The Three Signs - Book 4 - LisaChapter 47: Service NSW free porn video

This is a FigCaption - special HTML5 tag for Image (like short description, you can remove it)

When I woke up, I gathered some documents to show to John about how we would tackle the project. My main aim with today’s meeting was ‘project qualification’, that is, to get more details about John’s requirements, what were the key deliverables and results that he wanted to see, plus some feeling on what was he felt was a reasonable budget and timeframe for the project. I was also wanting to get some idea about how the project would run; what accommodation would be provided, would there be access to the Information Technology Services network and email system, and whether computers and printers would be set up for us.

I made sure I had an up to date copy of the company profile for him, along with some screen shots of the UNSW web site and documentation on the structure of the site. I called Michelle and told her I would be on the train going through Wollstonecraft at 9:02, we could walk from Wynyard station to the State Office Block. I chose a light grey suit, white shirt and a blue paisley tie to wear, I didn’t want to try the typical ‘dark grey power suit with the red tie’, this meeting wasn’t about impressing John, or intimidating him, it was just an information gathering exercise.

Michelle met me on the train as arranged; we sat next to each other, and talked about the project. She reminded me of one of this year’s thesis projects that could form the basis for the site search function.

“Do you remember that project, Chris Saunders was the student, I think Ken Robinson was his supervisor, he was developing an artificial intelligence program, one that had a learning ability in it, where you could ask it questions, and it would give answers,” she said. “Something like ‘what research is the university doing on infertility?’ and it would come back with a list of research activities, and you could ask for more information on specific ones”

“I do remember that, he based it on that chatbot program called ‘Eliza’, yes,” I replied. “We were looking at how it could be adapted to the website, as a guide to the university’s research activities. There was some work required to allow multiple people to use it simultaneously, and to work in a ‘stateless’ environment like a website, but it was a very impressive system. I liked how it had the ability to ‘learn’, where people would rate the accuracy of its answers, and new possible answers could be added all the time.”

“That’s the one. Now, for this project what if we look at building that into the website, but where you could ask it ‘how can I apply for a driver’s licence’, or ‘how much does it cost to get a copy of my birth certificate, and who to I contact?’ It would return links to the relevant web page on the site; maybe a brief description of where it would take you, and a hyperlink. For example, the answer to the first question would be something like ‘you can go to any Roads and Traffic Authority office, follow this link for details... ‘, and that link would go to the page on the RTA section of the ‘Service NSW’ site, where it described what you needed to do to get a driver’s licence, costs, documentation requirements, and so on.”

“I like it, that sounds like it would be a good way for users to find the service they need,” I said. “Once we start working on the proposal, we should contact Chris and see if he’s interested in some work with us. I assume you’ve got – or can get – his contact information?”

“Do you really have to ask me that, Will?” she said. “Of course I know how to contact him.”

“Yeah, I should know better than to have asked you. So that’s something we can present to John, a bit of AI behind the website to assist in service delivery.”

We went over a few more things we could cover with John, and when the train arrived at Wynyard, we got out, walked down George Street, then up Hunter Street to Chifley Square, and then into the State office block. We took the elevator up to the twenty-second floor, and followed the signs to the main reception desk.

“Good morning, Will Morris and Michelle Jones to see Mr. Martin,” I said to the receptionist.

She checked a large diary in front of her, and then made a phone call.

“Samantha? I have Mr Martin’s nine-thirty here. Shall I send them down? Okay, they are on their way.”

“Down that corridor, second door on the right,” she said. “His executive assistant is expecting you.”

“Thank you,” I said to her.

At the office we had been directed to, sitting behind a desk was Samantha Juneau, John’s executive assistant from when I worked for ITSO, back in 1980. I recall Karen Phelan referring to her as ‘the dragon lady’.

“Samantha? Nice to see you again, it’s Will Morris to see John Martin,” I said.

“Will! Great to see you, I have been looking forward to seeing you again. Go on in, John and Jim are waiting for you. Can I get you two coffees?”

We told her how we like our coffees, and entered the office, there at a side table was John Martin, and Jim Shipway, both looking older, well, it had been thirteen years since I had seen them last.

“Will! Good morning, glad you could make it. I assume you are Michelle? John Martin, Director-General of the State’s Information Technology Services Bureau. This is Jim Shipway, Director of the State Government Computing Centre. Jim got my old job when they moved me up here; we are just waiting for your old boss, Steve Crossling, who heads up the Network Infrastructure Branch to arrive.”

Just as he spoke, the door opened, and in came Steve. I shook his hand, and introduced him to Michelle.

“We’re getting the band back together!” I said, joking.

“Yes, it is almost like old times,” John said. “You will be pleased to know, Will, we are still using much the same change management procedures that you set up when you were with us, back in 1980. They have stood the test of time, that’s for sure.”

Samantha appeared with some coffees, and Michelle and I sat on a sofa, facing the other three around a low coffee table. I took my notes and sample pages from my brief case, put them on the table, and opened up my notebook.

“Did you want some background on the company, the sort of work we do, the people we have working for us?” I asked.

“That would be a good start,” John said. “Murray Allen filled me in with quite a bit yesterday, including why you are now not working at the university, but he mentioned that was sensitive, so we don’t have to cover that. But for Jim and Steve’s benefit, you are taking several years extended leave of absence, a sabbatical, I believe they call it. So, WTM Consulting, what do you do?”

I went through how the company was formed, as a vehicle to help a colleague set up a comprehensive IT system for her company, and we tended to specialise in accounting and business management solutions for medium sized business, not just the software installation and tailoring, but a complete IT solution. We could get computer rooms built, hardware and networks installed, mainly IBM Midrange and Personal Computer based systems, train users, do data conversion, a complete, end to end solution. More recently, we had done some internet and web design work, culminating in the World Wide Web development at the University of New South Wales. I showed them samples of screens, including the dynamic pages, mentioning dynamic pages generated using cgi / Perl and data base integration.

“Most of the people we have are those who I knew from UNSW,” I said. “They either went through their degree with me, or were my students, or are well known by the principals. As part of the proposal we will give you full CV’s of all proposed staff.”

“Where do you have your offices?” Jim asked.

