[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
Microbubbles in the tap water you just poured into a plastic glass are strong enough to create tiny abrasions on the inner layer of the plastic—quietly adding to our growing microplastic problem.

С благодарностию

Jan. 13th, 2026 02:58 pm
lev_m: (Default)
[personal profile] lev_m
Снова актуальной стала тема - бечь или не бечь, и если бечь - то куда? Я про социальные сети.
Многократно замечено, насколько удобной (и почти совершенной) была платформа, созданная Фицпатриком. Вероятно, не на ровном месте, были предшественники, о которых я не знаю. И были некоторые улучшения в процессе.
Стоит отметить и обратный эффект - использование той или иной платформы влияет на стиль общения (если не формирует его). Лично на меня ЖЖ повлиял настолько, что после него ФБ (в эпоху первого исхода - сейчас, на мой взгляд, лучше не стало) произвел впечатление yё6uща (выражение одной знакомой, приклеившееся намертво). Так что я пока на дрим.
Здесь интересные рассуждения от [personal profile] green_fr об оптимальном блоге.
Мне пригодились бы клиент для чтения на телефоне и клиент для написания постов (типа Semagic). Пока так.

Quick Welsh election thoughts

Jan. 13th, 2026 11:54 am
loganberrybunny: Election rosette (Rosette)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public

This spring's Senedd election looks like being an interesting one. Right now if I had to put money on any particular outcome, I'd go for a minority Plaid administration. I don't think they'll get anywhere near the number of seats they'd need to get a majority in the Senedd, which will now have 96 members. Probably a final seat count somewhere in the low-mid 30s. Reform are on their heels but seem to be slipping back a little very recently, so I'd suggest mid-high 20s for them. Quite possibly every other party, including incumbents Labour, in single figures.

Radiators

Jan. 13th, 2026 12:47 pm
cimorene: Blue text reading "This Old House" over a photo of a small yellow house (knypplinge)
[personal profile] cimorene
It's warmed up a little, but we're still in the edge of the cold snap. It's been down to 11° (in the low fifties) inside the bedroom a couple of times this week, which seems to indicate there may be a problem with the radiator in there. We haven't remembered to bleed the radiators the last two years and it's definitely got air in it, but I'm not sure that could account for it.

The individual thermostats on our radiators don't do much, because they're all controlled by the electronic thermostat on the geothermal pump. There's only one sensor and it's on the tenant side, which is already more insulated because it was built in the 70s and not 1950, so our side is always a bit chilly in contrast, since they would be roasting over there otherwise. And the bedroom loses more heat because of its location right under the roof. But normally in winter it's been more like 14-15° (58-59) in there.

In the last week I've been sleeping with three duvets (mostly under two though; the third one is sideways over the feet). This is actually not inconvenient enough to stimulate the executive function to try to fix it promptly though. We are at "Oh, ugh, I guess we have to do something at some point?"
[syndicated profile] flowing_data_rss_feed

Posted by Nathan Yau

Probability expressed as a percentage is a value between 0% and 100%. If there is a 0% probability that something happens, then the thing is impossible. If there is 100% probability that something happens, then the thing is definite. This uses words to describe a number.

Now turn it around. What probability do you use to describe the words? If something is unlikely, what are the chances that something occurs? Adam Kucharski made a quiz that lets you assign probability to common words used to express probability. Then compare against what others answered.

See also: the distributions of likelihood and the CIA rendition from the 1990s.

Tags: , ,

[syndicated profile] phys_breaking_feed
Young tropical forests play a crucial role in slowing climate change. Growing trees absorb carbon dioxide from the air, using photosynthesis to build it into their roots, trunks, and branches, where they can store carbon for decades or even centuries. But, according to a new study, this CO2 absorption may be slowed down by the lack of a crucial element that trees need to grow: nitrogen.

The Day in Spikedluv (Monday, Jan 12)

Jan. 13th, 2026 05:52 am
spikedluv: (winter: mittens by raynedanser)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I hit Price Chopper while I was downtown. Later I hit the bank drive-thru, the library to return and pick-up books, and Stewart’s.

I visited mom, hand-washed dishes, ran a load in the dishwasher, went for a walk with Pip and the dogs, baked chicken for the dogs’ meals, cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, scooped kitty litter, and showered. Supper was ham steak. I browned ground beef and added onions, peppers and seasoning for the start of tomorrow’s chili.

I started the next Jack Reacher book and watched HGTV’s Home Town.

My healthy eating win today was stocking up on healthy snacks at the grocery store: grapes and almonds, bananas, yogurt, and cottage cheese and peaches. I still have some oranges at home, two apples, and one grapefruit.

Temps started out at 25.5(F) and reached 36.5. There was a little bit of sun, which was nice.


Mom Update:

Mom was doing okay when I visited her. She was still in her nightgown, which is always concerning to me. She had some mac&chs AND made herself a root beer float while I was there. She said she had one the other day and it tasted really good. Calories!
[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by Amanda

Happy Tuesday!

Things are picking up for our TBR piles. Romantasy is still going strong, but we’re seeing some great mixes of romance and mystery coming down the pike.

What new releases are you excited for? Let us know in the comments!

A Killer Kind of Romance

A Killer Kind of Romance by Letizia Lorini

Author: Letizia Lorini
Released: January 13, 2026 by Gallery Books
Genre: , ,

In this new romance from USA TODAY bestselling author Letizia Lorini, a crime podcast host must solve a chilling serial killer case while navigating an unexpected romance with her mysterious next-door neighbor.

Scarlett Moore doesn’t do romance.

She’s made a name for herself narrating gritty crime fiction on a local podcast. But when her boss hands her the reins to the network’s romance show, Scarlett finds herself neck-deep in swoony love stories on top of her usual murder plots.

Then someone begins reenacting the chilling crimes she discusses on air, down to the last twisted detail.

Determined to protect her small town, Scarlett launches her own investigation. But the line between reality and fiction blurs even more when Rafael Gray—the brooding bad boy who disappeared five years ago—unexpectedly returns. Suddenly, her life reads like a romance novel filled with every trope she used to mock, with Rafael playing the dangerously irresistible lead.

He’s perfect in every way…except last time, he broke her heart, and now he’s the prime suspect in the string of brutal murders.

Will this be the love story she never saw coming, or is it a killer kind of romance?

Elyse: True crime and romance, two things I love!

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

A Vow in Vengeance

A Vow in Vengeance by Jaclyn Rodriguez

Author: Jaclyn Rodriguez
Released: January 13, 2026 by Slowburn
Genre: ,
Series: Immortal Desires #1

Deadly tarot, wicked schemes, dangerous alliances . . . can you survive the Forge?

Sexy, action-packed, and brimming with magic, A Vow in Vengeance is an unputdownable romantasy debut.

Rune Ryker has nothing left to lose. Everything’s been stolen by the Immortals—her family, her home, her freedom. But she’s done playing by their rules.

Each year, humans are forced to journey into the Immortal Realms, but twenty-year-old Rune orchestrates her own selection, determined to find her family and destroy anyone who stands in her way. Rune is used to doing whatever it takes to survive, and now she must endure the Forge, a cutthroat college for the Immortal druids’ elusive tarot magic. When Rune’s magic reveals itself to be the rarest and most powerful, she must live with its only other wielder—Prince Draven. As arrogant as he is ruthlessly ambitious, he’s the last person she can trust.

Rune’s abilities also draw the eyes of the most dangerous druids in the realms. Some want to use her. More want her dead. Draven offers to train her . . . for a price. As Rune becomes ensnared in Draven’s dangerous games, she learns there are secrets at the heart of the kingdom that some will kill to protect.

And Rune and Draven’s growing attraction may be the spark to ignite a brewing war.

Amanda: This has been described as a “coming of rage” book and I’m here for it.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

Fundamentals of Being a Good Girl

Fundamentals of Being a Good Girl by Julie Murphy

Author: Julie Murphy
Released: January 13, 2026 by Avon
Genre: ,
Series: Academic Affairs #1

From #1 New York Times bestselling author Julie Murphy and USA Today bestselling author Sierra Simone comes a brand-new college town raunch-com about a sexy single dad professor and a feisty law school grad turned nanny in this steamy tale of Academic Affairs…

Class is in session.
Maddie Kowalczk is ready to be a bad girl. When the rookie lecturer lands at Astra University, she’s looking to start fresh after a messy breakup. But her first night in town takes a twist when she bumps into Bram Loe—a reserved but incredibly handsome single dad she (not so accidentally) stole a parking spot from earlier that day. The unspoken chemistry as he locks eyes with her while she gets a birthday spanking at a local bar is hotter than a Bunsen burner at full flame.

