First, Do No Harm: Winter JenningsChapter 6: Ciggies free porn video

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Back in Los Angeles, I was now in a graduate seminar.

Carmen Ortega smiled, “Sistine thinks you’re ready to move on.” From opioids to the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder drug that Macklin had under development. PTSD.

I had briefed the three of them — Gloria Allen, Sistine Sanders, Carmen Ortega — on l’affaire Dillinger. It was over, time to turn back to my real job.

I said, “He wasn’t a criminal genius. The Sig Sauer was in his glove compartment. But he’d already confessed by then.”

Gloria reached for a Snickers bar, “Good.”

Enough about me. Tick-tock.

She said, “Macklin has set up a new lab in India. City called Indore. Big education center. And they brought along a boatload of scientists from their opioids lab.”

Sistine said, “They’re ready to start testing the new drug. Actually, three different versions of it, if our source in the Madhya Pradesh Police is accurate. He has some considerable leverage over one of the molecular biologists.”

I said, “Madhya Pradesh?”

Carmen smiled, “That’s the state where Indore is. It’s all in the folder.” In other words, don’t ask unnecessary questions until I’ve done my homework. Not the way I usually roll, but...

Cozad’s mother, Berlie Dillinger, hadn’t suspected anything. Certainly not the attempted murder. But she didn’t seem all that surprised. Nor did she when the Nelson Chang revelations came out. Moms know things.

Lonely days and lonely nights. Okay, I missed my family. FaceTime just wasn’t the same. Better than nothing, but not the same.

By now, the Beverly Wilshire was beginning to feel like home. A home where someone changed the linens and made the bed every day. Where food was delivered on demand. Where, eventually, I ran out of closet space. Carmen offered to upgrade me to a suite. Not at these prices, thank you. My contributions to the case consisted, so far, of draining money. Fortunately, there seemed to be enough of it. Gloria paid attention to the budget and had anticipated my side of the ledger.

The hotel agreed to put my clothes in storage when I’m not there. Nice to come back to freshly laundered outfits.

I quickly immersed myself into the LA food truck culture. Kansas City has a few; Los Angeles has a gazillion. Starting with the famous Kogi BBQ Taco Truck. Korean-Mexican rules.

Mitchum didn’t seem to mind driving me around. Especially once I started buying dinner for him and his silent wife. Besides, he got paid the same. For driving or sitting.

Kogi night, Mitchum and his wife had wide stripes of glitter paint on their eyelids. LA.

While I preferred, generally, to be out on my own, there were certainly advantages to being part of a successful operation. Financial security was an obvious one.

But time was another. I’m used to doing a lot of research. Stuff I didn’t want to bother the Sullivans with. Nor pay them.

But here, the Gloria Allen team not only did most of the background work, they anticipated what I was going to need.

For instance, I’d never heard of Indore, India before. Fine, just open the INDORE file. Metro population — over two million. And, like most Americans, it was terra incognita to me. Mostly Hindu. A local rock/metal band, Nicotine, was a pioneer in central India. Like that.

As Carmen started to lead me into the labyrinth of PTSD, I began to appreciate all the background work they’d had me do on Macklin’s opioid empire. Especially that marketing plan — most especially their deep incursion into the entire distribution channels.

The opioid game-plan was now the template for Macklin’s new drug.

Carmen walked me through the process to date:

> Macklin was trying to develop a medicine to mediate the horrific effects of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Psychosis, suicide, drug addiction, crime, jail time.

> PTSD wasn’t all combat-related. In fact, around ten percent of American women are, or will be, affected. Growth market from Macklin’s point of view.

> A small pharmaceutical company outside of Durham, North Carolina had had some positive preliminary results from a neuron blocker that might do more than relieve symptoms. It might eventually prevent PTSD. Collins, Schneider, & Malcomb Inc.

> CS & M couldn’t get the safety profiles worked out. Their drug — internal name, ZB8687 — was still causing tumors in test animals. Mostly rodents, but some primates too in the later laboratory experiments. Macaques usually, a few marmosets, tamarins, spider monkeys.

> CS & M couldn’t fade the ever-increasing costs of refining ZB8687. They put the patent on the market and Macklin leaped. Bought it for a little more than $88 million. Pennies on the dollar.