“We have office and lab facilities in my house at Lane Cove,” I said. “But my view is our staff shouldn’t be back in the office, they should be working with our clients, on site, getting real work done. Not sitting back in an office, being non-productive.”

“And I see you have a web address, ‘WTM-Consulting.com.au’,” he said. “I assume that’s available now to be viewed?”

“Absolutely, if you have a computer with a web browser, you can pull it up, and see. One of our employees is a web design expert; she is also a graphic designer, programmer and trainer. In fact, she is working with Tim Berners-Lee and some others to develop the ongoing standards for the World Wide Web and HTML. Her current project with them is looking to see if the SGML concept of ‘style sheets’ can be ported to HTML, so that the visual appearance of web pages is separated from the structure of the document.”

“And you’re still working on the core architecture of the Internet?” Steve asked.

“To a certain degree,” I replied. “I have been involved in the development of a number of the RFPs that specify how certain parts of the internet work. Mainly routing, the Domain Name System, ways to manage private address spaces, things like that. At the moment, I’ve been involved in the development of a Unix-like system called ‘Linux’, which is a rewrite of UNIX for the Intel personal computer architecture.”

“So you’re involved in that?” Jim said. “We’ve just started to play around with it in the computer centre, looking at the possibility of using powerful Intel 486 servers to perform various networking and other functions. Taking the load off the mainframes, or avoiding the need for specialized hardware. It’s a promising looking system, I have to admit.”

“You’ve come a long way since you left us at the end of 1980,” John said. “I always felt you would go on to bigger and better things. When Murray Allen called me back then, telling me he was poaching you from me, getting you back at the university, I told him that he owed me, big time. I think he’s now starting to repay that debt, hooking me up with you again for this internet project.”

“Well, if we are going to implement an Internet architecture for the State Government,” Jim said, “why not go with Australia’s internet expert?”

“Well, I wouldn’t go quite that far, Jim,” I said. “I’m not really into blowing my own trumpet.”

“Don’t be so reticent about your skills, Will,” John said. “You are well-known in the internet community, both here in Australia and internationally. I am just very glad you are now available to assist me, to work with us again, and we can take the benefits of your knowledge and experience. So, having said that, you can probably guess that we have already decided to take you, and your company, on for this project. It is not the usual way we do consultancy bids, we normally get some fully costed, detailed proposals, and evaluate which would be the best for the State. So, assume we will take your company on, what we need to do is tell you what it is we want – or what I think we want, you will probably have some good suggestions. What I’ll do now is give you my thoughts, we can discuss that, and I hope you’ll have enough information to get a project proposal and plan developed. Does that sound okay?”

“I guess so, I’m not going to tell you not to offer the contract to us,” I said. “I thought that we would have to convince you that we knew what you wanted, and how to do it. But let’s talk about what you are hoping to achieve with the project, for some aspects, there might be alternative ways to achieve what you want, but we can talk about that in the fullness of time.”

John then spent the next ten minutes or so expanding on what he had told Michelle and me yesterday afternoon, they wanted a way to have a ‘nsw.gov.au’ internet presence, giving access to the Internet mail system to all state government departments and agencies, and setting up a World Wide Web site for the State Government. At least he had a reasonable idea of what he wanted from the Internet, and the sort of things it would be able to do.

“Okay, that’s given me a good start,” I said. “At least you know what things you hope it will do for the State, you’re not like ‘oh, this Internet thingy looks pretty good, let’s have two of them!’, you have a clear picture – at least at a high level – of what you want.

“Now, there are several ways we can do this. How much do you know about the DNS system, the different address classes, private networks and Network Address Translation? I don’t want to go over stuff that you know and understand, but then I don’t want to talk about options, assuming you know the basics and architecture behind it.”

“I think you can assume we know the basics, but some of what you mentioned, well, let’s hear it from the expert,” John said, and the other two nodded their heads.

“Well, knowing what you want to do, at least at a high level, the first part of the project will be setting up the key infrastructure,” I said. “What we need to do is get the ‘nsw.gov.au’ domain administration transferred to you, and set up a server to host that part of the DNS system here. Probably two servers, in case one fails, with an automatic fail-over. Would you want those servers hosted in the State Government Computer Centre?”

“Yes, I think that would be appropriate, we’ve got the infrastructure to keep the environment operational through all sorts of failures,” John said.

“Now, there will in fact need to be two DNS systems, the external one that has all of the publically accessible ‘nsw.gov.au’ hosts in it, and an internal system, that will be on the inside network, behind the firewall.”

“Firewall?” Jim asked.

“What we need to do is have a boundary between the public Internet, and the internal State Government network,” I said. “What I think will be needed is an external, official IP address range – most likely a Class B network, which will have all of the external IP addresses for your systems. Then the firewall will be the divider between that network, and a private network – I would suggest a private Class A network, using the 10.x.x.x address range. The firewall will provide the Network Address Translation service between the public IPs and your private network, giving access to those servers that need to be accessed from outside the firewall.

“What that also does is provide a layer of isolation for most of the devices on your network that don’t need to be accessed externally. Now, things like mail servers, web servers, FTP servers and the external DNS servers clearly need to be accessible from all over the Internet. But individual application servers, personal computers, internal routers, printers and the like, no one from outside needs access to them.”

I continued to describe how the distinction between the external network and the internal network would be implemented with a possible addressing scheme for the internal network to help make it manageable, the use of DHCP to reduce the workload of managing devices, and so on.

“All of this will be in our proposal, and the overall implementation plan,” I went on to say. “One thing we need to work out is for those organizations that have their computer systems installed elsewhere than the State Government Computer Centre, do we connect their network to the internal side of your firewall, or have them set up their own independent internet connect? There’s pros and cons for both approaches, I’ll put that in the plan, and that will be one of the first things we need to resolve.”

“I’m sure some agencies would want their own connection,” John said. “In fact, some would want to be as independent of us as possible; they resent having to go through us, they don’t like being answerable to anyone else to justify their projects.”

“Of course, if they went with their own internet connection, they would have to see if they could get their own IP address range, and they are starting to get in short supply. At least if they wanted a Class B address. Mind you, most government agencies wouldn’t need more than a Class C address, not when using a good firewall with NAT,” I said. “And it would be difficult for them to justify anything larger. But then they need to have someone who knows what they are doing to configure and set things up.”

