Frontiers: Flint MurdockChapter 14: Organ free porn video

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Evening didn’t take long to reach Little River, but the town never got all that quiet. Saloon laughter and arguments, a lone coyote off howling about something important to him, the wind whipping through. Sometimes I felt the night was talking to me, trying to tell me something.

Word had come from Cleveland, via Kansas City, to pull in their murder suspect. Hold Venerable until further instructions arrived. It was a law enforcement request, not an order, but I was more than ready to oblige.

Since Marshal Autry and Hoss were in town, it seemed like a good time to arrest Reverend Venerable. Keep him in a cell for eventual extradition to Cleveland. Or until it could be figured out what else to do with him.

The unknown factor was the Deacons. I told Cayuse, “We got to figure they’re armed again.”

Cayuse nodded.

George Autry studied the copy of the Wanted poster from Cleveland that Sheriff Jennings had sent us via The West Mountain Express. He nodded, “Let’s do it. Good to cooperate with other law enforcement agencies.” He probably meant that it would also be good for him, for whatever his political ambitions were.

I knew from Mrs. Chambers that Autry was spending time in Helena. And that he was advising on law enforcement matters to the Secretary of the Territory. Gentleman named Webb, I believe. Both Webb and Governor Leslie had been appointed by President Cleveland, so they were probably useful men to know. If you were politically minded, which I wasn’t.

But politics had stopped that new-town fraud and if it could assist me in bringing Venerable to justice ... well, fine.

It was Marshal’s Autry’s idea to arrest Reverend Garth Venerable during one of his Sunday sermons. More publicity, more chatter.

I went along for a couple of different reasons. I figured there was less chance of gunplay from the Deacons with a house full of the faithful. And because of Venerable squealing out “Squaw Whore!” to Rosie. That still gnawed at me.

Rebecca and Rosie seemed unusually solemn. We were in our room, town business finished for the night. The sporting ladies were asleep and the taverns closed. Rebecca placed that night’s whore money in a cigar box. She’d pay Mrs. Chambers first thing in the morning and then the girls after they woke up.

Rosie said, “It’s just a rumor, Flint.”

Rebecca shook her head, “It isn’t even that, honey.” She turned to me, “Penny isn’t sure she heard right.”

Rosie said, speaking so softly, “But Lord Sidcup slapped Miss Melanie so hard he broke her nose. Penny screamed.”

I sat up. Penelope had been Mrs. Chambers’ gift to the visiting Royalty. To encourage Lord Sidcup to stay longer at the Bighorn. And to pass along Sidcup intel on to Mrs. Chambers. Turned out His Lordship was fond of the French Show that Penelope and Miss Melanie put on for him every night.

“Why did he slap Miss Melanie?”

Rebecca gathered her thoughts, wanting to get it, whatever it was, right. “Lord Sidcup was bragging about all the big game he killed. A Black Bear, buffalo, antelope.”

Rosie said, “He saved the heads, some old guy mounted them back in his camp. Did the entire bear, supposed to be taller than you, Flint.”

Rebecca, “Then Penny thought she heard Miss Melanie say something about the scariest trophies were giving her nightmares.”

Rosie, “That’s when he hit her.”

Marshal Autry, the quick-looking deputy — Hoss, Cayuse, and I waited outside until the hymns had stopped, until Willowdean brought the organ to rest. We waited until Reverend Venerable’s squeaky voice came through the front doors, “Holy Redemption is only a way station on the Road to Salvation! Prayer is the only answer! You can’t fall far if you’re already on your knees!”

I banged open the doors, sweeping my Parker eight-gauge from right to left, then back to the right, to the south wall where the Fitzes stood. Black suits, white shirts. No sign of hardware on any of the eight Deacons.

Venerable was truly shocked. Stunned into silence.

As planned, Cayuse aimed his Smith & Wesson Model 3 in the general direction of the four deacons on the right side of the church. Hoss held his lever-action .44 caliber Winchester steady, focused on the north side. I had my scattergun against my right shoulder, sweeping it back and forth.