> Macklin had deep pockets, an experienced R & D staff, a built-in distribution network, doctors hungry for solutions, public demand ... the perfect storm. If they could eliminate the fatal side effects.

Gloria added some perspective, “If the lab can come up with a safe, effective PTSD drug, it’ll be worth billions and billions and billions. At the same time, they’re configuring it to treat ADD kids. Sky’s the limit.”

Once I had familiarized myself with the entirety of Gloria Allen’s files —STRESS files — I stopped taking the paperwork home. Beverly Wilshire. But I had a 27-inch iMac on my desk. And a STRESS thumb drive. Good to go.

When I left for work in the morning, I put the thumb drive in my closet floor-safe. Maybe an excess of caution. Maybe not.

While US combat engagements ebbed and flowed, the pressure to find a cure for PTSD continued to grow. Too many families had too many loved ones affected. Homeless veterans. Prisons, suicides. And families stressed out from the opioids epidemic. Macklin had helped to cause one and now wanted to cure the other. Like throwing yourself on the mercy of the court — “I’m an orphan” — after killing your parents. No, I guess it wasn’t like that.

The Department of Defense allocated over $100 million for PTSD research. The Defense Appropriations Act.

Macklin viewed the disease, well the victims, as a growth area. Although not yet a market they could grow themselves as they had with opioids addiction. But the fuckers might even be working on ... no, too early to go that cynical.

Meanwhile pressure on another government agency — the Food and Drug Administration — took on a growing urgency. In the form of requests for wartime drug approvals. The Macklin lobbyists were particularly adept at prosecuting the PR battles.

As they had done with opioids, Macklin waged its STRESS campaign on several fronts.

The Institutional Review Board was charged with protecting the rights of human research subjects. Macklin now had a member, one of their allies, on the committee.

Of course no ZB8687 testing had been done on humans. Rodents, and a few primates before CS & M ceded the field and sold the patent rights. But Macklin now had a member on the IRB committee.

It felt like a gathering storm.

I was lost in the gorse. STRESS gorse. All of the files, all of the thumb drive capacity, could take me only so far. Like Daddy, I preferred to deal with people. Of course institutions couldn’t be ignored; best-practices procedures had to be followed.

But I was antsy. Felt I knew more than I wanted about Macklin’s company. Whatever it was called. Triple-I. Fine. I felt I knew more than I wanted about the pharmaceutical process. Processes.

I was itching to get out in the field. To start talking to people. Or at least learn who I should be talking with. I felt like a tiny stick figure looking up at a giant, brick wall. With no doors, no windows.

My choice was pretty straightforward. Keep my nose to the proverbial grindstone or talk with Sistine. Keeping a frustrated student in from recess will backfire. Sooner or later.

“Oh what a tangled web we spin ... something, something, Rin Tin Tin.” Or whatever it was that Wally Scott had to say about deception.

The one question I’d had from the very first time I’d met Gloria Allen was ... why me? With decades of mostly successful litigation behind her, she had access to dozens of private investigators. With a lot more seasoning than I had. Better contacts too. And many of them were based where she was — Los Angeles and New York.

Being a professional detective, licensed, I had figured it out. Pretty sure.

Gloria had asked me three or four times about my connection, my relationship, with Ash Collins. I told Daddy, “Red herring. Gloria must know people above Ash.”

“Then what’s her game?”

“I think it was my connection to Matt.”

Daddy’s quick. He leapfrogged Constance Grayson and said, “Senator Wainwright.”

“I believe so. Although my ties to him are less direct, now...” Now that Matt’s dead.

Daddy said, “What do you plan to do about it?” About my understanding of Gloria’s use for me. Potential use.

“Not sure. But I’m glad I figured it out.”

“Better to know than not.”

Ash Collins had always struck me as imperturbable. Even in the political maelstrom that engulfed the J. Edgar building. Which was, literally, crumbling around him. He even has a chunk of granite on a side table that had actually fallen onto the sidewalk. The chunk, not the table.

Months earlier, Constance had told Matt and me, “There are a lot of people, a surprisingly large number, who would be just fine if the building, the entire organization, collapsed.”

Matt said, “The Deep State gang.”

“Yes. And they’re howling in delight as scandal after scandal hits the FBI.” She reached over and patted Ash’s hand.

