Nature's no fool
2024-03-13 20:46In the late afternoon,
spatch and I hared forth into the wilds of Lexington, by which I mean the part of the Battle Road Trail through the Minute Man Historical National Park that would bring us to the Bloody Bluff. I even knew about assorted earthquakes in Massachusetts and had no idea until late last fall that a fault zone ran through the town in which I partly grew up. It records the subduction of the Avalon terrane beneath the Nashoba terrane during the Silurian period, one of those geologically slow-motion collisions that can still be seen in the twisting contact of magmatic and metamorphic rocks. Apparently the local chances of a major earthquake within the next fifty years are only about two percent, which of course makes me think instantly of Elio annoyed with himself in the Annuate Palace of Time City while his hair drips with rain: "I weighed the odds . . . and decided against having a rain-shield function on any of our belts. My calculation was that we would be outside in only two percent of the year's rainfall. What I forgot is that two percent is as wet as any other rain."
En route we stopped in Lexington Center so that I could collect my copy of Ernest K. Gann's The High and the Mighty (1953) from the library. I had become curious about the novel after encountering the 1954 film which I had not realized was so much the parent and original of the star-studded disaster flick and specifically the reason Robert Stack ended up in Airplane! (1980). We ended up perusing the perpetual book sale on the second floor and coming away with Howard Padwee and Valerie Moolman's The Cat Who Couldn't See in the Dark (1997) and Alan Bennett's House Arrest: Pandemic Diaries (2022) after hitting up the Theatre Pharmacy for 100 Grand and Charleston Chew bars—I had previously discovered them selling the Big Cherry Milkshake, the closest thing I have seen to a Cherry Mash since the days of the Big Broadcasts.
After a concerted effort on the part of Rob's phone to misdirect us into the wilds of Bedford, we attained our destination.
( We're all riders round the sun. )
We collected the car before sunset and returned home with the first barbecue I have eaten in nine months. I admit I was less than thrilled to see as soon as I turned on the internet that J.K. Rowling has moved right down the pipeline to Holocaust denial, especially when it includes the claim that gender-affirming care was an invention of the Nazis as opposed to Magnus Hirschfeld—I suppose it makes a change from the Jews turning your children trans—and then the next piece of news after the cat pictures was the death of Michael Culver. I will have to find something to watch in his memory. He will always look like Prior Robert or Captain Needa to me. Fortunately, the burnt ends and collards were delicious and further poking at the internet revealed that
moon_custafer has written some most excellent pre-slash starring the young Marcus Brody. Hestia kneaded a little in the blanket at my feet. I still think of her paws as so small and delicate and she uses them mercilessly to rabbit-kick the catnip pickle. I definitely feel better when I get out into the world.
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En route we stopped in Lexington Center so that I could collect my copy of Ernest K. Gann's The High and the Mighty (1953) from the library. I had become curious about the novel after encountering the 1954 film which I had not realized was so much the parent and original of the star-studded disaster flick and specifically the reason Robert Stack ended up in Airplane! (1980). We ended up perusing the perpetual book sale on the second floor and coming away with Howard Padwee and Valerie Moolman's The Cat Who Couldn't See in the Dark (1997) and Alan Bennett's House Arrest: Pandemic Diaries (2022) after hitting up the Theatre Pharmacy for 100 Grand and Charleston Chew bars—I had previously discovered them selling the Big Cherry Milkshake, the closest thing I have seen to a Cherry Mash since the days of the Big Broadcasts.
After a concerted effort on the part of Rob's phone to misdirect us into the wilds of Bedford, we attained our destination.
( We're all riders round the sun. )
We collected the car before sunset and returned home with the first barbecue I have eaten in nine months. I admit I was less than thrilled to see as soon as I turned on the internet that J.K. Rowling has moved right down the pipeline to Holocaust denial, especially when it includes the claim that gender-affirming care was an invention of the Nazis as opposed to Magnus Hirschfeld—I suppose it makes a change from the Jews turning your children trans—and then the next piece of news after the cat pictures was the death of Michael Culver. I will have to find something to watch in his memory. He will always look like Prior Robert or Captain Needa to me. Fortunately, the burnt ends and collards were delicious and further poking at the internet revealed that
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