Bram is looking for a break from his hectic life as an ecology professor and dad to rambunctious twins and a busy teenager. So when his college friend’s divorce celebration brings him face-to-face with the same delectable brat who stole his parking spot, he’s ready for a night to remember. But the next morning, Bram’s world turns upside down (and that’s not just the hangover talking). His new nanny? None other than Maddie, who also happens to be the new poli-sci adjunct at the university where he teaches.

Maddie is desperate and broke, so when Bram offers her a raise and the chance to set some ground rules, she can’t say no. As the two settle into their new roles, the normally unruffled Bram finds that no one riles him up like Maddie does, which is a problem when every argument feels like foreplay. Of course, Bram is an educator first and foremost, and he very quickly finds he can’t resist the temptation of instructing Maddie in the fundamentals of being a good girl.

And it turns out Maddie’s a hands-on learner…

Lara: I adored this book mostly because I genuinely liked both main characters. Full review!

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

Graceless Heart

Graceless Heart by Isabel Ibañez

Author: Isabel Ibañez
Released: January 13, 2026 by Saturday Books
Genre: , , , ,

A lush, atmospheric and achingly magical standalone adult fantasy romance set in Renaissance Italy from a #1 New York Times bestselling author.

In 15th-century Volterra, sculptress Ravenna Maffei enters a competition hosted by a secretive, immortal family who offer an invaluable boon to the victor. Desperate to win so she can save her brother, Ravenna reveals a rare magical talent–a dangerous act in a city where magic is forbidden. Her revelation makes her a target, and she is kidnapped by the Luni family and taken to Florence, a city of breathtaking beauty and cutthroat ambition.

There, Ravenna is forced into an impossible task where failure means certain death at the hands of Saturnino dei Luni, the family’s enigmatic and merciless heir. But under his cold reserve hides a vulnerability that draws her closer than she ever intended.

Meanwhile, Ravenna’s forbidden magic does not go unnoticed. The Pope, waging war against Florence, the Medici, and magic itself, has his own interest in her abilities, seeing her as a potential weapon in his ruthless campaign.

As alliances shift and war brews on the horizon, Ravenna must navigate the treacherous line between survival and betrayal, between love and duty. With time running out and her every move watched, the choices she makes will determine the fate of not just her own life, but the fragile balance of magic and power that could unravel Florence itself.

Amanda: Very interested in the setting here!

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

The Lust Crusade

The Lust Crusade by Jo Segura

Author: Jo Segura
Released: January 13, 2026 by Berkley
Genre: ,
Series: Raiders of the Lost Heart #3

A plucky librarian and an archaeologist on the run fake an engagement to save their lives, leading them into the labyrinth of their own desires.

Daniela Guiterrez has been in love with her brother’s best friend for as long as she can remember—until he went missing a year ago during an archaeological expedition. But on a solo trip to Greece, the intrepid librarian discovers that Theo is very much alive, although judging by the criminals holding him hostage, he is not doing well.

An expert in Ancient Greek archaeology, Dr. Theo Galanis has been abducted by artifact smugglers in search of a priceless gemstone—the Eye of the Minotaur. This ridiculous assignment was supposed to get Dani out of his system, not keep her tied up next to him. But when a little white lie spirals into his captors believing Theo and Dani are engaged, they must utilize her research skills and his expertise to solve the centuries’ old Minoan mystery, all while feigning a romance to keep each other alive.

Now with less than six days to find the jewel, underground societies, mythological beings, and pesky abductors are only half the battle. Because among the ancient ruins and temples they explore is an even bigger falling in love for real.

Book three in the action-adventure Raiders of the Lost Heart romance series.

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

Most Eligible

Most Eligible by Isabelle Engel

Author: Isabelle Engel
Released: January 13, 2026 by St. Martin's Griffin
Genre: ,

Miss Congeniality meets The Bachelor in this action-packed rom-com debut about an investigative journalist who sneaks onto reality TV only to fall for the wrong guy.

Georgia Rose is not going on the hit reality dating show Love Shack to find love. She’s there to write a killer exposé on the producers, which will guarantee the journalism job of her dreams. But when Georgia’s unforgettable one-night stand from the year before, country singer Rhett Auburn, steps into the Malibu mansion as the season’s new host, all of her carefully crafted plans unravel.

Caught up in the drama of backstabbing contestants, producer blackmail, and death-defying dates, Georgia must keep her identity—and history with Rhett—a secret. Despite the lies between them, it isn’t long before Georgia and Rhett’s heated behind-the-scenes moments start to feel more genuine than the romance Georgia’s faking for the cameras. But with her assignment unfinished and the executive producer on her tail, a second chance with Rhett could be her riskiest move of all.

Elyse: A journalist goes undercover in a Bachelor like TV show.

Lara: My only exposure to the Bachelor is Elyse’s summaries so I am perhaps not the target market for this book, but I enjoyed it nonetheless. Full review coming!

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

You’ll Never Forget Me

You’ll Never Forget Me by Isha Raya

Author: Isha Raya
Released: January 13, 2026 by Bantam
Genre: , , ,

In this captivating cat-and-mouse thriller, a struggling actress is only just beginning to enjoy the life she’s always wanted after inadvertently killing her rival—but now she must contend with the woman who threatens to take it all away.

Struggling actress Dimple Kapoor wouldn’t call herself a murderer, per se—she’d prefer the term “opportunist.” Years ago, she did what had to be done to get herself out of a bad situation. And now, after accidentally killing her Hollywood rival, Irene Singh, at a party, she’s simply seizing the chance to nab her dream leading role and resuscitate her career in the process. There’s only one someone else at the event witnessed the crime…and caught it all on camera.

With everything she’s ever wanted within reach, Dimple will stop at nothing to keep stardom in her grasp. But Irene’s parents have hired Saffi Mirai Iyer, one of the best private investigators in the business. Living up to her reputation, Saffi immediately zeroes in on Dimple, who feels she has no choice but to raise the stakes. Playing along with Dimple’s façade, Saffi invites her onto the case, suggesting she act as bait to draw out the killer—and as the two women’s cat-and-mouse game intensifies, Saffi starts to wonder if she may have finally met her match.

With their careers at risk, both women must fight the potent chemistry drawing them closer together. Dimple needs Saffi dead and for her theories to die with her. And Saffi needs Dimple behind bars, but catching her elusive prey won’t be so easy—especially as emotions begin to cloud her judgement. When ambition and desire collide, only the most cunning will survive.

A mix of f/f romance and mystery!

Add to Goodreads To-Read List →

Mod Post: Off-Topic Tuesday

Jan. 13th, 2026 08:59 am
icon_uk: Mod Squad icon (Mod Squad)
[personal profile] icon_uk posting in [community profile] scans_daily
In the comments to these weekly posts (and only these posts), it's your chance to go as off topic as you like.

Talk about non-comics stuff, thread derail, and just generally chat among yourselves.

The intent of these posts is to chat and have some fun and, sure, vent a little as required. Reasoned debate is fine, as always, but if you have to ask if something is going over the line, think carefully before posting please.

Normal board rules about conduct and behaviour still apply, of course.

It's been suggested that, if discussing spoilers for recent media events, it might be advisable to consider using the rot13 method to prevent other members seeing spoilers in passing.

The world situation is the world situation. If you're following the news, you know it as much as I do, if you're not, then there are better sources than scans_daily. But please, no doomscrolling, for your own sake.

Honestly, even I weren't in a rush today, I'd likely actively avoid mentioning the news because... there's just so damn much of it

So please away you go.

I will mention that I finally got around to watching TRON: Ares and whilst the career, and apparent appeal, of Jared Leto continues to baffle me somewhat, it LOOKED absolutely gorgeous!

Choices (9)

Jan. 13th, 2026 08:42 am
the_comfortable_courtesan: image of a fan c. 1810 (Default)
[personal profile] the_comfortable_courtesan
So much to boast of

Dickie Smith was a little chagrined that his talents in surreptitious following had not been called upon in this most interesting case of Mr Taskerville. That had been conducting a liaison with Lady Whibsall, and she, most imprudent, had sent him letters, and he, even more imprudent, had kept 'em, and they had fallen somehow into the hands of one that was demanding recompense for silence in the matter. For Mr Taskerville had expectations from an exceedingly pious great-aunt, that was also wont to make him generous gifts, while there was a considerable fear that Sir Francis Whibsall had a notion towards bringing a crim.con. action did he have evidence on hand.

And here was Taskerville, already not entirely rolled up but in less than flourishing circumstance due to his ill fortune at race-courses – Dickie snorted to himself, for he apprehended that the gentleman had no great understanding in that business! Dickie had passed some months as a groom in Terence Offerton’s stables, pursuing a case on behalf of the Johnson agency, and had learnt a good deal about such matters to supplement what one that had been about the Jupp stables since childhood and was acquainted with The Lady – Mrs Penkarding – already knew concerning horseflesh.