He said, “Look, we made mistakes. Are still making them. Will in the future. We’re 36,000 strong. There will be dotards, bumblers, iconoclasts, politically corrupt ... just like with any major organization. We have our share of stupid, too.”

Neither Ash nor Constance mentioned the direct, almost relentless, attacks from 1600 Penn.

Walker came up behind me at the kitchen sink. Put his arms around my waist and rested his chin on my head, “Winter.”

“Walk.” I continued rinsing soapy dishes.

“If you, um, meet like, some new guy...”

Uh oh. “Yeah?”

“I mean would you like to?”

“God, yes. I’m about ready to sleep with a Kennedy.”

“Huh?”

“Joke.”

“Oh. Well, if you do meet a guy ... I won’t be ... I mean, I’m sure I’d like him. Right away.”

Walker can be so sweet. “I’ve known you all your life, baby.”

“I know.”

“I recognize an excuse to cop a feel when I see one.”

I could almost hear the grin. I could feel, no almost, the instant bulge. Youth.

In a too-cheery voice as we were taxiing toward the terminal, the pilot said, “Welcome to El Paso. It’s eleven-twenty and the temperature is a pleasant one oh two.”

Logistics. It was Lina Paloma and me headed toward a Tornillo, Texas face-off with the United States Department of Health and Human Services. Specifically with their Office of Refugee Resettlement.

Hmm ... refugee resettlement. Innocuous-sounding term for ripping families asunder.

I had started the trip with Lina because, first of all, she’s a warrior. Language skills of course. Overriding everything, she’s a mother. An outraged immigrant in the shadow of a callous administration. Although, DC has had to do some recent back-scrambling — this family-separation policy had been too much of a black eye, even for some of the most ardent supporters. An executive order — that the nation had been told couldn’t be issued — had been issued to halt the government practice.

But Lina didn’t care, and I didn’t care, about the politics, about the optics. We had decided that if we could reunite even just one family ... well, that would be something good. Maybe just a small something, but something.

And, this would be a team effort. Pilar could supplant her mother; Vanessa could take my place. We had the financial resources and we would find the time. Make the time, take the time. Steal it from my Macklin duties — it suddenly felt that imperative to me. I’d even bring Walker into it if necessary.

Our goal was, pretty sure, noble. But what a depressing arena. A vast Texas desert, dusty roads, endless cotton fields. And a tent city to accommodate ‘unaccompanied minors’.

Actually, Tornillo was just a temporary stop; we’d circle back to El Paso. I’d called the office of a United States Congressman from Texas who’d been turned away, not allowed to go inside the tents to see the children. An elected United States Representative.

One of his assistants told me, slow Texas drawl, “Check it out. You’ll see the prison-like facility even from the outside. That’s the face of America these days. Down here anyway.” Her voice dripped with venom, “Zero tolerance.”

To orient ourselves, we took an early morning drive across the Fabens–Caseta International Bridge into Guadalupe, Mexico. A bank sign said 7:21. And 99 degrees. No border crossing problems either way. Two sleepy towns. And I was white; Lina had her citizenship papers.

She and I drove to the Tornillo tents. Stopped, and stared wordlessly. She had tears in her eyes. Me? I felt anger. Outrage. I U-turned and headed back to El Paso. To a federal court, if we could work things out.

So much for the Tornillo face-off.

The legal procedures would actually turn out to be the simple part of the process. Which I had mentally dubbed Project Reunification.

Lina and I made an appointment with the Rio Grande legal services operation which focused on indigent folks in Southwestern Texas. And it didn’t get much more Southwestern than El Paso. Nor indigent.

We drove past a branch of the United Bank of El Paso. The sign informed us it was 9:13 and 97 degrees. The legal office, a crowded, dusty storefront, was located in a crowded, dusty barrio. The only AC was an ancient wheezer above the front door. Its main function seemed to be to drip warm, rusty water on every visitor. The front windows were slanted open, but that didn’t help much. Room temperature in the nineties. At least. And that was my subliminal memory of that entire Texas trip — oppressive, unrelenting heat.

Annalie Delgado was Latina, all right, but not Mexican. Nor Central nor South American.

She was almost invisible behind two huge stacks of files.