We’d later learn the Deacons were unarmed, but the element of surprise had been enough to freeze them in place.

Autry, center stage, marched down the middle isle and put his Navy Colt revolver under Venerable’s chin, pressing deep.

For a short man, Autry had a booming voice when he wanted to, “Garth Higgins Venerable, you are under arrest for the murder of Hiram Hitchcock in Cleveland, Ohio. July 4, 1884.”

The shocked congregation was starting to stir, starting to murmur among themselves. I yelled, “Shut up!” My voice far louder than Autry’s.

Venerable was gasping, his mouth opening and closing like a fish fresh out of water. Autry handcuffed him smoothly, obviously not his first time. He frog-marched Venerable back down the center aisle, his Colt pressing the bottom of the prisoner’s spine.

Venerable shook his head, like waking up from a dream. He looked at Hugh Fitzroy, “Fix it.” Fitzroy didn’t acknowledge the command.

Cayuse and Hoss, weapons still pointed, backed away, trailing Autry and the prisoner. I waited two minutes, still sweeping my scattergun back and forth, back and forth. Then I backed out, the eight Deacons staring at me.

We secured Venerable in the south cell, having already cleared the O’Brien twins out. He had regained some composure, taken off his white robe. He folded it carefully and laid the knotted belt on top. Shot out his cuffs, making sure they were even under his black suit.

Autry posed for a picture, arms crossed, the Colt still in his right fist. North Platte Sherrill insisted on taking several shots, different angles. All with Autry front and center, Venerable in the background. Autry didn’t object.

Sherrill patted the camera, “Eastman Interchangeable View. Valuable beyond compare.”

I’d never seen one until Sherrill came into town with his printing press. The camera itself was an interesting looking contraption. The lens panel could be moved up and down and the whole thing could sort of fold into itself.

Hoss had seen enough, he shook hands with Cayuse, with me, and left for his post. Our jail’s vulnerability came from the back end. The east side where a wooden addition had been built out to accommodate the two cells. Hoss, Cayuse, and I would take turns guarding our flank through the night. Nights. Autry had authorized Hoss to stay in Little River until it was decided what to do with the Reverend Garth Higgins Venerable.

Marshal George Autry wanted nothing to do with my Lord Sidcup plan. First, he was uncertain about the conclusions I had drawn. Hell, I was uncertain. But I also wasn’t going to ignore the quiet voice nagging at the back of my mind.

In addition, Autry wanted no part, no political part, of any confrontation with a Viscount.

Doc Gimble had reset Miss Melanie’s nose; she claimed she tripped and banged into a door. He nodded, “Hmm.”

When I told Cayuse what I suspected, he was, as always, stoic. Did his left eyelid twitch once? Couldn’t tell for sure.

With Venerable locked up, and with Hoss and I taking turns watching the jail from the back, Cayuse took to long-distance trailing the Fitzes. In one sense, it was easy — they were always together. But they were watchful bastards and Cayuse had to hang back whenever they left town.

Later, he filled me in on his foray. What the Army would call an after-action report.

Three nights after we had arrested Venerable, Cayuse followed the two ex-cavalrymen north, past No-Name, past the copper mine, past the sawmill. They veered off to the left, to the west, a mile or so from the valley where Rebecca, Rosie, and I had watched the family of Appaloosas.

It was just a fingernail moon, but Cayuse could tell that the Fitzes crossed paths with four or five or maybe six other riders. When he could hear voices, he dismounted and, holding Sugar’s reins, followed on foot.

He saw a campfire in the distance and tethered Sugar. He took his Sharps buffalo rifle and eased closer. It was a gathering of the Deacons — the six remaining ones plus the Fitzes. Eight bedrolls ringed the fire.

The men were mostly shadows in the night, doing some quasi-military exercises. Crouching, sneaking, some belly-crawling, pantomime rifle and then handgun shooting.

He continued watching silently as they broke out two jugs of corn whiskey and began drinking.