“Could you not set things up for them, as an extension of this contract?” John asked.

“Well, I could do anything if I was asked, and paid for,” I said. “But we will have to work out what would be the best way for the State to take. That’s going to be one of the first tasks; because it will determine what equipment we need as part of that firewall and associated routers.”

“What I suggest you plan for early on in the project is for a meeting with the Cabinet information technology steering committee,” John said. “We can brief them on the project, and the directions we are going, and what we hope to deliver. That way, we get authority from the top to implement the project plan, and hopefully cut off any dissent before it can start.”

“Sounds a good idea,” I said. “What we should include in that is the web site plan, what I am calling ‘Service New South Wales’, a way for people to access State Government services and information on the Internet. I’ve given it a subtitle of ‘Positioning a Connected Community for the 21st Century’, the idea being that if there is any information the State makes available to the public, they can access that through the Web, any service, any transaction could be done that way. The challenge will be structuring a web site that allows for that to be done easily.

“The thought I had is while those in the Government like to think in terms of what each agency or Department does, that’s not how the general public thinks. They don’t care about what a particular department may or may not do, or that they need to talk to some other body to get that application processed, or renew a certain license or permit. They have a particular task they need to get done, they don’t care what organization or agency does it, as long as they get it done.

“One thing we have in mind is an artificial intelligence ‘referral engine’, a smart chat bot, where you can ask it a question, say ‘how do I renew my driver’s license’, or ‘what qualifications do I need to be a hairdresser’, and the referral engine will give a list of answers, with links to where they can find that information on line, or get that task done. One of the people on our team developed that as part of his thesis earlier this year, and we will get him to further refine it, and build it into the web site.”

“Are you suggesting that each department doesn’t have their own website?” Jim asked.

“No, not at all,” I replied. “We will come up with an overall design, or theme, and each department and agency can have their own site that fits into that design. But there will be lots of interlinking, that’s the whole point of the Web. That’s where the specific information on each service would be located, and the responsible agency would maintain that information, since they are, in theory at least, the experts on it. But we don’t want people in the community to have to guess which agency provides any particular service.”

“That will go down very well with the politicians,” John said. “The Premier in particular, he’s been pushing for something like that, and I’ve been asked if there’s a way in the rural and regional areas where we can have one location for all state agencies, and they can do everything in the one visit.”

“What I want to cover is how the actual project will be run,” Michelle said. “Will we be working out of your location, either in the Computer Centre, or up here? We will need desks, computers with network connection, phones, and so on.”

“We will provide office space up here in the State office block, plus a work area in the Computer Centre,” John said. “If you can give me a list of what resources you will need in the proposal and project plan, we can set that up for you.”

Michelle, John and Jim spent a while talking logistics, payment schedules – the project plan would include a list of deliverables, and the payments would be based on achieving certain deliverables. Finally, John had a list of all of the departments and agencies that would form part of the overall internet connection and web site, including number of staff, locations, email systems, and other information we would need. I thanked them for their time, gave them my card, plus the information I had prepared on the people we would have working on the project, a background on the company, and samples of the web page design we did for the University.

On the way back to Wynyard station, Michelle and I talked about how the meeting went.

“Well, that was a huge surprise,” Michelle said. “I expected we would have to do a full on sales pitch, convincing them that we knew how to take on the project, and why we would be the best people to do it for them. But they had already made up their minds to go with us, it was surreal!”

“I certainly wasn’t expecting that,” I said. “Sure, Murray said that John wanted me to talk about the project to him, but ... I guess Murray must have done a good sales pitch for us.”

“You know he had a soft spot for you,” she said. “He felt that you had huge potential, even becoming head of the School eventually. I’m sure he would have impressed on John just what a good job you would do for him.”

On the train trip back home, we discussed the overall project, and back at my place, we started on the project plan. Debra and Gillian joined us after lunch, they had finished the UNSW Web Site project, and it was due to be officially launched on Wednesday, December 1st. That morning, I would have to go in to the university first thing, and push the DNS changes out to the public DNS so the site would be accessible on the Internet. There was an official ‘launch function’ that we were expected to attend, not that I was vindictive, but I saw it as a chance to send John Hiller a big ‘fuck you’, particularly when he discovered that I would be leading this major project for the State government.

There was going to be the University’s official photographer there, and Tracie said she wanted a full article in the University’s newsletter, a press release and a write-up in the Alumni news. She asked me for brief two-paragraph summaries of the main people that were working on the project – Debra, Gillian, Larry, Michelle and myself – particularly considering all of us, with the exception of Gillian, were UNSW alumni.

When we got back home, we started work on the project plan – well, Michelle did, I started to order the additional equipment that we would need to set up a proper development lab here. First was a 19 inch rack cabinet, a decent battery UPS to fit in the bottom, a rack mount Cisco router, and enough parts to build three rack mounted powerful i486DX computers. I would install Linux on each of them; one would serve as our firewall / mail server / DNS and DHCP server, another as my Linux test machine, and the third as a general-purpose application server. There would be a sixteen-port network switch, currently 10Mbps twisted pair connections, but the switch could be easily upgraded to support 10/100 Mbps ports once the faster network adapter cards were readily available.

I contacted Telecom, they would put in a primary rate ISDN line, 2Mbps that would provide our Internet connection. They would be able to replace the existing two phone lines to our PABX, there was an adapter for the PABX that would connect to the ISDN line, pulling out the voice channels, and passing the data channel to the router. I checked with Frank Bubalo to make sure the alarm system would still work across that connection, and he said provided it still presented a standard PSTN style voice connection, things should work. I spoke with Patrick Tarpey, he would get the ISDN adapter for the PABX and come around and install it over the weekend.

As well as the servers, I ordered a number of new desktop computers; they would run mainly Windows 3.1, with the exception of two computers that would run Linux. For document production, we (that is, Michelle and myself) preferred to use vi and troff or TeX to produce high quality documentation. That meant a good quality laser printer would be required, and a HP LaserJet 4 was ordered, along with two Jet Direct network interface devices, allowing our printers to be network capable.