Had transpired that the business 'twixt Taskerville and the extortionist was not conducted in person, but by means of notes left in certain places. At which Matt had frowned, and sighed, and said that argued one that somehow had the entrée to the houses and clubs that Foolish Phineas frequented – but could be a footman, or able to present as one – though makes one wonder whether 'tis one that he would recognize did he see him –

So Matt went about to persuade Taskerville to bring him the next note he received – lord, I had to assure him that just because it says Burn this! he is not obliged to do so.

But at the moment Dickie was engaged on the useful if not very exciting task of cutting out pieces from the newspapers that mentioned the work of the agency or touched on cases or individuals in whom they took an interest. And when he had done so, Miss Frinton, that would not entrust it to anyone else, would paste 'em up in the agency scrapbooks, and mark 'em down in her indexes so that they might be found when needed.

La, said a voice from the doorway, look at those dirty hands! All printers’ ink! Here – Leda Hacker tossed him a damp cloth – Matt has got the latest note Foolish Phineas received and we are convoking over it in his office. Come along.

Dickie jumped up. This was something like!

In Matt’s office, that was furnished in such a way as to communicate confidence to those that came seeking the agency’s services – no fly-by-night enterprize! – Miss Frinton was examining the letter and holding it up to the light to scrutinize the watermark.

She snorted. 'Tis good enough writing-paper, but 'tis nothing very rare – a common enough make – widely sold about Town – one might find it in a deal of escritoires –

Hacker twitched it out of Frinton’s hand. Precisely, she said, and does it not look like a lady’s fist? She laid it down on Matt’s desk.

Matt nodded. Has that style, he agreed. Though whether that means our villain is a villainess, or whether 'tis one with a fine skill at counterfeiting hands – Hacker blushed a little, and Dickie wondered whether her childhood apprenticeship to the ken-cracker Laffen had included forgery among the skills she had learnt – or whether there is a female confederate in the business.

Whoever it is, said Hacker, is not very subtle and not playing for high stakes.

They all looked at her.

She shrugged. 'Tis not the like of Rathe, is it? That was playing a deep game with a long view and picking his victims with care, that either were in government offices or already had some kind of power and influence, or would be like to have in future. This one is choosing idle wastrels for small gains.

Matt looked at her with approval, and nodded his head. You sum it up very just. Mayhap 'tis an idle wastrel himself, finds himself pockets to let, goes poke about to see what he might find – one wonders has anybody missed small items of value of late, trinkets &C –

Hacker winked and said, would go ask in the usual quarter about that! For one understood that she had connexions in the world of fences, as well as pawnbrokers that did not make any searching enquiries concerning the goods they were offered.

– comes across compromising letters – or mayhap notes concerning gaming debts or such – and fathoms that he may turn these to profit. You might enquire of Dumaine, next time you go there as Babsie, whether he knows of any that might be in that condition.

Hacker wrinkled her nose, saying, would not be going to Dumaine’s very immediate, had this commission concerning Sir Hobday Perram’s precious Persian things

Matt grunted. Was going to suggest, that you take young Dickie with you, as excellent instructive for him –

Dickie was unable to repress a delighted yelp.

– so I will go dine with Dumaine myself and sound him out.

So, there was his mother and father, looking upon him very serious and saying, trusted that he would do the family credit going out in the capacity of Miss Hacker’s 'prentice. For Timothy and Nell Smith might be the keepers of the Buffle Arms tavern, adjacent to her brother Sam’s livery stables, but these days 'twas a fine respectable place. And had they not expanded to open the Beaufoyle Arms Song and Supper Room, where Clo Marshall had made her name?

Did not Pa become quite the businessman these days, convoking with their relative Maurice Allard over whether one might go it even further and open one of these halls for music and entertainment that was springing up hither and yon over Town? For Maurice might have made his reputation as a modiste with the finest eye for ladies’ fashion, but was renowned throughout their connexion for his acuity in all matters to do with business.

So, here Dickie was, dressed exceeding proper, in a railway carriage with Hacker, that grinned at him and said that she hoped he had something more comfortable in his dunnage, for fancied there would be a deal of clambering about and mayhap crawling into attics &C.

Dickie grinned back and said that Ma had been very wishful that he should make a good first impression.

There was Hacker herself, got up as if she was applying for a post as a governess! Most exceeding meek and proper.

He was somewhat astonished at the condition of Sir Hobday’s mansion – brought up in a household under the hand of one that had been trained in good practices was almost shocked – but Hacker murmured under her breath, la, 'tis a sad bachelor establishment, and he supposed that must explain it.

Though indeed, once they came to convoke with the master of the house, came to apprehend that there had also been some matter of lack of funds – but here was Lord Sallington, what a fine young man was that, had remarked that certain old paintings acquired by Sir Hobday’s ancestors would be exceeding vendable by art dealers, and now he might mend the roof and spruce up the old place.

Matt had took Dickie aside and told him to study upon Hacker’s manner with clients.

There she was, most sympathetic – listening – asking the occasional question – lightly mentioning the certain collections they had already been about protecting – Mr Grigson, the wealthy China merchant’s wonderful things from the Celestial Empire

La, perchance 'twas a strange occupation for a female, but had been taught by her foster-father

No, they were not putting up at the Crown, though they heard it was a very comfortable inn, they were staying at Attervale –

Here Hacker looked at her most exceeding prim governessy and disclosed that upon occasion she undertook secretarial work for Dowager Lady Bexbury, that had very kindly put 'em in the way of Lady Emily Merrett’s hospitality – was an antient friend of that family –

Dickie, that had seen Hacker in her guises as Babsie Bolton and Larry Hooper, was hard put not to laugh at how genteel she showed!

She showed a deal more relaxed in the company of the Ladies of Attervale, Lady Emily Merrett and her companion Miss Fenster, that treated her entirely informal and on the level of a friend, asking after dear Lady Bexbury &C – supposed Mr Smith would find himself more comfortable in the kitchen –

Indeed he did, where there was a fine table set, and a deal of eager enquiry about certain recent cases of the Johnson agency that had been reported in the press –

Thatching, that was the groom, was in particular interested in that matter of underhand behaviour about racecourses, that Dickie had been so closely involved in investigating – as they pushed back their chairs at the end of the meal, and Thatching lit his pipe, said he dared say that Smith would care to take a look at their own cattle here?

Would I! said Dickie. Sure Lady Emily is quite renowned – The Lady, that is, Mrs Penkarding, that is a neighbour of ours, will ever speak highly of her –

All looked very gratified and nodded their heads.

So – at this time o’year 'twas still light – when all finally got up from table Thatching took Dickie over to the stables and sure that was a very fine sight!

Mentioned that his uncle – Sam Jupp – Jupp’s Livery Stables and Carriage Hire – kept his own cattle in fine condition – treated 'em well – sent 'em out to recruit at his farm in Berkshire, did not believe in working 'em to death – but they was working nags, not the like of this.

Then came in Lady Emily herself, that saw Dickie’s admiration and appreciation of her cattle and grinned. Fancy you would know what’s what! she said. Now, Miss Hacker gives you the name of a sensible young man that can move quiet and discreet – should you like to come look at my hawks?

Dickie was unable to find words to express how much he should. Oh, he would have so much to boast of to his brothers and Lizzie!


Snowflake Challenge: day 6

Jan. 13th, 2026 07:43 am
shewhostaples: View from above of a set of 'scissor' railway points (railway)
[personal profile] shewhostaples
two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Top 10 challenge

I'm onna train, so here are 10 railway stations I like. In no particular order, and for various different reasons.

1. Frankfurt Hbf. This was where my international rail travels began. Standing on the concourse, looking at the departure boards (getting slightly earwormed by Stuttgart and Fulda), realising that I could get pretty much anywhere from here...

2. London St Pancras. It's beautiful. It's not actually a terribly pleasant experience getting a train from here (maybe the East Midlands and South Eastern platforms are better) but from the outside it's a fairy tale castle.

3. Stockholm. Rolling in, bleary eyed, off the sleeper from Malta, through dingy orange lights, and then suddenly you're in this marble palace. (I got chugged in Stockholm station. I don't know what I was doing to look like a Swede with disposable income rather than a discombobulated tourist, but there we go.)

4. London King's Cross. Never mind all that wizard nonsense, it has a fully functional platform zero. Also the toilets are free these days.

5. Liège Guillemins. Just glorious.

6. Ryde Pier Head. When it's operational and when you don't just miss the train because the catamaran was thirty seconds late. But there's still something fun about a station in the sea.

7. Dawlish. Train to beach in under a minute (your mileage may vary, as may mine considering I haven't been there in about a decade).