Cayuse had waited until just before dawn, when the Deacons were in their deepest sleep. He’d crept into the little camp; the fire had died out. The men were sprawled out, some snoring. No one stood guard.

There were eight rifles, butts in the dirt, arranged so the barrels rested against each other forming a little pyramid. Cayuse carefully laid them on the ground, then carrying four at a time, slipped into the woods. With two trips, he had hidden their cache of long weapons.

I had to smile.

Cayuse and I were walking our first rounds of the afternoon as he filled me in on his surveillance foray. As usual, not many words, a few gestures, one scene etched in the mud with a stick.

Toward the end of his raid on the Deacons — the sun was just about to start peeking over the horizon — he silently gentled four of the eight horses out of their tethers and mounted Sugar to lead them away. Cayuse, typical understatement, told me, “Darkness. Old friend.”

Sam sent my telegram to Sheriff Dave Jennings in Kansas City: “Venerable arrested, please advise. Flint Murdock.”

After Cayuse’s raid, three more Deacons wandered off, leaving five — the Fitzes and three others. I believed the departures were partly based on concern — how the fuck could someone sneak into their secret campsite, steal eight rifles and four horses? And partly humiliation — having to ride back to Little River, two to a horse. No one had seen them return — again, it had to have been embarrassing to double up like kids.

Holy Redemption services were over, bible studies finished, baptisms terminated. The church bell no longer rang on Sunday mornings.

Cayuse and I resumed our regular patrols, taking the keys to the cells with us. The iron bars set in cement were enough to prevent a breakout. Or break-in. And the cement floor would make tunneling impossible. The back wall was the only vulnerability I could think of. Maybe the roof, but that was pretty visible. And Hoss, Cayuse, and I could cover the roofline while we watched from our second story perch overlooking the back of the jail. We set up above Mason’s Hardware; Dave used it mostly for storage and was happy to cooperate. No charge.

But someday, I’d have to address that back wall. Maybe put bars on the sides and back, making a sort of cage within the building.

We rarely had any overnight prisoners in our little jail. I didn’t count the O’Brien twins — they were more like guests, often letting themselves in for what was left of the night.

So Cayuse and I had to arrange meals for Venerable. Even though she wasn’t pleased on missing out on the per diem from the Territory, Mrs. Chambers agreed that this particular inmate didn’t deserve Bighorn vittles.

I went with Clare’s Cafe — Clare Spacey could use the money, especially with winter setting in.

Venerable was showing signs of wear. It’s hard to maintain your swagger when your roommate is a chamber pot. I did allow Deacon Fred to bring him fresh clothes. And the Chinks, one of them, or maybe different ones, did a wash every couple of weeks.

He had stopped preaching, screeching really, at Cayuse and me. Maybe figured it was a lost cause. Or, more probably, he just ran out of steam.

Ollie Chambers came by, offered him five dollars for the church organ. Venerable spat out, “Fuck you.” Then the next day told me he’d take it. Ollie came back, “Four dollars, final offer.”

Venerable nodded.

Hoss, Cayuse, and I traded night shifts, watching the back of the jail from Mason’s Hardware.

Cayuse and I were just finishing our Bighorn coffee and we were getting ready to make our first rounds of the day. He’d take Market Street this time; I’d walk the side streets.

Domino, the piano-playing sporting lady, burst in, “Sheriff! Trouble at the school. Rosie says come quick.”

I grabbed my scattergun; Cayuse was already out the door racing north to Fifth Street. I caught up easily with my long strides and we skidded around the corner and raced three blocks east to Washington Street.

Rosie was huddled with two young girls, the Blaine sisters. Hugging them tightly, they were sobbing. Helen Maple stood in front of the school doorway, frowning, arms crossed. I mouthed, “Guns?” She shook her head.

I eased the door open, Cayuse right behind me. Three dead men, lying on their backs in a neatly-arranged row. Faces blown off. They wore the black suits and white shirts of the Deacons.

