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Chapter 10

 

 

 

Now Diana is looking back through the photos with minute interest. “These people must be staying at the same hotel”

She is looking at me differently.  She comes over and sits beside me.  “You’re right.  Everything you said about him is true. Geraldo is going to blackmail me, pretending to be you, to get at my money.  The gold-digging, murdering, cheating, bastard!" 

She's become concerned. "He's going to kill you. That's why he's made sure that there's nothing to connect him to your corpse. I'm the only one with an obvious motive for your death. He might even be intending to implicate me and then hold it over me to make me change my will. There's no way I could plausibly establish a connection between him and you. But I've been sleeping with you and he'll have the evidence. If you seem to have been blackmailing me, I have a strong motive."  

With relief in her voice, she concludes: "No way of connecting you two, except for the chance discovery of someone else's holiday snaps in this camera you stole." 

She's sees it all immediately.

Now she suggests a way for me to avoid Geraldo's stiletto: "I can post these images of you two together on a public site, like an album in Google or on Instagram, then SMS Geraldo with the URL to forestall him. His alibi and motive will both be blown and he won't be able to kill you without suspicion falling on him."

Diana is much smarter than me! In a single instant she has solved the whole puzzle. 

Not only that, she's also realised that there must be a back-up camera. “We need to search this room top to bottom, starting with those suspicious smoke detectors; and that dancer; and that vase." she says, looking around.  

"Let’s hope we don’t find any cameras connected to the internet, otherwise I may soon be the celebrity sex-scandal sensation of the year.” She says laughing and seems to be quite excited by the thought! "But that's unlikely, he wouldn't risk an inferior hotel web connection that might be hacked. He'll collect his video cards when he gets back on Monday."

How does she know all this technical stuff? She's right about the smoke alarms, the sculpture and even the flower vase. We've gathered four full HD video camera memory cards.

"That seems to be all..." she says, beckoning. "Come over here and sit beside me. You've been a very foolish boy you know? You've been set-up to be a posthumous blackmailer!"

Her hand is behind my head and her lips are pressed to mine. 

It has been the most terrifying hour of my life. I've been to purgatory and now I'm saved! No stiletto. No jailhouse buggery. Just Diana's forgiving kiss.

"So, if I understood you correctly, your plan was to stay the night? Maybe we should put the cards back and complete your mission?" she suggests huskily.

On this occasion, Olympus truly was auspicious! 

Perhaps that Australian was an Angel from God? Maybe this is Devine intervention... ¡Gracias a dios.

 

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Travel

Canada and the United States - Part1

 

 

In July and August 2023 Wendy and I travelled to the United States again after a six-year gap. Back in 2007 we visited the east coast and west coast and in 2017 we visited 'the middle bits', travelling down from Chicago via Memphis to New Orleans then west across Texas, New Mexico, Nevada and California on our way home.

So, this time we went north from Los Angeles to Seattle, Washington, and then into Canada. From Vancouver we travelled by car, over the Rockies, then flew east to Toronto where we hired a car to travel to Ottawa and Montreal. Our next flight was all the way down to Miami, Florida, then to Fort Lauderdale, where we joined a western Caribbean cruise.  At the end of the cruise, we flew all the way back up to Boston.

Seems crazy but that was the most economical option.  From Boston we hired another car to drive, down the coast, to New York. After New York we flew to Salt Lake City then on to Los Angeles, before returning to OZ.

As usual, save for a couple of hotels and the cars, Wendy did all the booking.

Breakfast in the Qantas lounge on our way to Seattle
Wendy likes to use two devices at once

Read more: Canada and the United States - Part1

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Meaning of Death

 

 

 

 

 

 

'I was recently restored to life after being dead for several hours' 

The truth of this statement depends on the changing and surprisingly imprecise meaning of the word: 'dead'. 

Until the middle of last century a medical person may well have declared me dead.  I was definitely dead by the rules of the day.  I lacked most of the essential 'vital signs' of a living person and the technology that sustained me in their absence was not yet perfected. 

I was no longer breathing; I had no heartbeat; I was limp and unconscious; and I failed to respond to stimuli, like being cut open (as in a post mortem examination) and having my heart sliced into.  Until the middle of the 20th century the next course would have been to call an undertaker; say some comforting words then dispose of my corpse: perhaps at sea if I was travelling (that might be nice); or it in a box in the ground; or by feeding my low-ash coffin into a furnace then collect the dust to deposit or scatter somewhere.

But today we set little store by a pulse or breathing as arbiters of life.  No more listening for a heartbeat or holding a feather to the nose. Now we need to know about the state of the brain and central nervous system.  According to the BMA: '{death} is generally taken to mean the irreversible loss of capacity for consciousness combined with the irreversible loss of capacity to breathe'.  In other words, returning from death depends on the potential of our brain and central nervous system to recover from whatever trauma or disease assails us.

Read more: The Meaning of Death

Opinions and Philosophy

Electricity price increases

 

 

14 April 2011

New South Wales electricity users are to suffer another round of hefty price increases; with more to come.

The Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) has announced that electricity prices for the average New South Wales resident will increase by 17.6 per cent from July.  Sydney customers will pay on average about $230 more each year, while rural customers will face an extra $316 in charges.  IPART says it is recommending the increases because of costs associated with energy firms complying with the federal government's Renewable Energy Target (RET).  The RET requires energy firms to source power from renewable sources such as solar or wind.

What is this about and how does it relate to the planned carbon tax?

If you want to know more read here and here.

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