8. York. Never mind a pub in the station, it has one on the platform. Lovely stained glass, too.

9. Norwich. Light, gracious, makes you glad you've arrived.

10. Luxembourg. Stained glass again - and just time for an ice cream before the train.
ypq: (Default)
[personal profile] ypq
[мелкие подробности опускаю...]
сначала в чате студ.группы обсуждали, что скоро у КИПа ДР и надо собрать деньги на подарок. [они IRL вообще никак не пересекались]. потом позвонил К. говорит:
- чота давно ты в гости ко мне в подвал не заходил...
- а чо ты в такую рань звонишь?!
- так уже обед!
- да я же в отпуске, сплю до полудня.
- ну хорошо, я щас по такому-то адресу, знаешь Областную Прокуратуру? вот там...
- что, в Прокуратуре?
- нет, в подвале.
тут ЛМ кричит из другой комнаты, что я обещал погулять с Юлькой.
вышел с ней во двор, оставил на детской площадке, подумал, что надо купить пива. сходил в ларек. тут опять звонит К:
- ну ты идешь?
- щас с Юлькой погуляю...
- ну смотри, я потом пойду в ТЮЗ.
- на спектакль?!
- нет, там тоже в подвал.
отправил Юльку домой, пообещал, что потом нормально погуляем - по городу, как мы обычно гуляем.
пошел в Прокуратуру. ну примерно как IRL.
там и правда, если обойти здание со двора, нашелся вход в подвал. мужики стоят курят - спросил их:
- К тут?
- нет. был, но ушел недавно.
ага, значит пошел в ТЮЗ. пошел пешком. но теперь оказалось, что я где-то у стадиона и надо идти по Коммуне к Детскому Парку. там на горизонте виднеется Планетарий [который потом сделали Органным Залом, а сейчас Храмом Александра Невского].
шел по Коммуне, но там машин много, а тротуара почему-то нет. решил идти по параллельной улице. там хоть и нет асфальта и грязь, лужи, зато не надо от машин шарахаться.
дошел до Кирова [ТЮЗ, вообще-то, дальше - на Цвиллинга, но тут и здание оказалось не как у нашего ТЮЗа]. покрутился у входа - хз где тут подвал. потом вижу - веселая компания молодежи идет. обходят ТЮЗ слева. я их догнал, спрашиваю - куда идут? говорят, что на концерт какой-то новомодной группы. В ПОДВАЛ. о! это мне туда...
тоже обошли здание, спускаемся в подвал по лестнице. лестница длинная - типа на минус второй этаж. вошли внутрь - там темно, интерьер - то ли "лофт", то ли просто ремонт никогда не делали [вспомнил в Москве подвальчик "Китайский лётчик Джао-Да"].
на сцене ребята копошатся - провода подключают, аппаратуру настраивают, рядом барная стойка. я - туда:
- ищу К... он тут появлялся?
- да, где-то тут ходит.
пиво у меня закончилось, так что заказал ещё коктейль.
тут входит ВМ (из студ.чата - см.выше):
- о! ты тоже на концерт пришел? ну вот заодно сдашь деньги на ДР КИПа...
а я начинаю вспоминать - а когда у К ДР? сегодня у нас какое сентября? у него вроде 21го? [IRL у него в марте, вообще-то]. это поди что он концерт себе на ДР организовал.
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[personal profile] ak_47
Несколько разрозненных мыслей про Иран и около.

Аналогия №1.
По разным оценкам Иран тратит около 20% своего бюджета на войну (в основном с Израилем), включая расходы на Хезбаллу, хуситов и пр. Мне это напомнило СССР, который тратил примерно такие же бюджеты на борьбу с мировым империализмом. Это включало и поддержку стран-саттелитов вроде Кубы и Анголы.

Аналогия №2.
Из-за хронической нехватки денег, некомпетентности и коррупции, в Иране сейчас кризис с водой. В ноябре 2025 года пр-во Ирана даже заявило о готовности эвакуировать часть Тегерана. Зимние дожди немного улучшили ситуацию, но до настоящего решения ещё далеко. Подземные источники воды разрушаются от нерационального использования. В СССР не могли вырастить достаточно хлеба чтобы прокормить собственное население. Распаханная Целина превратилась в пустыню и стала экологической катастрофой.

Аналогия №3.
В Иране сложное общество, с многовековой культурной традицией корни которой уходят в доисламскую эпоху. Но над этим обществом стоит варварское руководство. В СССР в области балета были впереди планеты всей. Но страной управляли ограниченные, зашоренные идеологией люди. Цинизм и двоемыслие пронизывают все аспекты жизни как в Иране, так и в СССР.

Аналогия №4.
Как нам известно из биологии, скорость эволюционных изменений и разнообразие видов в центре выше, чем на периферии. Например, американский и ново-зеландский английский сохранили элементы старого английского, который в самой Британии давно пропал. В то время как в Саудовской Аравии Мухаммед Соломонович продвигает реформы, ОАЭ и другие исламские страны подписали соглашения Авраама, в Иране и Турции укоренился фундаментализм. Постоянно ужесточаются религиозные нормы.

Особая ирония в том, что и персы и турки утеряли свою традиционную религию, приняли учение от арабов, читают священные книги на чужом языке. Казалось бы, где кочевые воинственные арабские племена, и где оседлая городская культура персов и турков, с законами и театрами. Что им до войн 7 века в чужой пустыне? Но теперь пытаются натянуть эту сову на свой глобус.
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Posted by News Editor

The Calendar Heroes by Michele Dunaway

The Calendar Heroes
by Michele Dunaway

Welcome to the Sexy Public Servants Charity Calendar, where True Love is Only a First Responder Away.

Mr. September
Mr. December
Mr. July
and bonus novel featuring Mr. August,
The Good Girl’s Fake Date

Featuring St. Louis’ finest firefighters and police officers, these men might be bare chested pinups, but there’s far more to them than being eye candy. While the books do have a time sequence, each stands alone and can be read in any order. Expect Hallmark sweet with some spicy heat.

The Calendar Heroes omnibus edition!

REVIEWS

About Mr. September: “This book took me totally by surprise, yes you get a hot fireman in Joe Marino, but there is so much more to the story between him and Taylor Krebs. his is a nice fluffy romance, but it is also a little deeper than that, I didn’t think I’d find myself in tears reading this book, but I was and more than once. I didn’t expect to find that the author took these characters and their pasts and developed their story as well and as seamlessly as she did, as well as merge their futures together into such a cohesive and wholly engrossing read, it is safe to say all of my expectations were met and exceeded with this one. If you are looking for a beautifully written, entertaining story, with a great supporting cast, a little drama and a bunch of firemen, then you can’t really go wrong.”

About Mr. December: “Michele Dunaway has sprinkled quirky characters, a small town attitude and two amazing characters together over a sugar cookie sweet tale of romance, togetherness and love, while sharing the plight of a young puppy and all animals in need of their perfect forever home. Not your cookie cutter Holiday read, this author understands the spirit of the Holidays!”

About Mr. July: “The third book in Michelle Dunaway’s Man of the Month series continues in the stellar tradition of its predecessors. The author manages to take well used tropes and give them a fresh spin, with plenty of love, romance and entertainment for the reader to enjoy.Have a few tissues handy, what with a healthy dose of survivor’s guilt and unaddressed grief on both sides, flowing through their story, and a couple of letters towards the end that bring a massive lump to the throat, I was a bit of a blubbery mess when I finished!”

About Mr. August: The Good Girl’s Fake Date is a fun contemporary Jacobson romance starring two likable protagonists. The story line focuses on Olivia trying to throw off the “shackles” of her family so that she can enjoy life just a bit. Garrett is attracted to the good girl as much as the bad girl. Readers will enjoy Michele Dunaway’s latest Jacobson romantic caper due to the feisty heroine.

____

Michele Dunaway, a best-selling contemporary author and retired award-winning high school journalism teacher, loves creating hometown sweet romances with a hint of spice. A mom of two grown daughters and several rescue cats, Michele never wants to stop creating fiction, baking treats, or traveling to new places.

Buy Calendar Heroes at the BVC bookstore

Read a Sample from Mr. September

Chapter One

Ten, no, twelve rogue pirates surrounded her, the hot, humid air one of the reasons for her flushed skin, the men surrounding her the other. She trembled, for there was one in the midst who stood out over the others, who captured her full attention, held a magical power. He was strong. Dashing. A cad. He’d sidetracked her mission, yet as an illicit thrill stole over her, she wanted him to swoop in, scoop her up, and carry her away, help her escape from all this. His lips would fall on hers, taking her to never imagined heights . . .