I could tell from the lack of blood that they’d been shotgunned somewhere else and left here to be found, to be seen. I heard Helen yell, “Keep away!” to someone running toward us on Fifth. Cayuse went out and spoke quietly to North Platte Sherrill, “No.”

The three dead men were tall and skinny; definitely not the Fitzes. Who, I was pretty sure, had killed these Deacons with their LeMat revolvers. The ones with a 20-gauge smooth-bore barrel firing buckshot.

I looked more closely, the three men had abrasions around their wrists; they’d been executed at close range.

Cayuse and I rode out of Little River, heading south to Lord Sidcup’s camp, around six in the morning. Still dark. Before I had left the Bighorn, I confirmed that Sidcup and Miss Melanie were still in their suite on the third floor. Penelope too.

Early as it was, Mrs. Chambers joined Rebecca and Rosie to see us off. She said, “I hope it isn’t true.”

“Me too.”

I suppose it’s this way a lot of places. That church organ replaced the Bighorn piano. Which Ollie sold to the Buffalo Cut. Martin Bisbee sold his own beat up piano, to Matty’s Bar. Who sold his piano, missing part of one front leg to Pat’s Irish Pub. The O’Brien twins would enjoy that.

Over her husband’s strong objections, Willowdean Sherrill became a regular performer at the Bighorn Saloon. A considerable improvement over Domino, who didn’t seem to mind giving up her musical career.

As was his custom, North Platte Sherrill started drinking every evening at six. In the newspaper office where he and Willowdean lived on the second floor. These days, she didn’t leave the Bighorn until around midnight, enjoying the organ, joshing with the customers, being the center of attention. I saw Mrs. Chambers talking with Willowdean a couple of times. Not difficult to decipher the nature of those conversations.

Same as Frontiers: Flint Murdock
Chapter 14: Organ Videos

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Surprise Melody FlintkoteChapter 15

The watch was old, the crude ring older still. Scrabbling around in the box, I found a letter written on grocery bag paper. The letter was the same color as the cardboard box Flintkote, the letter in the box began. Just Flintkote ... Not Surprise, Cynthiamae or Jack ... just Flintkote. Flintkote, This all of your inheritance. The watch will take you to the past or the future. Eventually, if you use it enough, you will meet the Seven in One ... they are from the future ... and the past....

2 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 5

“Who are you?” said the pretty lady behind the desk. “Kucherenko, Khrystyna,” replied the pretty Ukrainian. “Ya know ... I didn’t think this thing was going to work.” “Tyche Flintkote,” said the tiny replica of Sultry Wench Flintkote. She was still holding on to Krys’s shirt. “What have you done with my daddy?” “We have absolutely GOT to fix the damn portals,” said the Ceiling. “Your daddy?” “John Walter Flintkote, my daddy,” Tyke said. Ceiling said, “Sent him home weeks...

1 year ago
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FlintkoteChapter 66

“Where did the ‘We’ come from?” I said, “I’m building Farr 3.7’s ... you’re going to school.” “Nope ... not old enough. Have to be five ... won’t be five until October.” “I’m going to check on that.” I called. “Hi. I’ve had a 4 year old foisted on me by her mom. What proof do I need and how old does she have to be?” ‘When will she be 5?’ “October.” ‘I’d say you have plenty of time to gather up your paperwork. Just for conversation’s sake ... her name and present address.’ “Tyche...

2 years ago
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Surprise Melody FlintkoteChapter 2

When you’re at sea, passage making, it feels like you can’t wait to get ashore. After 29 days at sea ... even Samoa works. But ... three days ashore and we’re itching to get to sea. You can’t please everybody all the time. Teenagers seldom settle. Satellite radio and TV are our means of keeping up with the doings of the land based. Listening to the propaganda (NEWS) 0r watching the bubbleheads express opinions so far away from the opinions of real people gets either boring or hilarious ......

