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173 Publicações
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Female
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28/11/1961
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sample-新婚日记-V-05-The Thing We Didn''t Name-202606092020The Thing We Didn''t NameClaire was watching Mark make coffee the way people watch birds: with the patient attention of someone who understands that the interesting things happen at speeds you can''t quite track. They had been living together for three years. They shared a credit card. They shared a cat named Pym, who was indifferent to both of them in roughly equal measure. And suddenly,...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações 0 AnteriorFaça o login para curtir, compartilhar e comentar!
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The Gilded Cage of DustThe manor house at Blackwood stood like a rotting tooth in the jaw of the Mississippi Delta. Silas was the last of the Blackwoods, a man whose blood was a map of ancestral sins and whose mind was a doorway that wouldn't stay shut. He didn't choose the jumps. The jumps chose him. It started with a sneeze, a blink, a sudden shift in the wind. One moment he was staring at the peeling wallpaper of...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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The City of TomorrowACT I — THE ARRIVAL The train from Boston to New York arrived at Penn Station at 6:47 on a Tuesday in October 1924, and Julian Marsh stepped onto the platform carrying nothing but a leather satchel and the kind of quiet that comes from watching every man you served with get buried in French soil. He was twenty-six years old and looked forty. The army had seen to that—the mustard gas at Belleau...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 5 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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Casey had been sent to investigate her.The neon sign above the jazz club flickered like a dying star, casting pink and blue light across the wet pavement of 125th Street. Casey Moran stood in the doorway, one hand on the doorframe, listening to the saxophone bleed through the walls. He had been a soldier once. Now he was a reporter for the New York Herald Tribune. Sometimes he felt both professions were the same thing—just different...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 7 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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The Chronos Archive(Variant V-10: Grand Narrative) In the beginning, there was the Pulse. It was a single, golden vibration that birthed a trillion galaxies, each a delicate bubble of order in an ocean of chaos. For eons, the Great Hegemony of Aethelgard ruled the stars. They were not conquerors of land, but conquerors of time. They had learned to fold the seconds, to stretch the minutes, and to build cities that...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 10 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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She noticed because she was the one who had to wash the clothes in it.The river went backward on a Tuesday in July, and Clementine DuBois was the only person in Salem who noticed, because everyone else was too busy being afraid to look at the water. She noticed because she was the one who had to wash the clothes in it. Clementine stood at the bank of Cypress Creek with the washboard under her arm and watched the current pull toward the mountains instead of away...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 9 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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The White Room Dialogue(Minimalist Existentialist Style) The room was white. Not the white of paint, but the white of an absence of everything. There were two chairs, a small table, and two people. "How long has it been?" the man asked. He was wearing a grey suit that looked like it had been bleached by a thousand suns. "An hour," the woman replied. "Or a billion years. The clock on the wall stopped when the sky...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 9 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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The Mother's WatchI first noticed something was wrong with Arthur when he came home from the river with the pearl. He was fourteen, my only boy, and he had always been a quiet child. Not shy, exactly, but thoughtful. The kind of boy who would sit by the water for hours watching the ducks and the ripples and the way the light changed on the surface. I let him go because the river was safe—shallow, slow,...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 9 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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The Caretaker's SignalThe Caretaker's Signal Act I The signal arrived embedded in the silence between stars. Orion Cole was not looking for it. Nobody in the Solar Memory Archive was looking for anything — that was the whole point of the archive. It existed to preserve, not to search. Its sensors passively recorded the cosmic microwave background the way a museum's walls passively recorded the dust of centuries, and...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 11 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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What the Files Don't SayThe case file for Rudy Callahan occupies exactly one cardboard box in the basement of a demolished police station in downtown Los Angeles. The box is labelled with a case number that no longer corresponds to any database. The ink has faded. The paper has yellowed. The staples have rusted. And the truth, if it was ever in the box at all, has long since decayed into something unrecognizable. The...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 10 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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THE LAST LIGHT OF LONG ISLANDI. The jazz was so loud it vibrated through the floorboards of Elias Thorne's Long Island estate, rattling the crystal decanters in the bar and sending shivers across the dance floor where two hundred of America's most beautiful people spun in a blur of silk and sequins. Elias danced alone near the terrace doors, moving with the rhythm but not truly participating—the way a man moves through a...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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The plantation had been dead for three years.Colonel James Beauregard sat on the porch of the house that had belonged to his father, then to his brother, then to him, watching the cotton fields stretch out into the distance like a sea of white ghosts. The house was falling apart—the paint peeling, the floorboards sagging, the roof leaking when the rains came. But it was standing. And standing was something. He had been forty-two when the...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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