“What else are we going to need in here?” I asked Michelle. “I assume your initial plans for taking a vacation have gone out the window.”

“Well, I assume the two weeks either side of Christmas / New Year are going to be pretty quiet, you’ll be doing your Coffs Harbour race. That will be enough vacation for me; I’m really excited about working with you, full time in the company. But what do we need in here? Maybe a book case, filing cabinet, a few more desk style chairs around this table. Stationary, I’ll go up to Penfolds in Chatswood tomorrow, get what I think we will need. I can’t see me spending more than a hundred dollars on that all up.”

“Sounds good; what if we get that furniture this afternoon? There’s an office furniture place in Atchison Street, St Leonards, they have reasonably priced stuff. We can see what sort of chairs they have, too.”

We had some lunch, and then went in search of furniture. I picked up two three foot by six foot high bookcases, and a decent four drawer filing cabinet, and saw some chairs that would be good for us, they would deliver everything tomorrow morning. That would give us time to move things around a bit in the ‘Banksia Room’, leaving space for the computer equipment rack. I suspected we would need at least one additional power circuit, so I called up Bruno, another one of Alexa’s cousins, and after the standard introduction, he said he could come around this weekend and give me a quote for running a fifteen-amp power circuit, with a number of outlets around the room.

Over the next week equipment continued to arrive, I had Bruno install three power circuits, one for the rack, and the other two had a number of outlets put into the floor. At least he was able to run the cables back to the main breaker board through the basement ceiling. The rack was delivered, I built and set up Linux on the servers, we ran the network cables and set personal computer workstations up on the desks. Telecom installed the 2 Meg data line, the other end was terminated at connect.com.au, the phone and alarm systems were reconfigured to work with the ISDN link. WTM Consulting was now operational in our own office, complete with internet connection. Debra had designed and set up a simple web site for us, despite the simplicity of the site – there were only four individual pages – it looked professional.

Len had set up our mail server on one of the Linux servers, we set up email accounts for each of us – I was ‘[email protected]’, and I sent out messages to all of my professional contacts, and co-developers in the Linux world letting them know what my new email address was. I set up a relay on the University’s mail server to forward all of the email to ‘[email protected]’ to my new account.

We attended the official release of the University’s web site, I was prepared to sit back and let the others on the team take much of the credit for the site. Well, all I had done was set up the infrastructure for hosting the site; Debra and Gillian were the main people responsible for the development of the site. Some of the people from Computer Science asked me what I was doing, and I told them I was taking a year or two sabbatical, and setting up the Internet architecture for the State Government. I pointedly did not refer to why I suddenly decided to take time off, and when asked about John Hiller and rumours of him trying to upgrade a student’s fail result, I said nothing. Hiller would find out soon enough that I had the better of him, no need for me to upset him any more than I had.

I called Murray Allen to let him know how the meeting with John Martin went, and told him that I owed him a dinner for setting up the contract. We agree on dinner – I would take him and his wife, Dorothy, out for dinner this Friday night at the Longy, Lisa, Fiona and Michelle would be with us. Friday night dinner was always pretty good at the Longy, it was nice having a nice, friendly local pub not all that far from home. It wasn’t quite within walking distance, like the pubs at Erskineville were, but still close enough.

The four of us arrived at the pub before the Allen’s; we found a table for six at the back and waited for them. They were only a few minutes after us, I made sure Dorothy was introduced to Fiona, and we sat down and looked at the menu.

“So, how’s retirement going, Murray?” I asked him.

“Well, I’ve had the time to improve my golf game,” he said. “In fact, I played a round with your father on Wednesday, up at his club at Bayview, with the Sydney Vets. Great course, we had a great game, even if he did beat me by one shot, a really good chip up the hill to the eighteenth green. He seems to be enjoying retirement, I must say.”

“Yes, I think he plays golf at least three times a week, but somehow has a natural affinity for water,” I said. “There are some holes where he won’t play with the good balls he has, because he’s afraid they will end up in the drink!”

“I can understand that, my golf balls seem to have an internal guidance system that’s also attracted by water!” he said. “But I enjoyed playing with him and catching up with him, he’s much happier, far more relaxed now he’s not working. I think he was getting fed up with all the changes at Telecom, he wasn’t happy there.”

Same as The Three Signs - Book 4 - Lisa
Chapter 47: Service NSW Videos

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 23
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 41 The Penultimate Semester

“Megan, Tracy’s on the phone for you,” I called out. I handed the receiver to Megan, she sounded quite excited when she started talking to Tracy. But her voice quickly changed; all she said was ‘okay’ and ‘I guess so’; then she sobbed loudly, handed the receiver to Lori, and ran out to the roof-top deck over the laundry. Lori spoke briefly to Tracy, then handed me the phone. “Tracy’s found a guy she really likes in Melbourne,” she said. “Talk to her for a bit, I’ll go out and comfort...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 32
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 8 Three in a Boat

The next day, Garry and I were going into town; we both had some final Christmas shopping to do, and he wanted to look through Palings, the large music store with me. He arrived at my place on his bike just after breakfast, and together we walked down to the main bus stop. We had waited till the morning peak hour had passed, that way we would get a seat all the way into town. Standing all the way on a one hour bus trip isn’t much fun! Our bus was a double-decker, and we made our way...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 28
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 20 Janelle Tells The Truth

It took me a few minutes to fully wake up, even with the alarm radio going off. Ten a.m.? Why had I slept so late? I finally remembered, last night, actually, earlier this morning at Janelle’s place, we had decided to resume our relationship. I could have even stayed there, sleeping with her, but I would have felt a bit uncomfortable when we got up if Beth was around. I knew Janelle had said that her mother was happy, even encouraging us to get together, but I still felt a bit strange about...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 22
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 31 Presents

I picked Cathy up from her house just after 8:30; as she slid into seat she gave me a big, passionate kiss. “Where to first?” she asked. “I was thinking about Warriewood,” I replied, as we headed up Mona Vale road. “There are lots of places there, provided we don’t trespass on one of the market gardens.” We headed up a side street from McPherson Street, towards the Catholic girl’s school, “Mater Maria”. Being school holidays, the place was deserted, of course. We parked under a tree,...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 24
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 27 Back at University

