tall willowy and dour Jenny Winter, sat up in the gallery, her face a mask of total disgust, mostly at her husband for getting caught and of course for the fact she would be on her...

2 years ago
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Deadly Pursuit Winter JenningsChapter 8 Kernel

My mother called me. At work. First Autumn, now ... Flora Jennings. “Winter, can you come by?” Mom knew I worked, had my own office. But since I was no longer with the KCPD, nor employed by a real company, she simply hadn’t accepted that I do anything worthwhile. In fact, after Reggie left me, and before Vanessa married me, my mother regarded me as ... sad. A loser. Couldn’t keep a man, couldn’t find a real job. So it didn’t surprise me that she would expect me to drop whatever...

3 years ago
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Dark Voyage Winter JenningsChapter 2

I was spending hours with the diminutive, scarlet-haired Sullivan twins, bleary-eyed from the grainy security tapes. Duplicating what more competent investigators with the KCPD were doing. At home, at dinner, I tried to wear a game face for Walker. He had lost Mindy to California, to Stanford, to a more age-appropriate life. I had lost my friend, Mary Packer, but I was determined not to let the gloom prevail. After working all day on her dream restaurant, Euforia, Vanessa was overseeing the...

3 years ago
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The God Pill Winter JenningsChapter 3

Robert ‘Bobsy’ Atwater, as part of his three-patent sale to Hayes-Harris, the venture capital company, became an employee there. He wasn’t a partner, but he was one of seven on the Executive Evaluation team. He sat in on presentations from individuals and companies looking for investment capital. Hayes-Harris took small fliers and big risks, tiny positions and majority ownership. They provided money when they were interested. And money, expertise, guidance, even personnel, when they were...

4 years ago
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Hide Seek Winter JenningsChapter 7 A Siege of Herons

I sent Clint some suggestions for the name of our firm. For incorporation purposes, he would be the equivalent of a CEO, but no one seemed to be interested in titles. To the clients, potential clients, each one of us would be the Indian Chief in our home town. As for a corporate name, I was leaning toward Winter Jennings & Associates, LLC. A second stolen print ended up for sale in Omaha, then a third in Des Moines. Little Rock, Denver, St. Louis. I push-pinned a map and noted that...

2 years ago
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Hide Seek Winter JenningsChapter 15 A Flamboyance of Flamingos

Clint spoke softly, “Does he have a gun?” “No, not in the basement. I don’t think.” Our first words. Clint bundled me in his arms and carried me back inside. He sat me gently on a hall bench and flicked the safety off on his Sig Sauer. Even in my panicked state, I registered his new P320. And I also became conscious of the anguished howls coming up from the basement. Clint opened the door cautiously. He didn’t look away from the stairwell as he asked me, “What did you do to...

4 years ago
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First Do No Harm Winter JenningsChapter 14 Inside Man

Once Fowler started babbling, it became almost anticlimactic. Bear started the video recorder and even Fowler’s voice seemed to have lost its resonance. He confessed without emotion. He answered every question — no longer defiant, no longer any vitality in his voice, his posture. Mr. November was resigned, had given up. The last call he’d made, to Ryder and Mologna — “It’s her. Do it.” — turned out to be an order for them to go back to Richmond. To tear the Barbara Reynolds apartment to...

4 years ago
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Play BallChapter 06

In mid August Mo is well integrated into the team when he’s called up to the Major League Club, along with Dave, and Pedro. They’ve got two days to report in, but it’s just a day’s drive away so Mo takes his van while giving Dave and Pedro a lift as well. Late in the day after the phone call they arrive at the Club’s offices. They’re a day earlier than instructed, but that’s OK. Now they’ve enough time to complete the paperwork and to get the medical checks done before they go to the club...

3 years ago
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Play BallChapter 03

The players gather for the first after-school baseball training session and the head coach tells them, “I’ve got three rules you all need to know up front. If one of these applies to you don’t bother me with asking for a change. First, no one gets on the Varsity team until I’ve seen them play a season on either the Junior Varsity or Freshman teams. The second flows from that, no Freshmen on the Varsity team. Only the best players will be on the Varsity team. So those who come under the first...

4 years ago
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Hard WinterChapter 10 Spring Our expedition to Pickering

It was the day before our expedition to Pickering was due to set off. Kelly, Kirsty, Kat and I were going and we were taking Will Hinds, Harry Wilton and Emma. Jim Bolton was also coming with us. Although he was now quite frail he wanted to feel useful and his military experience would be good for Will and Harry. He still had sharp eyes and would stay with the train on lookout duty. Katie and her group were all travelling and we would use both engines, with the same make up of carriages as...

3 years ago
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Elementary My Dear WatsonChapter 3 Winter Comes Early

At noon on Thursday, Miss Thompson's presence was requested at the principal's office. She arrived to discover a parent seated opposite the principal, dressed conservatively but expensively, with conservative but expensive jewellery. The wedding rings on her hand were expensive, elegant but not ostentatious. The contrast between her and the two educators, both of whom were wearing runners, ankle socks and minor jewellery, could not have been more strong. The Principal herself had decided to...