3 years ago
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Surprise Melody FlintkoteChapter 16

Cyn was right ... they should have warned her ... but the Powers that Be aren’t Gods ... they are extremely adept scientists. Scientists generally don’t have time for mundane shit ... like explaining about a watch user materializing in water because the marina isn’t there in the past. They haven’t warned the holder about the invisibility factor either. That should be easy ... don’t wind the watch backwards. Cyn turned to me, “I don’t want the damned thing ... you take it.” “Nope ... you’re...

1 year ago
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Surprise Melody FlintkoteChapter 27

Several weeks later, after Cyn, JW and the CAT had moored in front of the Hotel waiting a berth at the Yacht Club, I got a strange request in the mail. The address was: Miss Surprise Flintkote The 48 foot Farr Cutter The Anchorage Carey’s Bay Hotel Port Chalmers, Otago New Zealand The letterhead: Bank Of New Zealand Wellington Office Wellington Miss Flintkote: The Bank has received a request. An anonymous party has made an appeal. The party wishes to make a deposit in your account....

3 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 8

She had to think about that for a few seconds, “Flintkote Addie Resort-managers daughter?” Tyche asked. “No...” And here was a bit of Icelandic... “Tyche Addierétturstjórnandidóttir,” Addie said. The planet, Cassandra, has been receiving Heroes from all Earth nations. Admittedly, the majority of those heroes have been from English speaking territories. But not all heroes are restricted to English ancestry. Cassandra is a Matriarchy, and that is a social system in which females hold the...

1 year ago
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FlintkoteChapter 46

So, here we are. The 2009 Mac Pro Desktop has died again. Not really. There are three deaders, two 2008’s and one 2009, sitting in various stages of disrepair and no end in sight. This may or may not be chapter 46. I have a perfectly good chapter on the 2009 but such is life. I have no idea what I wrote on the 2009 ... so. There is more to it than that. The 2009 mac pro is also called a 4,1 but I flashed the 4,1 to a 5,1(2010). It worked fine but the video card bit the big one. As soon as I...

1 year ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 4

“You knew my father?” “And your mom,” he said. “Box of rocks ... but damned sexy.” I was all set to lambast him a good one when his phone rang ... the red one. “Hold that thought. I have to answer this.” He picked up. Whoever was on the other end made the ex-SAS man smile. He pushed a button. “You got other I.D.?” I was flying out of country ... of course I had other I.D... “What do you want?” I said. “US passport, New Zealand passport, US Birth certificate, New Zealand Naturalization,...

4 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 12

The knock on the door came a couple of days after I spoke to the Everyboat Insurance receptionist ... who assured me that Mr. Arbuthnot was perfectly fine. “There wasn’t anything he struck on the way down, Miss Flintkote. He just ‘wilted.’ I’m calling our Hong Kong office. An adjuster will contact you soon. May I have your current address?” “Mr. Kwan? Would you speak to the lady?” Information soon passed, the call disconnected and I resumed fretting. Oh ... I wasn’t brooding over the boat...

1 year ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 48

“Remember when you guys vacationed on the Island?” Junior said. “We won’t be doing that again,” said Six. Junior broke down. If Surprise hadn’t been flying from ‘Feet Wet’ over Lake Huron and knew what to do ... they’d have crashed. Six was immediately contrite. Looking at me he said, “That was rather callous of me.” Looking at Junior he said, “I’m sorry ... I’m sorry, Junior. I didn’t mean it.” “It’s time I started living again,” Junior said. “I did get my revenge.” Surprise said....

2 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 49

Ambassador Johnson wasn’t there to discuss his Ambassadorship with Junior ... he was there to discuss Ms. Flintkote’s status. Since he served at the whim of the President ... as do all Ambassadors ... he was stuck with greeting Ms. Flintkote Officially ... even though he was a personal friend of the murdered president and didn’t approve of ‘that murdering bitch’ or her offspring. The sins of the parents shall be visited on the offspring even unto the tenth generation. He got the quote wrong...