On Saturday, we had all gathered in the studio for a planning session and rehearsal for the new album. Phil had invited several others, DonWalker and Ian Moss (ex-Cold Chisel), I had invited Mike Franz, and Mary Beth had invited Chrissy Amphlette. Don had brought his Yamaha DX7 synthesizer and a Yamaha Clavinova electronic piano, Ian had a Fender amp and two of his guitars and Mike had a Yamaha stage organ. After a bit of shuffling equipment around, we had room for everyone; although we were...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 20
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 32 Another Year Ends

There was only another five weeks of classes before the end of the semester; well, before the study break that led into the exams that would be the end of the semester. We all found that time had a habit of shrinking; at the start of each semester, the end of the semester and the exams seemed so distant ... but before we realized it, there was only a matter of weeks left; and a pile of assignments and projects to complete. Having David, Claire and even Garry living next door made the study...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 28
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 42 University Ends

I had already planned my work schedule for my thesis; the date that the completed documents had to be submitted to the Faculty’s review committee were fixed, so I worked back from that date. I would have to work out the best way to produce the master copy of the thesis; I could always use Lori’s electric typewriter; but I thought it might be worthwhile playing around with the troff / nroff document processing software we had on the Unix system here. One of the PhD students was writing a...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 36
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 6 Getting an AllOver Tan

Thursday dawned clear and sunny, and promised to be another hot summer’s day. I decided to start with some laps of the pool before breakfast, and swam about forty laps – maybe half a kilometre – and went inside to eat. After breakfast, I grabbed the things that I would need for the day; towel, sun cream, some cold drinks, and lunch, and put them in my backpack. Around ten minutes before eight, I got on my bike, and headed towards Cathy’s place. I was full of apprehension; while the thought...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 17
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 4 Moving on Out

We woke up with the alarm; made love, had a shower together, then ate breakfast before we drove into Surry Hills and the recording studio. When we reached the studio; I parked at the side in the loading area, and went inside looking for George. We found him in the administration office, speaking with a brunette. “Hey, Will, good to see ya, Mate,” he said. “And this is...” he asked, looking at Lori. “You remember my girlfriend, Lori?” I said to him. “Of course, I remember now. Will, here’s...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 42
  • 0

Harry Potter and the Spellbook of Desires Chapter 20 Malfoys Hogwarts Escort Service

Chapter Twenty – Malfoy’s Hogwarts Escort Service Disclaimer: This story does not reflect the attitudes or characters in the Harry Potter series, nor does it have any affiliation with its author. Story Codes: mmf, cream pie, grope, magic, preg, spank, unif The Yule Ball had been a wild success for Harry Potter and Ron Weasley; they had used the animal magnetism potion Harry had concocted from the Spellbook of Desires to great effect. They hadn’t been able to seduce the girls they had...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 21
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 25 WTM Consulting

The lead up to the end of the semester was busy – really busy. Not only did we have to get ready for the contract with Alexa’s company, preparing the ‘Banksia Room’ as our computer staging area, tweaking the training notes from the university to suit the contract, but there were examinations to prepare for – not that I had any, the last two ‘Science and Society’ subjects had their assessments based on the assignments and class work. But I still had to vet the papers, make sure the questions...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 20
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 36 I Got You Babe

It was late on Saturday morning when I woke up, still feeling down in the dumps. I looked at the clock next to me bed; 9:30 am. I guessed Cathy would already be on the road; they wanted an early start, getting to Goulburn for lunch, and then on to Canberra by early afternoon. She hoped to get everything up in her dorm room before dinner time. I deliberately averted my eyes from the photo of her on my desk; the fact that it was Valentine’s Day didn’t make me feel any better. After a quick...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 24
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 22 Off to the Race

It took a while for us to wake up on Christmas morning, by the time we had all cast off our sleep it was close to eight; leaving little time before the others arrived for some yule-tide fucking. Just enough time to have a shower, and start to prepare things for breakfast. Lori had suggested we make pancakes; scrambled eggs, toast, coffee and her ‘home fries’. After we had finished our showers, I started to prepare the potatoes for the home fries; peeling them, dicing them, and chopping up...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 26
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 33 Performances Part 2

After our early morning love-making, shower and breakfast, I dropped Cathy off at the bus stop. She wasn’t sure just how late she would be working, and I suggested that she let me know maybe 45 minutes before she was due to finish, and I could drive in and pick her up, to save dealing with the night time buses. At Mike’s, we started talking about the actual sets we would play. “We want to start off with something to really get them going,” Mike said. “Something to kick them in the balls, so...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 32
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 10 Party Party Party

Thursday night we were having a Thanksgiving dinner at Mary Beth’s suggestion; instead of a complete turkey, which would have been far too much food even for the seven of us, she had baked two large turkey breasts in the oven. Patrick had helped, making some traditional side dishes, a green bean casserole, and somehow he had found a source of candied yams. As we sat around the dinner table, Mary Beth spoke to us all. “Well, I know Thanksgiving isn’t really an Australian tradition, but it is...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 39
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 29 ChCh Changes

With the New Year’s Eve only a few days away, we spent the Saturday afternoon reviewing the set lists for that gig. We had been asked to play for a total of four hours – well, four fifty minute sets, with a ten minute break between them. Then at midnight, we would lead everyone in singing ‘Auld Lang Syne’, then play a final thirty minute set before calling it a night. It was going to be a pretty intense, tiring evening, and right after that we would have to travel to Gosford for the first...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 21
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 44 Unexpected Results

We pulled up in the car park for Lilianfels, it was more in Katoomba itself than Leura, close to Echo Point lookout and the Three Sisters. It wasn’t all that far from some of the other scenic lookouts over the Jamison Valley, or some fairly energetic walks, including the ‘Giant Stairway’, some 800 or so steps descending into the valley. There were some more leisurely walks, including one around the cliff top to the ‘scenic railway’, and Katoomba falls, or the other way to the Leura Cascades....