Portly, dusky-skinned, pleasant. A white smile that buried a dark mole in the crevice of a deep laugh line. Annalie and Lina chatted merrily in Spanish. I was getting better at following the conversation. ‘Por favor’ and ‘gracias’. Nothing about ‘cerveza’, although I could have gulped one or two down right then and there.

Remembering her manners, Annalie turned to the ignorant Gringa and said, “I was telling Lina that my mother and grandmother were on the boat-lift out of Cuba — Marielitos. In 1980.”

Lina said, “They were treated about as well as the new immigrants today.”

Annalie shrugged, “Yesterday’s newspaper. Now, how can I help?”

I reached between the two tottering stacks and handed her an envelope. “Ten thousand dollars. A donation whether you help us or not.”

Huge grin. She reached down to a drawer and pulled out a worn, canvas-covered ledger. She asked for my ID. Filled in a pre-printed receipt, “IRS-approved.”

“Thank you.”

“Thank you. So, how can I help?”

Not rushing us, but keeping things moving. The office was filled, every visitor’s chair taken. Twenty or so standing, many holding wide-eyed kids. Some children were crying softly — exhaustion and heat and ... life. Everywhere, Latino families clutched numbered cards, like at a popular deli counter. Except this was life and death for many of them. The last stop before the street, jail, a bus ride back across the border. The room smelled of sweat and despair.

Most of the staff was Latinx. Most were young, with a few grizzled vets. All shared that same look. Harassed to the breaking point. Mostly helpless tasks made more miserable through arbitrary changes emanating from DC. A movie they’d seen for years and years.

Here, in this grimy office, I stood out because I was blonde, tall, out of place. But I didn’t sense any animosity from the supplicants. So, someone else cut in line in front of them. A tired old story. Them that has, gets; them that don’t...

Lina spoke, in Spanish again, wanting to be sure there was no misunderstanding. In English, it would have been, “We want to help a mother get out of detention; bail her out of jail if that’s necessary. A mother who had her children taken away. We’ll provide for her, do everything we can to find her children.”

A bit of skepticism. Yankee do-gooders. Although Lina...

“Any mother? No one in particular?”

I said, “We’ll follow your lead. Or, if you point us to another attorney, a social worker.” I shook my head, “There are so many women who need help. If we can reunite just one family...”

The money we had given her had been needed. And appreciated. But it still created a rather awkward dynamic. Some understandable resentment. Rich bitches thinking they can buy their way into God’s Good Graces. And God didn’t seem to be spending a lot of her time in this particular barrio.

Balancing that: Lina Paloma. An immigrant herself. Illegal when she crossed into Texas. Both Lina and I were mothers — that might count for something.

Annalie held up a ‘wait-one’ finger and left for the back of the room. Strode directly to one of two dozen or so four-drawer file cabinets. A family of five stepped politely aside. She brought back a tattered file labeled ‘Luzon López’. A mug shot was paper-clipped to the inside cover. Along with a garishly-colored photo of a young boy.

“Bail hearing is Wednesday morning, which means it might be then or that afternoon or the next day. Or the next.” This was Monday.

My blouse was sweat-soaked, completely saturated. The overhead fans just pushed warm air down on us. “What is she accused of? Luzon López?”

Annalie shook her head. “She was a motel housekeeper. Admitted as a refugee from El Salvador four months ago. She and her son were granted Temporary Protected Status. That’s good for 18 months in their case. Her green card application will be sent to the USCIS as soon as she qualifies.”

I said, “CIS?”

Lina said, “Citizenship and Immigration Services.”

Annalie patted the folder, “Fortunately, Luzon was meticulously obsessive about the paperwork. Saved a copy of everything remotely related to the process.” She shook her head, “Wasn’t enough to keep her out of the dragnet.”

“What happened?”

“The motel manager got nervous — all this new aggressive border enforcement. He didn’t provide any benefits, ignored minimum wage laws. He was paying late night visits to Luzon too. But he still fired her. She and her son, Ennio, lost the storage shed they were sleeping in. All their belongings are still in there.” Shrug. “As far as I know.”

Lina said, “How old is Ennio?”

“Five years, two months. A neighbor a couple of doors down from the motel was teaching them English.”

I said, “The arrest?”

“Shoplifting. Tortillas and milk. Overzealous clerk. The bodega is willing to drop the charges, but for now it still impacts the federal paperwork.”