Taylor Krebs blinked. Focused. Cleared her head, fading the Walter Mitty fantasy world she created, one she’d gleaned from reading bestselling Lalita Crane’s latest historical romance novel. Last night Taylor had turned the pages until three a.m., a foolish choice in hindsight, as she’d had to be awake, dressed, and at the hotel by seven.

Now midafternoon, she was tired, hot, and—finally—almost finished with the job she hoped would ignite her career.

She had to get her head out of the clouds, although fantasy was almost always better than reality. Case in point, she was surrounded by twelve of St. Louis’s sexiest bachelors and it was fast becoming her worst nightmare. She would much rather read about being surrounded by gorgeous guys, and hey, in her fantasy, maybe one of them could help her with the applied project due for her master’s degree, the other task constantly taking up brain space.

She sighed, doubting very much that any of the sexy guys in front of her could help. And she needed the master’s degree, for if she couldn’t make it as a full-time photographer, a degree meant she could get a job teaching at the college level. As her mom kept harping, “You need a fallback plan, dear.”

As it was, Taylor was so far behind on getting her project approved that entering it in the college’s annual juried photo contest, the one with a thousand-dollar cash prize, would take a miracle.

“No, no. He needs a more seductive smile.” Virginia Barker Edwards, calendar committee chair, clapped her hands until the poor man complied. “Much better,” she called.

Taylor took the last shots and let the grateful man escape. She stifled a yawn.

Where was a rogue pirate when you needed one?

She made an adjustment to the camera, readying it for the next frame. At first, being chosen to photograph the Sexy Public Servants of St. Louis calendar sounded delicious. Who knew that St. Louis had such a bumper crop of handsome men?

There was Mr. December—cop Jack Donovan—in his Santa hat and low-rise jeans; Mr. January—park department’s Blaine Johnson—in hat, tails, and tuxedo pants that fit like a glove; Mr. July—former Navy Seal turned SLFD marine rescue, Brad Silverman—wearing a pair of swim trunks and a smile; Mr. April—assistant District Attorney Liam Rogers—the only male wearing a shirt, although the partially unbuttoned white oxford had the same effect as if he was posing without it. Some of the female onlookers had actually swooned.

But for Taylor, it had been Mr. September—Joe Marino—who’d turned her insides into gooey marshmallow. She hadn’t really paid much attention to the sexy firefighter. Not at first. Mr. Tall, Dark, Dangerous, and Brooding was so not her type. She liked them shorter. Blonder. Safer. More like ADA Liam Rogers, although the ADA hadn’t made her heart race, hadn’t made her do a double take like Joe Marino had.

Why was it she dated shorter, blonder men when heroes like the long-haired Duncan MacGregor from Crane’s Burning for the Rogue Pirate kept Taylor reading until the wee hours, way past what was sensible?

She frowned as she swapped out the dead battery, using a backup one she’d forgotten to charge fully and prayed it would hold. She had one more month to photograph—September.

Her initial heated reaction to Joe had happened right before taking the group shots, when she’d peered through the viewfinder and zoomed in on Mr. September’s eyes. Blue melded with light gray and a hint of green, forming a color that defied description. Which being without words kind of pissed her off, especially since she prided herself on description—it was part of being a photographer.

Worse, as if sensing her perusal, he’d winked. She’d zoomed out, caught, feeling as if Joe somehow knew what she was doing. Impossible. Still, her insides turned to oatmeal-like mush, and an indeterminable moment passed before her erratic heart slowed.

For Mr. September’s portraits, Joe wore only his boots, turnout pants, suspenders, and coat—and a cheeky grin that well-intentioned mothers warned her about. Before Taylor had started Joe’s individual shots, his second blatant wink had sent raw heat scorching straight down to curling toes clad in black and white striped high-top Converse.

Her tennis shoes were a concession to being on her feet all day, a downside to being a photographer. Camera settings adjusted, she was ready. Joe stood in the middle of the dance floor, in front of the bright green background. After the long day, his earlier cheekiness had vanished. She couldn’t blame him.

“How much longer?” His impatient tone indicated his tolerance was wearing thin.

“Not too much. Just a few minutes more,” Taylor replied, grateful the other months were complete. Because of Virginia’s endless directions, each shoot had run over allotted time, and the men had ended up waiting around.

“Only a few more shots, I promise.” She took them. “There. All done.”

“I want his coat adjusted,” the calendar committee chair called out as Joe began to move. He checked himself mid-step, turned back.

“Well, maybe we’ll need a few more,” Taylor amended wryly as Joe scowled, those full, dark brows knitting together.

However, his surly frown was lost on Virginia Edwards Barker, the calendar chairwoman and the one who had everyone dancing to her tune. This was her pet project, and perfect silver hair remained frozen in place as her head tilted while she studied Joe over hot pink designer reading glasses. Her lips puckered. “He needs to show more chest. Definitely more chest.”

The six or seven inches already exposed had sent Taylor’s imagination into overdrive. The curly hair on Joe’s chest matched the thick layers atop his head, and those glossy untamed raven waves kissed the edges of his turnout coat collar—bad boy, rock star hair that he wore better than her favorite lead guitarist.

“Taylor! Stat! Time is money. Let’s not delay the poor man further,” Virginia called.

The loud series of claps she added jolted Taylor to attention, and her face flamed. Betty White’s younger doppelganger had awarded Taylor the assignment, so Taylor did Virginia’s bidding. No wasn’t an option.

Her fledging photography business desperately needed this break and the subsequent exposure the calendar would bring. Her bank account, drained from undergraduate and graduate school loans, needed the cash jolt.

So she trotted dutifully out onto the brown parquet, the white soles of her Converse making nary a squeak. Joe waited in the last pose: right knee bent, boot planted on a wooden crate, hands on hips. She reached for the worn mustard-colored edges of his turnout gear and pushed the sections of the heavy fire retardant material toward his sides. Her fingertips grazed rock hard abs covered with those tempting silky strands and her breath hitched, causing her to emit a tiny hiccup.

Twinkling blue—no, gray—no, blue eyes drilled into her. “Want some help?” Full, kissable lips inched upward, amusement clearly evident.

He was enjoying this!

Sensing her hesitation, he covered her trembling hands with his and, with his touch branding her unsteady, shaking fingers, he eased the coat off his shoulders so that more of his perfectly sculpted torso showed. He moved her right hand to his bare chest, and Taylor’s mouth dried as her fingers resisted the urge to palm with abandon. She bit back the next threatening hiccup—her often-uncontrollable nervous reaction—and tugged her hands free from his firm grip.

Laughter lined those wicked eyes. “Like that? That work for you?”

Oh Lordy. He definitely worked for her, and having turned into a silly, childish puddle, she could only nod because her normally loud voice had vanished. Being she stood five foot five, he towered over her by at least a foot, maybe more. He was tall, lean, ripped. With a body carved from real life, he shamed all the sex-on-a-stick men gracing the covers of the Lalita Crane historicals she devoured.

Forget hot, he was smoking—a man’s man—the irresistible kind that gave women extremely erotic dreams.

“That should work,” Taylor finally managed, praying no one watching had heard her exhaled whoosh of edgy breath. She and Joe stood toe-to-toe—every one of Taylor’s nerve endings on high alert. She wasn’t a naïve teenager, but she’d never been so physically aware of a man—especially one like Joe. Her brain screamed run, but her feet clung to the ground. Her hands desired to fully feel his chest, test the texture for herself, curl her fingers into the silk.

“What about his hair?” Virginia called. “Don’t you think we should fix that? He has some hat head.”

Joe reached up, dragged his hand through his hair.

“No, that’s not what I want,” Virginia returned, her lips puckered in clear disapproval. She held her hands up and wiggled her fingers in the air. “Muss it up. Make it sexier. Do you know what I mean?”

Unfortunately, Taylor did. She inhaled patience and composure and called back, “Yes, I’ve got it.”

A sexy black eyebrow arched, curiosity evident. Joe’s lips moved, capturing her dormant libido’s complete attention. “You do?”

Taylor blew out a deep breath, which was followed by a hiccup. She winced. “Stand still.”

She rose on tiptoes, her plain red T-shirt inching up to reveal a sliver of pale stomach. Threading both hands into Joe’s hair, she pushed the wayward locks off his forehead. “Sorry about this.”

The thick strands caressed her fingers—no grease or residual gooey product here. Just shampoo and natural waves. Her skin heated like an inferno. His breath hitched as she pushed his hair up and over, patting any loose pieces to make them stay. “There.”

“Am I good?”

Uhhh, he was more than good.

His eyes had darkened to blue steel, held a hint of something. . . . “Didn’t know we knew each other so well. Not that I minded. Was it good for you? If not, I could make it good.”

“I said I was sorry.” Taylor gave another embarrassing hiccup.