4 years ago
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The Magic of Winter

Meredith Daulton was running around her house yelling. They’d been given the evacuation order a few minutes ago. The Ranch wildfire was coming and they had twenty minutes to get out.Paul Caruso was packing both the car with computers, legal papers, and some clothes.“My jewelry, “Meredith screamed as she threw a bag at him. “I need that, it’s valuable.”“Is it insured?”“Of course it is...”“Then you don’t need it. I said clothes now, get in the fucking car and let’s GO!”She snatched the bag from...

Love Stories
2 years ago
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Winter is Cumming part 2

As the bright, invasive afternoon sunlight came streaming through my stained (with dust and dirt) glass window, I found myself spooning (and possibly forking) with my new dream girl, Winter Summer, whom I had met earlier at the Public Market. Rubbing my aching jaw from our earlier sexcapades, fearing I might have lockjaw then grinning like an escaped lunatic as I recalled her hairy pussy, suddenly so afraid she might be a werewolf I had to rush out to buy silver bullets (the ammo, not that...

Humor
4 years ago
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Winter is Cumming

The day began like all others, climbing out of bed at the crack of noon, devouring a Toaster Strudel and mayonnaise sandwich before braving the crisp Canadian weather by going to Vancouver's Public Market for fresh seafood now that I'm eating healthy.  Along the way I passed a group of American hipsters vaping cannabis oil on a street corner, celebrating Tommy Chong's birthday.  Damn Americans! Since Trump's election, they have flocked here like a silverfish infestation.  Silverfish, that...

Humor
3 years ago
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Ninas unexpected winter adventure

Nina sat idly flicking through a few magazines while she was waiting for her appointment with the dentist. For the last three years, she and her mates had hit Southern California beaches, where they swam, surfed, danced and drank themselves silly for about three weeks solid.This year Nina wanted something different, a much more relaxing and hopefully a more romantic setting place to visit. She closed her eyes for a moment, maybe somewhere with a lake, mountains, spa, hiking trails, and clear...

Seduction
2 years ago
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Coachs Winter Retreat

>?> > The coach just returned from his winter retreat with his special > boys. All the boys on the team want to go on the winter retreat of course, > but the coach only selects the very best. The boys who have maintained > strict control and discipline over their exercises and development. No boy > who has shot a load in the last six months gets to go on the winter retreat. > No boy who has spoken to a girl gets to go on the retreat. Only boys who are > totally focused and dedicated to the...

3 years ago
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Hard WinterChapter 2 Autumn A Thief in the Garden

It was the first week of October 2013, I was working in the garden of my cottage on the edge of the Yorkshire Wolds near the coast. I hate gardening, always have done, but after last winter when potatoes reached £120 a pound on the black market, I decided that turning the garden, and a bit of the field behind the garden, with the agreement of the farmer who owned it, into a large vegetable patch was prudent. I was lifting the last of my potato crop and storing them for use during the winter....

2 years ago
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Deadly Pursuit Winter JenningsChapter 14 Mole

Two parallel investigations — sometimes intersecting, sometimes intertwined. The FBI, supervised by Ash Collins, was focused primarily on illegal weapons — manufacturing and sales. And chasing the gun money, possibly diamonds, around the world. Matt Striker, reporting to Constance Grayson, was all things Meriwether. Their PAC, their possible connections to Wexler and Hoffstatter. And, just maybe their connections to diamonds. I was, for now, relegated to the sidelines. Impatiently so. Ash...

2 years ago
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American Nazis Winter JenningsChapter 16 Goodbye Party

American Snapshot: In Montana it is illegal to guide sheep onto a railroad track with the intent of damaging the train. Vanessa and I agreed to bring Walker and Pilar back home. We couldn’t hide them forever, although Rebecca Montgomery was enjoying their company enormously. But school. Friends. Life. An FBI agent was still posted in the Wrigley lobby. Gunther wouldn’t be able to board the elevator even if he were foolish enough, or desperate enough, to return for another try. Nor would...

3 years ago
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Wizards Apprentice 4 the Vale in WinterChapter 5

The magic of Gaen seems closely bound to music and song while at the same time, Magic and Music each seem to be blooms from very different flowers. Beneath everything, they are very much of the same body. Mathematicians and musicians will both tell you this is true. Wizards will too, if you are in a position to ask them. Threes and fours, apart and in combination, especially in combination, have strong ties to the magic and history of Gaen. These numbers, especially in combination, seemed...

2 years ago
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First Do No Harm Winter JenningsChapter 8 Kansas

Sistine called me herself, bypassing Carmen. “Just heard back from G and G — they’re pretty exercised about something in those Rowley pages you sent to Carmen.” “Want me to go back in?” “Of course not — wouldn’t that be ... um, bending the law?” “Right, stupid thought.” Translation: okay, Winter, get your butt in gear and don your B & E threads. This time, photograph every work-related page you can uncover. Later for you, Nowak. I had a Dr. Samantha Rowley problem. The first time...

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