Yeah. That.

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Sitting at lunch, looking at maps on phone, I turned to Kris, and commented.

"Can you imagine this 100 years ago?"

"Service would be a bitch."

"My wormholes to the future, yeah, they aren't so stable."

"That, and you'd be burned at the stake as a witch."

"Yeah. That."

Morning! Er... afternoon!

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After sleeping until nearly noon and enjoying a deliciously late start, Kris and I ventured out of the resort in daylight to see what this Maine place is like. Turns out, to my delight, there are a lot of lilacs in this area. I wasn't expecting to see lilacs since they're not still blooming in the Bay Area.

Our first task of the day was, "Find coffee." No, wait, that's not quite right, it was "Fine good coffee." Our journey took us a long the main street, where we stopped at light. On the four corners of this main street where a Burger King, a McDonalds, a church and an abandoned building. I thought it telling of how representative of American culture that street corner is.

We eventually found our way around the town, and, to Kris' delight, found a coffee shop right next to an easy parking space. Turn, zoom, screech, brake, flip, open, close, hustle, and Kris was right at the door of the coffee shop.

It was closed.

While part of me was a little annoyed, the other part of me appreciated that even coffeeshop owners can want a life, one that includes doing something else on weekends than wait for the not-quite-tourist-season trickle of tourists to come into the shop for a $3 cup of coffee. Of course, I'm not the one addicted to the caffeine of those cups of coffee, so it was easy for me to express appreciation.

So, off we wandered, back on the original plan of checking out the small town we're in. We passed a couple restaurants that seemed good, the menu had lots of tasty items on it. Kris made a note of them, then kept going.

Until we approached the Brass Compass. The place was PACKED!

Knowing that locals always know, Kris turned to me and said, "Here. Let's go here." "Because it's packed?" "Yes. The locals always know."

In we went.

As we stood near the door, waiting our turn to be seated, a small girl walked up, a look of concentration on her face. She knew exactly what she wanted, the yellow ones from the jar. I was amused by the recollection of the number of times that I, as a child, had done the same thing.

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I was also a little impressed with the conversation that happened at the table next to us. There were three men seated at a large table. They had already ordered and were waiting for their meals to arrive. As we stood waiting, a waitress walked up to the table, and said, "Gentlemen, I have a favor to ask." Without hesitation, one of the men asked, "Would you like us to move, to give this table to a larger party?" No pause, no thinking it over, the three of them stood up to move.

Clearly, we weren't in a metro area.

We were seated quickly after that. Looking over the menu, one of the items was listed as Lucy's Triple Deckah. Not a Decker, a Deckah. Yeah, I pretty much had to order it, even if, well, it ended up to be TOO MUCH FOOD. It did, but it was pretty awesome nonetheless.

It reminded me of the interview I read about recently that went something like, "Why can't more people become vegetarian?" "Bacon." That pretty much sums it up. I'll be vegetarian for the rest of the day, but for this meal, mmmmmmm, bacon......

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Oh, and Kris managed his coffee.

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Refuse to believe it

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Okay, if you're a Dresden fan and haven't read Changes, stop reading now.

I mean it. Stop reading. Right now.

RIGHT NOW.
















Oh, you've finished Changes? Okay, fine. Continue on...

Shipped

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Oh, a happy little dance for this one. I may not have to buy three copies, as I did for the Harry Potter books. Perhaps hard copy and Kindle version should suffice. Of course, that Kindle version can be read on my mac, too. Oh, happy happy joy joy !

Subject:  	Your Amazon.com order has shipped (#103-1...7)
Sender:  	Amazon.com
Recipient:  	Kitt Hodsden
Date:           04.04.2010 03:33

Greetings from Amazon.com.

We thought you'd like to know that we shipped your items, and that this 
completes your order.  Your order is being shipped and cannot be changed 
by you or by our customer service department. 

...

The following items have been shipped to you by Amazon.com: 
--------------------------------------------------------------------
 Qty                           Item    Price         Shipped Subtotal
---------------------------------------------------------------------

Amazon.com items (Sold by Amazon.com, LLC):

   1  Changes: A Novel of the Dr...   $14.01               1   $14.01

Shipped via ONTRAC

Tracking number: C1...6

---------------------------------------------------------------------
                           Item Subtotal:     $14.01
                  Shipping  and handling:      $0.00

                     Pre-order Guarantee:      $0.00

                                   Total:     $14.01

--------------------------------------------------------------------

Our Pre-order Price Guarantee covers one or more item(s) in this order. If 
the Amazon.com price decreases between the time you place your order and 
the end of the day of the release date, you'll receive the lowest price.

...

ONTRAC (estimated delivery date: April 05, 2010).

In case not obvious, this is for the latest Harry Dresden novel, Changes, by Jim Butcher.

Childhood

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The smell of lilacs reminds me of my childhood, of the smell of morning as we waited for the schoolbus at the end of our driveway. It reminds me of walking with my mom, and stopping every time we passed a lilac tree, so that she could stop and bury her face in a bloom, a look of joy on her face. It reminds me of being innocent, before my parent's divorce.

It's a good smell.

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