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 22
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 23 Welcome to Gresham Terrace

“Mr. Morris, glad to see you’re awake and back with us. I am Doctor David Pickett, and I’m one of the cardiologists here at the Prince of Wales hospital. I guess you’re wondering what it was that happened to you? First, I need to make sure you understand just how the human heart works; it’s basically a pump whose purpose is to circulate blood around the body.” I nodded; that was pretty basic human anatomy. “The blood carries oxygen and nutrients to the rest of the body, and also carries...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 27
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 34 Murder and Music

Lori was overjoyed to have us back home; as was Tracy. Even though we tried to be quiet, we woke them as we got into bed. Despite being tired, we made love, and then I slept soundly until nine in the morning. I would have preferred to have gone back to sleep, but I had to get across to the university to enrol. I grabbed a quick breakfast, got my organizer folder from the study, and drove across to the University. I parked behind the Electrical Engineering building, and went up to Professor...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 21
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 3 JanelleChapter 9 Engagement and

After a busy few weeks filled with gigs most nights of the week, it was back at University. The fibre optic installation was proceeding; there had been a few minor issues, but the company supplying and installing the cable had worked around them. The University – mainly through the School of Physics – had a long term relationship with Crown Corning; they had worked together on a number of projects, particularly in developing reliable connectors for their single mode fibre. The first set of...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 19
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 1 Joining the Australia Dream

“Hey, Will. Paul Ramos here,” the voice on the phone said. “I guess you’re at home at the moment, I called your office at the University, but that cute short girl in your office said you weren’t in over the summer break.” “Paul, comrade. Great to hear from you,” I replied. “No, I’m taking a couple of weeks off; we’ve got a bunch of gigs heading up to Christmas, and into January too. So, to what do I owe the pleasure?” “I’ve got a proposal I’d like to discuss with you; are you going to be...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 27
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 54 Reboot

The words that Mary Beth was saying to me somehow didn’t register, everything after the ‘she’s dead, Will ... she was drowned in the floodwaters’ was just noise. I understood what she told me, the troubling dreams I had experienced the night before made sense. There was a loud rushing in my head, and I was wracked with loud sobs. I was aware of Traci standing next to me, her arms around my shoulders, and Mary Beth was on the phone, talking to someone. “Let’s get you down to bed, Will,” Mary...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 24
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 10 Sweet Sixteen

I was half awake, and remembering that I was in Dianne’s old bedroom at Cathy’s place, I rolled over to look at the clock next to the bed. 5:30! Far too early to get up; but I needed to have a pee, so I quietly crept out of bed and into the hall, not wanting to disturb anyone. I tiptoed down the hallway, and tried to open the bathroom door quietly. Not being completely familiar with the house yet, I had already started to open the door when I remembered about the squeaky hinges. Oh well, too...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 22
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 39 Songs of Injustice

With the wedding out of the way, we got back into the work on the songs for the new album, as well as various gigs around the place. They were starting to take shape, but the real challenge was to ensure that the songs were musically as good as our previous work, and could stand alone as rock songs. We didn’t want the lyrics to be too ‘preachy’ and turn people off. There’s no point in making a protest song, if people don’t like it and refuse to listen to it. After my talk with Alonzo’s...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 22
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 16 Babies and Bullets

“It’s on,” Mary Beth said. “Their baby is on the way!” “Oh, I had better get up to the hospital then,” Mrs. White said. “Where should I put my case?” I showed Mrs. White where her bedroom would be; told her that this afternoon we would get the bed made with fresh sheets, and put some towels out for her. Mary Beth was ready to take her up to the hospital; I would clean the bedroom and make her bed with some fresh sheets. At least the room was ready for her when she returned from the...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 25
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 33 Summertime Tours

We spent the morning going over the ‘Sister Angela’ scenario with Lori; she wrote down all of the lines that we could recall, our descriptions of what happened overnight, even my rather sacrilegious thoughts on nun-fucking. While Megan and I would be out of town on the tour, Tracy and Lori would flesh out the story, even starting to write it. Around lunchtime some of the others returned home; Mary Beth was pleased to see us. She showed us the final schedule for the first country tour, we...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 28
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 7 Four in a Boat

The next day, Sunday, I spent time playing the piano and swimming in the pool. After dinner, I walked down to church; hoping Cathy would be there. I wasn’t disappointed; both she and David were there; David, of course, sitting with Gina. “How was your lunch?” I asked. “Not too bad,” Cathy replied. “But I kept thinking about what we may do tomorrow. Are you sure you are comfortable with being with the other two as well?” “Yes, but can we talk about it afterwards?” I said. “You don’t have to...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 21
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 38 Bicentennial Year ndash Part 2

For our visit to Brisbane for our week-long gig at Expo, most of the people were flying, leaving Sydney early on Saturday morning for the hour and a half flight to Brisbane. Lisa and I were taking the train, the XPT left Central at 2:40 pm on Friday, getting into the main station in Brisbane just before 5:00 am on Saturday. We had booked a sleeper cabin for the trip, and the return journey would leave Brisbane just before 6:00 am in the following Sunday, arriving at Central just after 8:00...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 24
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 11 Friends and Lovers

I was dreaming, I must have been, lying in my bed, when I felt a person slide under the sheets next to me. A hand slid over my mouth, and I heard a voice whisper in my ear. “Quiet, don’t make a noise,” she said. “I just want to lie next to you for a while, and feel our bodies together.” Lori? It couldn’t be her, but it certainly felt real; her body was pressed against my back, and I could feel her warm breath on my cheek. My buttocks were hard against her lower stomach. “Lori?” I started...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 55
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 7 Itrsquos Just a Casual Encounter

Don’t ask me what my name is I know what your game is It’s just a casual encounter It’s just a casual encounter It’s just a casual encounter Christina Amphlett & Mack McEntee Free Falling Late September, 1982 I landed with a hard thump on the ground, knocking all the air out of my lungs. I felt a stabbing pain in my shoulder, and then more pain as my foot slammed against the back wall of the house. I heard Lisa scream, and come running towards me. “Everyone! Help, please! Will’s...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 25
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 31 Second Semester

On the last day of July, we took Alonzo, Paul and Patrick to the airport. At least for Patrick and Wendy, it was only a temporary separation, he would be back in two weeks’ time; but for Ros it was a very tearful farewell. The five months before Alonzo was back for his sabbatical job teaching at the University would really drag out for her. Patrick said that one of his first projects would be to get a remote data link set up in our study going back to the office at St. Leonards, ostensibly so...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 19
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 2 Lori Finally