His deep, suggestive voice caressed over her in a smooth wave. His lips twitched. “Don’t be sorry. I’m not. Who knew modeling could be so . . . hands on.”

“Uh . . .” Her tongue tied into knots. In her favorite novel, the hero would have kissed her now. He’d lower his mouth to hers and . . .

“That’s better.” Virginia’s voice broke the intimacy, reminding Taylor that she stood in a rented ballroom, in clear view of the others, making unprofessional googly eyes with her subject.

“I’m much happier,” Virginia called out. “Very sexy Joe. Just what we’re looking for. Now get the shots, Taylor. Didn’t he say he had to leave? Why are we still keeping the man waiting?”

“Yes, let’s get this done,” Joe replied. Aware of their audience, his grin widened and he lowered full lips to whisper in Taylor’s ear. “But you just let me know if you need anything. I’m happy to oblige. Maybe we should explore what else those expert fingers of yours can do. I’m a very hands-on kind of guy. Comes with the job description.”

The seductive way his words rolled off his tongue made no secret that he meant the double entendre. “Yep, more than happy to help you.”

As Taylor scurried back to the safety of her camera, his low chuckle burned her ears. No way did she need more of him!

Joe Marino was bad news. The kind who ran into danger instead of safely away. If one glance, or one hand on that hard chest, had turned her into a heated wreck—and she prided herself on being a woman who was never, ever, out of control—what would touching him more do? He’d shattered her precarious control with mere words.

“He reminds me of that werewolf in True Blood,” her friend Marci whispered as Taylor refocused her camera. The black Canon SLR was like a security blanket, and she moved it in front of her right eye.

One thing was certain—the camera loved Mr. September. The lens captured all his hard angles, accentuating them and making them even more chiseled. Taylor swallowed the next hiccup, which came out as a faint, mouse-like squeak.

“You know, the actor. What’s his name? He also did that firefighter dance in Magic Mike,” Marci continued.

A movie Taylor had sadly missed. But she knew the HBO show. Had seen every episode with her girls’ viewing group, read all the Sookie Sackhouse books. “Joe Manganiello.”

Marci snapped her fingers. “Yeah, that’s him. See what I mean?”

Eye to the viewfinder, Taylor could perceive the resemblance Marci claimed—both men had the same dark hair and super-cut body—but really, the generalities were where the likeness ended. The Joe in front of her was clean-shaven. She could probably crack an egg on that sculpted jawline. He wasn’t as broad in the shoulders. He stood taller. His hair was longer, wavier. And his deep, sexy voice definitely hadn’t been the same. “He might even be hotter,” Marci said.

Marci was dead on, one hundred percent correct, but Taylor ignored answering her flirtatious friend, who’d only volunteered to assist on the photo shoot so she could hang out with twelve, hunky single men.

Taylor, being too poor to hire an assistant, had welcomed the help, even though that meant Marci flitting from guy to guy, her search for Mr. Right as fickle as the number of times she changed shoes per day. Marci had shed her earlier four-inch heels for a sensible pair of Sperry’s. Despite Taylor’s Converse, her feet screamed for a warm footbath.

Mr. September planted his hands on his hips and widened his stance as Taylor pressed the shutter, catching his poses. “Now if you could just move your helmet . . .”

“Here?” He dropped it directly in front of his crotch, and she flushed.

Virginia let loose a giggle. “Oh Joe! You are so bad.” Narrowing her gaze, Taylor frowned. She’d sworn some of the women in Virginia’s entourage had swooned.

“Under your arm will be fine,” Taylor returned briskly as his wicked grin split into devilish laughter before he complied. She pressed the shutter and the camera clicked rapid-fire. She issued a few more orders, and Joe executed the subsequent positions without complaint or comment, much to her relief. The man was danger personified.

“Okay, we’re finished,” Taylor called. “Unless you have anything else?”

Virginia shook her head. She appeared a bit flushed. “I’m satisfied. And it’s hot in here.”

“Great. I always make sure a woman is pleased before I leave.” Joe strode from the dance floor and headed their way.

“He’s going to be a favorite,” Marci observed.

“He will,” Taylor agreed. She had well over a hundred fifty photos—surely Virginia would find something she liked. Taylor wiped a drop of moisture from her forehead. The hotel’s air conditioning had failed miserably with keeping up with the unseasonably warm June day. The temperature outside was ninety-nine; it had to be at least eighty inside. The large fans designed to give the men the windblown look had provided some relief, but not nearly enough. She’d clipped her long auburn hair up off her neck and into a loose knot, but that hadn’t done much. Her unsecured natural curls had frizzed into a hellacious halo.

Joe reached the set of chairs. He shed his coat, slid the suspenders down. Six-pack abs rippled as he pulled on a navy T-shirt embossed with the fire department logo. Then he sat down and pulled off the boots. Rising, he slid the turnout pants down, revealing the blue work pants he wore underneath. She knew he had to have been uncomfortably hot wearing all his gear. But he hadn’t complained once, unlike a few others. After realizing that Virginia hadn’t planned on providing food and drink, Taylor had sent Marci to the nearest convenience store for two dozen cold bottles of water, a Styrofoam cooler, and a bag of ice. Her charge cards already bleeding, what was one more unplanned expense?

As the group began to disperse, Taylor grabbed one of the last bottles. Unlike those TV modeling shows with multiple computer monitors on tables, Taylor’s reality was a used light kit bought off Craigslist, the green screen, and her camera. She’d work on her MacBook later and process the images. Shot against green, she’d easily be able to Photoshop the men onto the various St. Louis backdrop photos she’d taken previously. Then, once done, she’d bring the disk to Virginia.

“Tuesday, my office,” Virginia reminded Taylor of the upcoming deadline as she and her entourage made to leave.

“Ten a.m.,” Taylor confirmed. Today was Wednesday, so she had almost a week to get the images ready. As she had double shifts at Presley’s Friday and Saturday and thousands of photos to process, she’d need every spare minute. The hairs on the back of her neck rose as a rich, sexy voice said, “Can I see?”

Taylor turned. Joe stood there, towering over her in the T-shirt that fit like skin. He gestured at the camera, the small Maltese cross tattoo on the inside of his wrist clearly visible. She’d kept the tattoo out of view during the shoot. Virginia’s orders—and what Virginia wanted, Virginia got.

“There are hundreds of images . . .”

“I don’t want to see all of them. Just the last few will be fine.”

“No one else saw theirs . . .”

That sexy irresistible grin slid into place, and Mr. September turned into Mr. State the Obvious. “I’m not like everyone else.”

No, he certainly wasn’t. No one else made her heart skip or her face flame. Now in the clothes he’d wear around the firehouse while waiting for a call, Joe shouldn’t be so intimidating. Shouldn’t be so alluring. Shouldn’t be calling to something deep inside, something primitive she’d buried two years ago, something too dangerous to allow out.

“Besides, you owe me. You had your hands in my hair and on my chest. Surely that gives me some leeway, a little extra.”

Ooh boy. “Fine.”

The devilish grin widened. “See how easy that was?”

As Marci went to roll up the backdrop and put away the light kit, Taylor turned on the camera’s preview mode and scrolled through the last few images. Joe leaned over her left shoulder and watched as she did. “That’s good work.”

She paused, surprised. “Thanks. You’re not going to make a comment about how I had a good subject to work with?”

“That goes without saying.” His now trademark smile came and vanished. He shrugged. “Seriously, though, I can tell you’ve got talent. I hate being photographed. I never look good in them.”

Add lying to his list of talents. She scoffed. “Then why did you do this?”

He frowned. “Because I had no choice.”

Ha. Hardly. Somehow she couldn’t quite believe him. “Everyone has a choice.”

He opened his mouth, checked whatever he’d been about to say, and instead returned to the wide sexy grin found in all the photos. “Perhaps I just wanted to meet you. Get to know you.”

“Oh please. You’re being a cad. Be serious.” Taylor threw a hand over her mouth, realizing she’d sounded like the heroine in the book she’d clearly needed to put down last night. How embarrassing.

Hands went on hips. Eyebrows arched. “A cad? Where does that word come from anyway?”

From a romance novel. Face flaming, she turned the camera off, watched the screen go dark. The backup battery had done its job of allowing her to finish the shoot. She made a show of putting her Canon into the camera bag, but Joe didn’t take the hint. “I’m sure you have other places to be.”

“You called me a cad. That’s a low blow. I have to defend my honor.”

“Are you serious? I was joking. I’m sorry if I offended you.”

He shook his head, that lovely hair caressing his jawbone. Her fingers longed to touch the thick strands again, run her fingers through them, and draw them away from his face. Clearly, the book’s steamy love scene was wiggled into her subconscious.