“I want to help them. Lina and I do. Where’s the boy?”

Annalie shook her head, “Between the cracks. No one knows. Luzon is having panic attacks. Which doesn’t endear her to the federales.”

I got a suite for Lina and a room for me. Indigo Plaza Hotel in downtown El Paso. If we got Luzon out on bail, she could bunk in with Lina. Then the hard part — locating Ennio.

I thought about, but didn’t really consider, calling for reinforcements. Bulldog Bannerman. Constance Grayson. Gloria Allen. Although in this climate, I’m not sure any intervention by a U. S. Senator would be helpful.

But that’s not really why I didn’t reach out. I needed to become more self-sufficient, more ... capable. Hanging with Constance and Gloria ... well, I’d gotten to see firsthand two strong, resourceful ladies in action.

Plus, I didn’t know what Lina and I were getting ourselves into. My intentions were good, maybe even honorable. But there was no telling what I might have to end up doing ... well, one never knows, do one?

Lina and I started with the Immigration Enforcement detention facilities in the El Paso Processing Center on Montana Avenue. Joint looked like the prison it was.

Annalie Delgado had called ahead and got us a sit-down with Luzon López. The old-girl network ... um, worked. Even from lowly Legal Aid up to the mighty Feds.

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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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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 15 EEEE

Richard Hyder was apoplectic, “Your Honor! This is outrageous! Trial by ambush! I’ve never seen anything so ... underhanded, so deceitful, in my forty-one years before the bar.” “Is there an objection in there?” Judge Graves seemed more amused than annoyed. “Yes! Yes there is. The Defense hasn’t even begun to present its case and this ... this ... private eye miraculously points the way ... I object! This ... these items cannot be entered into evidence.” “Grounds?” “Illegal search and...

1 year 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...

3 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,...

2 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...

3 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...

4 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 9 Fantastique

Pilar: “Guy walks into a bar and is shocked to see a horse behind the bar.” Walker: “Horse says, ‘What’s the matter? You can’t believe that a horse can tend bar?’” Pilar: “No. I just can’t believe the ferret sold the place.” Alicia Collins called me from New York. “Bear told you.” “Yes. Have to admit it shocked me. Vanessa too. And the kids.” “I’m sorry I didn’t say anything. But I felt it was Bear’s news to share.” “No, I understand. And he would have wanted to be the one to tell...

2 years ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 16 O say can you see

Walker: “A rabbi, a priest, and a Lutheran minister walk into a bar.” Pilar: “Is this some kind of joke?” Walker and Pilar, holding hands, bowing, “Thank you, thank you. This ends our Kansas City engagement.” xxxxxxxxxx Douglas ‘Duke’ Arlington. A new trial, his second, for the murder of Gustav Hindenburg in Ft. Payne, Alabama. Different courtroom, different judge, different jurors, different defense attorneys. New evidence. Ned Daniels and Hilary Dunne would reprise their prosecutor...

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...

1 year ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 3 Top Down

Clint called, “Any New York plans yet?” “Remember Vanessa? Tall, good looking. Married.” “I’ll throw in a set of steak knives.” Click. Hey! I’m the one supposed to be hanging up. We invited Cathal Conway and family for Sunday brunch. Riles went with Walker and Pilar back to their room. She may be only 10, but the kids treat her as an equal. Jorge and Javier immediately started roughhousing with Hobo. The Proper Villain jumped up on Juanita’s lap. Cathal accepted his glass of Jamison —...

1 year 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...

2 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...

2 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...

1 year 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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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...

2 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...

3 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
1 year 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
3 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...

2 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....

3 years ago
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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...

1 year ago
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Play Ball Winter JenningsChapter 7 Guastavino

The kids were hunched over the kitchen table moving black and white stones around a board. Gertie, sipping her Tanqueray, was watching with interest. I said, “What’s this?” Walker, shoehorning pity into a single word — a feat that only a teenager who had a slow mother could master — said, “Go.” I swatted the back of his head, “I know that, dumbbell, why are you playing Go?” Pilar, not looking up, said, “Gertie said that when AlphaGo beat Ke Jie, it was China’s Sputnik moment.” Walker,...

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...

1 year 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...

2 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...

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