“Hi Lori, Will here,” I said when she answered. “Will Morris, where have you been these last four days?” she yelled down the phone line. “I’ve been worried sick about you; every time I called it was just that stupid machine, I even drove around to see if you were at home; your car was in the garage, but there was no answer. What have you been doing?” I told her briefly that on Monday morning, I had been hit by a car as I was crossing the street. I quickly told her that I hadn’t been badly...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 29
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 52 Developments in Canberra

Late December 1996 – January 1997 We had the big Christmas Day party at Banksia Lodge, much as we had done in previous years. My father again played ‘Santa Claus’, handing out presents to all the children present. On Boxing Day, we watched the televised start of the Sydney to Hobart yacht race, there were some impressive boats; a huge Reichel/Pugh maxi, owned by the head of the software company SAP. ‘Morning Glory’ was first out of the harbour, followed by ‘Condor of Currabubula’,...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 17
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 13 Lazy Days of Summer

Cathy and I had a late breakfast on Sunday morning; it was still overcast outside, and looked like there could be more rain later in the day. Actually, despite having slept together the whole night – just sleeping, too – our mood was a sombre as the weather. “I miss her already, you know,” Cathy said out of the blue. I didn’t have to ask Cathy who ‘her’ was; I was also feeling sad at not being able to be with Lori for the next few weeks. “Me too,” I said. “How come Janelle gets to go with...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 19
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 3 JanelleChapter 7 The New Album Takes Shape

After the New Year’s Eve gig, we had a very lazy New Year’s Day. I think I slept in until close to noon; and did nothing that afternoon until Janelle came around just before dinner time. Or breakfast time for her ... stupid shift hours. We had time for a quickie, before she had to eat, and get ready for work. She promised that she would spend more time with me over the weekend. With the New Year’s gig out of the way, it was time to concentrate on the extensive schedule that Fifa had for us...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 22
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 17 Interviews

We pressed the intercom button, a voice answered and we said who we were and that we were there to see Bob Hudson to appear on his show. A minute later a man came to the door, unlocked it, and let us in. “G’day, I’m Marius, Bob’s producer. Come on in, you’re all a bit early, but we can go up to the studio,” he said. He led us up two flights of stairs, down a dimly lit corridor, and into the control room or the studio. The place looked like it was a dump, there were boxes piled in the...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 26
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 23 Senior High School

My lips were so close to Cathy’s; I could feel her breath on me. Her eyes looked directly into mine, and I felt a huge yearning. I was about to pull her to me, letting my lips lock on hers, wanting to feel her tongue against mine, when I stopped myself, realising what was happening. “Think, William Morris, use your head, don’t blindly rush in!” I heard a voice in my head. “Don’t you remember what you told yourself, what you told Lori? You know what will happen if you give in to your desires,...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 27
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 27 Back at University

Just as everyone had warned me; second year electrical engineering was full on, right from the first day. In each of the subjects, the lecturers didn’t waste time reviewing what we might have studied in the previous year; it was head first into the deep end. I had some doubts about one of the subjects; Solid State Physics. To me, this looked like the sort of subject material that graduate students at Oxford University or MIT would cover; quantum mechanics, atomic particles, and similar...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 20
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 28 Towards the Final Exams

The August school holidays were only three weeks away; these were going to be the last break before the HSC exams at the end of October. At lunchtime one day, we were all discussing the plans we had for the two weeks off school. “Well, I’ll be going over all of the previous exam papers,” Cathy said. Some of the others groaned, called her ‘swot’. David wasn’t being anywhere near as studious as his sister; he had arranged to take a train up to the Gold Coast to renew his acquaintance with his...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 24
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 10 My Baby Just Cares For Me

We managed to get all of our stuff into the back of the car; but it meant all four of us had to squeeze into the front seat. We worked it out; Megan sat in the centre next to me, then Lori was on the outside, with Jillian on her lap. At least it didn’t take all that long to drive back to Mona Vale, where we dropped Megan and Jillian off with their bags, before heading to Lori’s place. On the drive back to Mona Vale Megan told us about her experiences with the publicity photo shoot yesterday...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 21
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 3 JanelleChapter 6 Rockin The Antler

“I have no idea what’s got into my sister,” Mary Beth said as she sat across the table from me. Since this Monday would be the last time for over a month that Mary Beth and I would be able to have our regular lunch date, I had made a point of catching a bus into the city to meet her. Rather than eat at our usual location at the Quay, we had gone to a nice steakhouse in Phillip Street; just a short distance up from her office in Macquarie Street. It was going to be an expensive meal, but I...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 28
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 34 Farewells

I pulled up in the driveway of Jenny’s place, and knocked on the front door. Jenny answered; pulled me inside, wrapped her arms around me, and kissed me deeply, even before I had a chance to put my stuff down. When she finally released me, I asked her where I could hang up my clothes for the evening, and she led me down the hallway to her room. Hannah was waiting there; she was just wearing a long white tee shirt, sitting on the double bed with her legs curled up underneath her. “So, how...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 23
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 32 Party Games

After our overnight cruise to Castle Lagoon, we discussed where we might take our next cruise. One option was to go up to Lake Macquarie, we could go up for a few days at the start of the mid-semester break; I would have to be back in time to take the midday train to Canberra for my Labor Party policy steering committee meeting. But with some planning, we could sail up on the Friday afternoon, reach the Swansea bridge at high tide, spend the next three days exploring the lake, and return to...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 20
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 35 Hello CSE Goodbye Tommy

“Good morning, I am Doctor Will Morris,” I said to the assembled class. “I assume you are all here for subject 6.710, Introduction to Computer Engineering. If anyone is in the wrong place, I suggest now you leave quietly, and get to wherever it is you should be.” I looked around the lecture theatre, there were maybe two hundred and fifty people, none of whom looked like leaving. Most of them had been in the previous lecture, the introductory lecture for Computing 1A. The challenge we had...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 17
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 12 Changes in Foursomes