“Humor me. You had your hands on my chest—and good hands, by the way.”

“Part of my job.”

“Why’d you become a photographer?”

“Why’d you become a firefighter?” she returned.

“Not for the reason you think, and do you always answer a question with a question?”

Her chin jutted forward. She was intrigued but tired. “Why? Does it annoy you?”

Deep laughter erupted, and shoving his hands into his back pockets, he disregarded the bad habit that sent most men she met running for the hills. “I like challenges; I don’t scare easily.”

Not expecting that answer, her next inhale went down wrong, and she coughed.

His forehead creased. “You okay? Need me to bang on your back?”

The thought of him touching her made all her nerve endings go haywire again. “I’m good. No need.” She made show of touching the base of her collarbone. At least the hiccups had stopped. “Hate when that happens.”

The easy grin returned. “You seem to have some breathing issues today. I’m a certified paramedic. I’m trained in mouth-to-mouth. Let me know if you require that.”

The thought of his lips touching hers caused her next breath to whoosh out. No man had made her react so viscerally. She would take charge. Put him in his place. “I’m fine. I really need to pack up. So if we’re finished . . .”

“Actually, I have another question for you.”

The directness of his answer made her stare, curious. “Oh? What is it?” Was he about to ask her out?

“I like the work you do, and today I saw how patient and kind you are with your subjects. I’m looking for photographer to help me with a pet project. Interested?”

Damn. For a millisecond disappointment filled her and she wiped the back of her right hand on her forehead, the lack of decent air conditioning starting to get to her, or maybe it was simply his dynamic proximity. Of course he didn’t want her—just her skills. But, she’d hoped. Anticipated. Get it together, she chided herself. He hadn’t even really been flirting—just more annoying, right?—and she certainly couldn’t turn down business. “I’m willing to listen.”

“Perfect. Card?”

His entire demeanor turned serious, and she remained frozen, the change so abrupt she was certain her head would be spinning if not attached. “Yes. Hold on.” She dug into the front of her camera bag, took out a tiny piece of heather gray cardstock.

He plucked the business card from her fingertips, studied the words, and tucked it into a front pocket, the movement creating a crease in the pants near his. . . . She jerked her gaze away. “Great. I’ll call you in a day or two. That work?”

“Uh. Um. Yes.” She forced herself to be professional.

“Good. Can’t wait to talk then.” He thrust his hand forward, and unprepared for the gesture, she shook it awkwardly. Like when he’d covered her hands earlier, a sizzle fused her fingers to his, forcing her to pull away quickly. All day he’d had her off her game. She was drawn to him but wasn’t sure she liked him. After the huge ordeal of her breakup with Owen, she avoided anything or anyone that made her feel out of control, which was how she felt since his first wink. But she needed work. “Talk to you soon.”

With that, Joe picked up his gear and strode to the exit. Taylor stared, stupefied, unable to rip away her attention as she tracked his progress. She was no match for this man, this gorgeous chameleon who could charm his way into getting whatever he wanted. As for exactly what he wanted, he’d led her one way and then switched directions so fast she hadn’t been able to keep up. Did he really need a photographer? But why would he pretend otherwise?

“He is so hot,” Marci said, approaching with the gear. Her enthusiasm bubbled. “He took your card. Did he ask you out? God, I wish he’d have asked me. Are you going to go? You should. Especially since he’s single and you haven’t had a real date in ages. Not since Owen. It wasn’t your fault he was such a jerk and . . .”

As Marci rambled on, Taylor pressed her water bottle to her forehead. She was getting a massive headache. Time to get some real food and into some actual air conditioning—stat. As for Joe Marino, she dismissed him from her mind, although it took more effort than she’d expected. No matter how much her body liked him, she was a girl who’d learned the hard way to follow her head and not her heart. And her head said to stay far away from Joe. Even if he did make her mushy. And hot.

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The Madman's Dangerous Delusion by Patricia RiceThe Madman’s Dangerous Delusion
Gravesyde Village Mysteries #4
Patricia Rice

Menaced by a madman, a widow and a soldier seek safety. . . and discover so much more.

Recently widowed Kate Morgan supports her family as a seamstress in Gravesyde Village. She needs a husband to farm her land but is losing hope of finding love. With her insane brother-in-law claiming her home, she might even lose that.

Battle-worn and bitter, Sergeant Major Fletch Ferguson returns from war with a single goal: fix clocks, not lives. But when the widow’s lunatic relation threatens her, Fletch’s fighting instincts ignite. The resultant battle leaves him temporarily disabled, Kate terrified, and a madman on the loose.

When a cousin who resembles Kate falls to her death, Fletch refuses to believe in coincidence and insists on moving in to protect her and her children. Terrified, Kate has no reason to deny the surly ex-soldier’s offer, especially after a string of suspicious accidents and deaths involving her fellow seamstresses follows.

Can one madman really be behind all of the dangerous incidents? Fletch would far rather deal with the manor’s eccentric case clock than lunatics and killers. But with women and children endangered, he and a furious Kate must stop the villain before anyone else must mourn a loved one.

Gravesyde Village Mysteries #4

REVIEW

Anne Gracie, author of the bestselling Heiress’s Daughter, praises Rice’s mysteries as “wonderful, fun, gothic … with a cast of quirky characters and a heartwarming romance as well. Pure entertainment.”

____

With several million books in print and New York Times and USA Today’s lists under her belt, former CPA Patricia Rice is one of romance’s hottest authors. Her emotionally-charged romances have won numerous awards and been honored as RITA® finalists in the historical, regency and contemporary categories. She is thrilled that readers are now following her into romantic mysteries! To receive news of new releases, sign up for her newsletter at http://patriciarice.com.

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Read a Sample

Wednesday
ONE

Kate

The tolling of the manor’s mad floor clock resounded through the open portico doorway, striking noon. Or midnight. Neither of which it was, but Kate Morgan knew she was running inexcusably late. In the drive, she gave her two youngest a last-minute inspection before sending them to the new schoolroom. On days like this, she wished for a magic wand, or three hands, or more practically, for the maid they once had—back in the time when she hadn’t realized innocence provided no defense against evil.

“Keep your coat on, Lyn. It’s cold in that schoolroom.” Kate buttoned her eight-year-old daughter’s too-small jacket. Lynly had her late father’s weak chest and was often sickly.

“Rob, where’s your slate? I can’t buy another if you lose it.” Her twelve-year old held his overlarge coat closed as if he were freezing. Odd. Rob was never cold. Now that his older brother was in boarding school and unable to tease him into his old clothes, Rob refused to wear castoffs.

“I’ve got it. I’m not a baby.” Rob dodged her attempt to straighten his scarf.

His coat wriggled under the scarf he never wore. It had been a gloomy spring, but the wind today was brisk, not freezing. With a sigh, Kate yanked open his coat, revealing a squirming bundle of baby bunnies.

“Oh, no, you don’t, sir.” Kate snatched the bundle from his grip. “Mrs. Russell has enough work without adding rabbits.”

“I want to show Davey and Oliver!” he protested. “They’ve never seen bunnies.”

Davey and Oliver were the privileged, eight-year-old great-grandsons of an earl, living in a stately medieval manor. They had seen London and society. Rob had never known anything except his family’s farm and Gravesyde’s rural poverty.

Kate sympathized with her son’s desire to educate—and impress—but not at the risk of disrupting schoolrooms. “Tell your teachers the bunnies will be in the yard, where they belong. Go on with the two of you or you’ll be late.”

She sent them into the tower stairwell that had once served monks and knights. The eccentric assortment of Priory Manor owners had spent these last months using a—literal—pirate’s ransom to restore the keep, turning it into workshops and schoolrooms for the benefit of the village. Kate was more than grateful and willing to do whatever necessary to prevent the manor folk from regretting their generosity.

The children raced into the tower, leaving her with the bundle of baby rabbits. Wild hares would make dog food for the manor’s hounds. She didn’t have time to find a stable hand to lock them up. She’d have to take them inside or be late for work. Again.

Taking the grand portico entrance, relieved the clock had quit its infernal bonging, Kate shoved the bundle into the hands of the startled footman. “The boys want to see bunnies. I have no notion of what to do with them.”

The poor lad juggled the bundle and her cloak without question. He’d probably been handed worse. It wasn’t as if Gravesyde invited normal. They’d been without civilization for too long.

Carrying an armful of linens, a cheerful bundle of energy bustled down the long side hall toward the service stairs near where Kate stood.

The manor provided plain gowns and caps for everyone working here, so her drab attire resembled Kate’s. “’Morning, Mrs. Morgan!” She cast a glance at the squirming bundle and laughed. “Easter bunnies! Don’t let Miss Marlowe see them. She’ll be dressing them like that doggie of hers.”