2 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 6

“Language, little girl, what would your mother say?” “She would have climbed up on a chair and torn down your tiles,” Tyke said, “You’re lucky I’m so small. WHERE.IS.MY.DADDY?” She was loud enough to rattle the secret doors. One of those hidden doors opened and an older woman entered the room ... Eva Caretaker Controller entered the picture. Ceiling said, “Good Day, Ma’am.” This was the ‘Good Day’ of the ‘Thank the gods you’re here’ variety ... not the ‘oh shit’ kind. “Ceiling ... what is...

4 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 9

When Tyche came through the door, Ceiling could smell and taste the mouthful she was chewing. Now, you need to know that ‘something new’ was one of the highlights of Ceiling’s existence. Soviet Russians were an unknown commodity, and the new Russian Federation hadn’t started sending Russian heroes ... yet. Going by the old adage, “Beasts of the field feed. Men eat. The gentleman of distinction dines.” Ceiling had NO idea what the Russian heroes liked to eat. The run of the mill English...

3 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 15

“That was just plain mean,” Eva said. “Did you send them?” “Not me,” I said. “Her.” I pointed at Tyche. I expected that might not satisfy Eva ... but it was all she was going to get. “Tyke,” Eva said, “I realize you’re four years old. I also realize that, just like your Dad and Aunt’s that Four is a number that has no relationship to you except size. We don’t have your Daddy ... well ... The organization that is known as Crossroads has confessed that an effort was made to send him home...

2 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 28

“How does it happen that you have two boats?” “Insurance... SV Surprise, the big boat, hold your horses, Lieutenant, the big boat had just finished total scrape, grind, patch and paint. she got a salon makeover and all new fabric ... sails, bedding, cushions ... beautiful example of the kind of work the Starship Yards in Hong Kong can do when she got crushed ... I’m getting to that ... crushed when the Sultan’s warships were sabotaged by terrorists ... or pirates. Turned my little hundred...

2 years ago
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The Organization

THE ORGANIZATION BY  MASTERINCThis story is purely fictional and does not represent known persons or places.  It is entirely a creation of my own dark imagination.  All rights reserved.Chapter 1??The CaptureI saw her at the Outlet Mall.  She was just as I remembered her from my days of watching volleyball and basketball at her high school two years pervious.  She still had that great ?female? presence with a beautiful face, bright smile, and wonderful figure.  As a senior in high school she was...

3 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 49

Nobody asked. The pair had money for food and a ute. They moved into a garage flat and bought both ... the flat and the garage. People took them to be mother and daughter. The name was unusual ... Flintkote ... Tyche Selene was 4 but very smart. Mom was 22 and American. Surprise Me Flintkote. Tyche was Aussie born and had the accent ... unless she was having you on ... then she was posh. The garage was on Beach Road in the flight path of the Whangārei airport down at Onerahi the seaside...

2 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 54

Pentwater... In the spring when the ice goes off the Lake and the big lake is clear as glass ... the dormant bugs are coming out. In the summer ... if the Lake is up ... every 29 years the lake cycles from ‘where did it go’ to ‘Oh Shit.’ This year is the peak of ‘Oh Shit.’ ... and this year the Lake runneth over ... the three curses ... the bugs AND the tourists AND the Summer folk are in abundance. The beach is crowded, there is no room at the inn and the park is reservations only. In...

2 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 61

Drudge ... Drudge ... Drudge... I forgot how repetitious cabinets can be. Gee ... was it only a year ago I was building them at Gold Coast? At least I had fun teaching the stations building the Farr’s. Not all my help stayed. I ended up with half... 13 employees ... with 13 wives and 26 children. I sunk a ton of money into the first year ... and then I sold the first boat... 14k ... for boat and trailer. The breakthrough came at a University of Michigan Law School Alumni Reunion. During...

2 years ago
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FlintkoteChapter 64

“No.” “Flintkote International?” “No ... wait ... International?” “Do you gentlemen and lawyers realize I can’t spend the interest on my trust fund ... I’ve tried ... seriously tried. Bought 18 million dollar boats ... a month worth of interest. I’ll admit mom bought it but she used my trust fund ... educational use. “Why on earth would an anonymous buyer want to buy my little shop? Now that I’m production I can build one a day ... start to out the door. Fifteen thousand a day. I’ve been...