After the great Election Day results, Lisa and I had a fun day sailing; it was a Quartet Bowl race, our favourite. Lisa steered us to another win across the line; we were looking good for a first place in the series. On the way home, Lisa asked me what my thoughts were about Georgina. “You know she wants to sleep with us,” she said. “And both Fiona and I would like to sleep with her, too.” “I guess that’s two votes out of three in favour for it already,” I said. “No, that’s not how it...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 25
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 9 Watching the Yacht Race

I woke up early, feeling slightly disoriented until I realised where I was – in Cathy’s old bedroom, at the Parsons’s place, where she had slept until she took over Dianne’s room. It wasn’t yet six o’clock, and I could hear the sounds of the surf through the open window. Elsewhere in the house, all was quiet. I suspected Mr and Mrs Parsons would be sleeping in, and I didn’t know what time David returned, but I was well and truly asleep when he did. I was lying there, wondering whether to get...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 25
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 38 Epilogue

Monday morning was dismal, pouring with rain, and I was waiting to hear from Cathy. She should have arrived home last night, and I thought she would have called me then. Maybe she got in late, and was tired, I told myself. By mid-morning, I hadn’t heard anything, and I was going to call her, when I saw the mail arrive. There was a break in the persistent rain, so I walked down to the letter box to see what had arrived. There was a letter for me; in Cathy’s writing, postmarked from Wednesday....

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 52
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 2 LoriChapter 36 University Third Year Part 1

I woke up refreshed and excited about the start of the new semester; once I had finished breakfast, and packed my notes and papers for the day’s lectures in my backpack, it was on my bike for the quick ride across to the campus. The first two sessions were the introductory lecture for Numerical Analysis, and a tutorial session; it looked to be pretty interesting (at least for a mathematics subject), the material that we would cover seemed quite interesting. The lecturer, Doctor Opie, appeared...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 20
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 9 Parks and Parties

The weeks leading up to the final exams were busy; not just studying for the two exams that I had, but helping Fiona get her internship report finished and ready for submission; last minute coaching for some of my students, and trying to fend off a potential war between some people at Sydney University and other participants in the AARNET project. Independent of the AARNET project, Sydney University had developed a simple store-and-forward network, but they wanted to use the country-level...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 17
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 28 Touring

There were several additions to the entourage; Robyn and Sally were coming, along with their two kids; and of course the other two young kids, Bruce and Rachel’s son, Robert, and Andrew and Mandy’s daughter, Debbie would be coming along. Given that all four kids were a bit over a year old, they really couldn’t be left behind, and neither Paul nor Phil wanted to be away from their wives and kids for the three weeks. I could see in the future organizing tours like this one would become more...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 23
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 4 Building Relationships

February saw life start to return to normal. Back at Uni, we started to prepare for the upcoming semester. Preliminary enrolment figures for Computing I indicated we would have slightly over three hundred full time students, and another sixty or so in the part time class. During the summer break another large room had been equipped with terminals connected to the Department’s PDP 11/70, which had also been upgraded with additional memory and disk storage. As well, another 11/40 had been...

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 18
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 4 Photography

As Cathy and I had agreed, we spent the next few days apart. I did my piano grade exam practice for several hours each day, it was boring, but it had to be done. We did speak to each other every night to talk about the things we had done that day. The rain that had cleared on Monday afternoon had returned, so we would not have been able to do much outside anyway. Actually, thinking about it, may have led to more inside activities, including more of what we might discover in Cathy’s copy of...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 54
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 1 CathyChapter 15 Partings

After the first month or so of school, memories of the summer holidays had faded quickly. The study workload had increased dramatically, and I was glad I had taken the time to set myself a strict program. With schoolwork, practice for my next piano grade exam, and rehearsals and playing at the Mirage, Friday nights were my only regular free time. After the blow-up with Katey Jackson, I didn’t bother going to the youth group meetings on Sunday nights, which gave me some time to get things...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 26
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 48 Winners and Losers

“Hey, Will, it’s Martin here,” the person on the phone said. “Just a reminder, it’s coming up time for your company’s Annual General Meeting, and there’s a few ideas I want to run past you.” He suggested it was time we appointed a ‘Board of Directors’, four or five people who I trusted to provide ‘corporate governance’ and review the major decisions of the company. “I assume at the moment, you’re pretty much running things by yourself, with input from Lisa, Michelle, Mary Beth?” he...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 32
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 46 Sabbatical

Tactics on this year’s Coffs race were quite different; the wind was a steady twelve knots from the southeast. Therefore, it was a spinnaker run all the way to Coffs; the perfect test for the new hounds asymmetrical number one. The larger boats made the best of the ideal conditions, we were twentieth across the line, several hours ahead of the next Young 88. We sailed reasonably well in the three short courses, but our overall result for the regatta was a tenth on scratch, fifth on handicap....

3 years ago
  • 0
  • 16
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 42 Changes Changes Changes

“Hey, Will, have you got a few minutes to talk? We’ve got a proposal we’d like to talk with you about,” Paul Christie said to me, when we had finished our first sound check for the New Year’s Eve concert in Victoria Park. Paul had established The Party Boys back around 1983 along with Kevin Boritch, and since then it had served as a place for anyone between groups to join and play with. Even some big international names – Joe Walsh, Eric Burden – had played with them. “We hear you guys are...

4 years ago
  • 0
  • 21
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 4 LisaChapter 11 Summer Activities

I slept quite late in the morning after the engagement party, and even when I woke up, I felt exhausted and disoriented. I asked Lisa if I had drunk too much the night before; maybe the alcohol had interacted with my heart medicine; but she said I had only had a glass of champagne, one nip of bourbon, and stuck to soft drinks other than that. But it wasn’t just that I was feeling tired; I had dreamed some pretty wild and vivid dreams overnight; dreams involving Jillian, and that she had...

2 years ago
  • 0
  • 29
  • 0

The Three Signs Book 3 JanelleChapter 5 Two Phone Calls

My life was pretty busy; work, music, sailing, and re-building my friendships with Allison, Mary Beth, Michelle and Garry. Music-wise, we had to get our sets worked out for the Hordern Pavilion gig supporting AC/DC. Normally, it would have been nothing all that special, we’d just do two of our usual rock / blues sets, but with the change in the group line-up, we had to modify arrangements to fit Fiona into the line-up. The gigs went fairly well, I thought; it was also great to see the guys...

Porn Trends