Ana Marie had only just moved to the village after a lifetime in Worcester. Kate’s older cousin, she had the Calhoun auburn hair and plain features, but they barely knew each other except by name.

Reminded of her own cap, Kate pinned the windblown linen back in place. As head seamstress, Kate had to maintain a prim and proper façade. “Rob wanted to show them off.”

“That boy of yours is adorable. I’m going up with linens for the nursery. Shall I ask Mr. Birdwhistle what to do about bunnies?”

“That would be perfect, thank you.” Leaving the amused maid behind, Kate rushed down the hall to the sewing workshop set up in what had originally been a monk’s house of worship and then an earl’s ballroom. She hated setting a bad example by being late. Women’s voices already arose from the interior.

“The children giving you trouble again?” Miss Jameson called, loud enough for every soul in the echoingly enormous chamber to hear. Heads turned to see who entered, so all and sundry knew Kate was tardy.

Both slender and voluptuous, black-haired Vivien Jameson had made it clear since her arrival a few months ago that she should be head seamstress. Miss Jameson was an experienced needlewoman, yes, and she commanded attention as plain, quiet Kate did not. But Kate had been head seamstress long before this upstart had arrived. The newcomer lacked Kate’s knowledge of their customers and the other workers. Besides, Miss Jameson’s attention-getting was unbelievably annoying.

Kate reminded herself to be charitable. The young woman was struggling to make ends meet, as they all were.

Without responding to the comment, Kate studied the main table where the day’s work was laid out.

“Mrs. Morgan, welcome! Now we can start.” At eighteen, Lavender Marlowe was entirely too young and beautiful to be relegated to running a business. But as the illegitimate granddaughter of Baroness Marlowe, and heir to a portion of the manor under the late earl’s eccentric will, the youngster had access to funds and facilities no one else in the village could claim.

And she was a tremendously talented modiste.

Kate had a lot of respect for her young employer, who provided work for impoverished women. She nodded greeting and waited to see what had the irrepressible lady bubbling with excitement.

Blonde, blue-eyed as the rest of the earl’s family, Lavender was a vision of wealthy aristocracy in a lace-bedecked, periwinkle blue frock of her own creation. In contrast to her frivolous appearance, she waved a page full of very business-like numbers. “Mr. Walker says we have earned enough creating and refurbishing bonnets and holiday gowns over Christmas that we now have enough to start looking for a shop in town!”

Kate wasn’t entirely certain of the wisdom of paying rent when they had the manor’s unused ballroom and tower workshop for free. But attracting outsiders had been a long-time goal, and she understood the excitement. “Start small?” she suggested cautiously. “Selling ribbons and lace?”

“And my hats!” Vivien Jameson added in loud delight. She hadn’t been the only one refurbishing hats, but she’d recently learned to create simple bonnets from scratch.

Lavender perched on one of the worktables. “I’d love to have that empty shop next to the new hardware, so women coming to market would see our wares. But it’s large, and Walker says the bank is asking too much. It’s just, we really need that shop window.”

The estate’s American steward was a brilliant businessman. Ignoring his advice was never wise.

“My brother-in-law is moving out of his office at the inn. The space was once a ladies’ parlor and has a lovely bay window—although the inn isn’t exactly an area where women shop.” Kate puckered her nose as she offered her suggestion.

“But the inn pub is open to all now, even ladies!” Lavender bounced in excitement. “We could have signs directing people to look. Although that mud field of a yard. . .”

She frowned and stood. “Let’s all think on it. Kate, bring your basket. My grandmother and Lady Spalding have finally consented to refurbishing some of their ancient gowns. They like you and think I’m a featherhead, so come talk sense to them for me.”

“I can talk sense,” Miss Jameson said, looking insulted. “I have excellent ideas. Mrs. Morgan just sews a fine seam.”

Vivien, unfortunately, lacked the patience to sew fine seams. She preferred playing with lace and silk. Kate accepted her own limitations—her needlework was superior, yes, but she wasn’t as inventive as the newcomer.

Except Lavender didn’t require Vivien’s creativity. She already possessed more imagination than the dowagers needed, and she loved showing off for her grandmother. Kate simply accompanied her as the sensible older woman to convince them they would look beautiful in a young girl’s designs.

Rather than assert her authority, Kate let Lavender decide.

“Vivien, I need you to take those infant clothes up to Mrs. Lavigne.” Lavender pointed at a stack of newly-sewn infant gowns. “She’ll want to ask about the fabric. You can reassure her that it’s sturdy enough for many washings.”

A descendant of the third earl of Wycliffe, Patience Lavigne was the first of the family to give birth in the manor for nearly a century. The entire household hovered.

Picking up her own sewing basket, Lavender gestured for Kate to follow her to the hall. “I’m relying on your sensible head for the new shop,” she confided once they were out of hearing.

“I will be delighted to help in whatever way I can,” Kate admitted. “Perhaps older workers who can no longer see well and for whom the hill up to the manor is difficult might work there as clerks.” She started toward the back service stairs that Ana Marie had taken earlier.

Lavender grasped her elbow and turned her around. “Main stairs. Quit pretending you are a servant. You are a squire’s daughter and gentry, which is why you’ll be perfect for the shop. It will require showing fashion plates and taking appointments for fittings, and you know the locals better than anyone. Both the manor ladies and shop women will listen to you. You can sew there as well as here, so I won’t be losing your fine needlework.”

Kate wondered if highhandedness was an inherited trait and if that was how people became earls. She didn’t speak her thoughts, but once they reached the gaslit, imposing, wide marble stairs at the front of the manor, she hesitated, regretting taking the family’s route.

The white stone stairs were littered with blackened, filthy cogs. On the landing, at the center of the pigsty, stood Sgt. Major Fletcher Ferguson, his wrinkled neckcloth undone to reveal a strong brown throat. Having discarded his form-fitting coat, his straining shoulders garbed only in waistcoat and worn shirt sleeves, he heaved the heavy floor clock to one side.

He was much too large and hairy to be a pig, but he was covered in grime and grunting at the weight of his burden.

At least the timepiece had stopped its infernal bonging. Apparently, the man had finally killed the family’s priceless antique.

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sovay: (Sydney Carton)
[personal profile] sovay
Running this many days without sleep, I find it hard to tell whether I had an insight about creativity this weekend or just reinvented a 101-level objection to LLMs and so-called generative AI, but it ocurred to me that such technologies are not capable of allusions. Their algorithms are not freighted with the same three-dimensional architecture of associations which accrete around information stored in the human cold porridge, all the emotional colors and sensory overtones and contextual echoes which attend the classic example of a word like tree when you throw it out across the incommensurable void between one human mind and another to be plugged into their own idiosyncratically plastic linkage of bias and experience whose least incompatibility may be the difference between a bristlecone and a birch and Wittgenstein has to lie down with a headache, but all of these entanglements form as much of the texture of a writer's style—of any human communication—as the word cloud of their vocabulary or their most commonly diagrammed sentences. It has always interested me to be able to detect the half-rhymes or skeletons of familiarity in the work of other writers; I have always assumed I am reciprocally legible if not transparent from space. I've seen arguments against the creativity of LLMs based on intentionality, but the unintended encrustrations seem just as important to me. By way of illustration, this thought was partly sparked by this classic and glorious mashup.

I was delighted to find on checking the news this morning that a new Roman villa just dropped. Given the Iron Age hillforts, the twelfth-century abbey, the Georgian country house, and the CH station, Margam Country Park clearly needed a Roman find to complete the set. I have since been informed of the discovery of a similarly well-preserved and impressive carnyx. Goes shatteringly with a villa, the Iceni tell me.

I joke about this rock I spend most of my time under, but how can I never have heard of Marlow Moss? The Bryher vibes alone. The Constructivism. And a real short king, judging by that jaunty photo c. 1937 with Netty Nijhoff. Pursuing further details, I fell over Anton Prinner and have been demoralized about my comprehension of art history ever since.

Last night I read David Copperfield (1850) for the third time in my life. It has the terrible feel of a teachable moment. In high school I bounced almost completely off it. About ten years later, I enjoyed the dual-layered narration and was otherwise mostly engaged by the language. Now it appears I just like the novel, which I have to consider may be a factor of middle age. Or I had just read the necessary bunch more of Dickens in the interval, speaking of traceable reflections, recurring figures; my favorite character has not changed since eleventh grade, but I can see now the constellation he's part of. It seems improbable that I was always reading the novel while waiting for chorus to start, but I did get through Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886) in the down time of a couple of rehearsals that year. I was not taking either of the standard literature classes, but I had friends who left their assigned reading lying around.

I have to be at three different doctors' offices tomorrow. I could be over this viral mishegos any second now.

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