3 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 6

Departure was delayed five hours. Although there was no public notification, rumor had it that an important arrival had been delayed due to Communications failure in Samoa. A bar fight over the result of the final try at a national Rugby test, put several customers in hospital and led to the arrest of several participants ... all wearing India National Team Rugby shirts. No mention was made or inferred as to whether or not the shirted participants were players. Rumor had it that they were...

1 year ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 7

“Master J and Miss Cyn are from home. By your look, you are Miss Surprise ... and these are?” asked the butler. Only JW, I thought. “My guests.” I said. “A surprise.” “Amelia?” said the man. It was obvious he was speaking to our chauffeur. “Have you retrieved their luggage?” “Yes, Mr. Kwan.” “Please to assist Mary,” Mr. Kwan instructed her. “Yes, Mr. Kwan.” She disappeared in the nether regions of the apartment. “Master J and Miss Cyn are at the boat,” Mr. Kwan said. “If you wish, I...

3 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 9

The shocker came when we reached the boat, she was in a custom cradle tucked away between a pair of some country’s Navy ships. Genuine military hardware undergoing modifications to civilian life. No one was ever going to redesign them to be anything but what the pair truly are ... greyhounds of the sea. Fast moving hunter-killers put out to pasture that won the lottery of life. Long, narrow and fast looking sitting on the hardstand. Too small for drydock but almost too big for the land ......

2 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 10

I know the family has money ... wouldn’t have been able to buy a hundred foot catamaran without it ... the same pile of cash would buy a hundred fifty foot monohull. Dinner out? Sure. Many times. Posh places? Uh huh. Sailing the world put me in exotic restaurants wherever we went. Our nanny would pick up a phone book ... find something interesting, and call for reservations. “Party of four,” she would say. “Flintkote ... yes, 8:30.” She always included a credit card number...”In case we...

2 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 33

“So!” said Cynthiamae McWillians (née Flintkote), “This is where I find you!” She had her hands on her hips, her face broadcasting righteous indignation. “Surprise Me Flintkote!” Uhoh ... full name. She continued, “Soiled our good name last night in this very den of iniquity!” she drew a ragged breath and gestured towards John Bottoms, “You return ... after spending the night in the arms of this ... this ... this ... Hippie...” Can’t really blame her for the ‘hippie’ John was truly...

3 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 41

“No,” Border said. “Although ... you were in our top ten, ‘shoot on sight’, list.” Then she laughed... “Not really ... but you were a person of interest. That particular president didn’t get re-elected ... come to think it ... he was appointed to fill out the term. Now I’m pissed. Anyway ... you’re good.” While Border Patrol was looking to see if there was an actual list ... probably by computer ... Visa was doing the same. I think one could safely say that Visa can search the Internet with...

2 years ago
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Surprise Melody Flintkote Part TwoChapter 43

“Mr. Austin. My name is Surprise Me Flintkote.” “Ms. Flintkote.” “Sometime in the recent past, a freighter unloaded my catamaran off Pentwater. You brought her to your town with your salvage tug.” “Before I admit to that ... the boats name?” “SV Basilisk 20 meter sail.” “Yup ... your boat ... yes.” “Yes?” “Yes ... I picked her up and brought het to town. The Marina couldn’t find room ... she’s at the village docks.” “What are your charges?” “I was paid by the shipping company....

2 years ago
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Surprise Melody FlintkoteChapter 17

“Well, officer Jacobs?” Headmaster Scott said, “You started this.” “You know I hate giving up,” Jacobs said. “We might as well face facts,” Scott said. “They’re smarter than smart. I’ll contact the University. Tomorrow. Let them have a whole day with our prodigies.” On the morrow, the Admissions office asked where the trio gone to school. Headmaster Scott didn’t know... “But it was somewhere in the southeast United States.” “Oh, you want the International Office. Just a mo and I’ll ring...

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