”“Uh oh, careful with that one. She’ll get you in trouble!”“Oh no. We just danced a little and went home early.” I tried not to blush thin...king about WHY we went home early!“Ok,” He said with a smirk that seemed to say he knew more than he should. “I’ll call you when I need you.”Andre was not k**ding about that week. We were working our asses off. Upper management kept changing the direction of the pitch, so we had to adjust our presentation. It meant a lot of late nights and early mornings. It. "Jerry was almost bouncing off the wall with joy, and ran out of his room nearly knocking over his smiling sister in the process, and headed down to the basement to check out his new room. He hadn't ever really explored the room that much, and a lot of the stuff had been there far longer than he had been on this Earth. There was some old furniture, and a few odds and ends, but the biggest lot was all in boxes.He was just standing there, looking at the mess, trying to figure out where to start. “If you ever achieve immortality or stop ageing, wait until you are 30.”“Immortality?” That was all I could get out, in a high pitched voice that would have sounded better coming from a pre-adolescent rather than an eighteen-year-old.Frost was quick to intervene, “Not true immortality, per se. We just stop ageing at a certain age, when our abilities and control over miasma achieve a certain level. We can still be killed though.”‘That does not make it any better, Frost.’ That was something I was. Twelve of these Australian built frigates were to enter service with the Royal Australian Navy. A further ten were ordered but cancelled as the war drew to a close.Eight, HMA Ships Barcoo, Barwon, Burdekin, Diamantina, Gascoyne, Hawkesbury, Lachlan and Macquarie, were built to the British River Class design and Australia likewise named its frigates after Australian rivers. A further four, HMA Ships Condamine, Culgoa, Murchison and Shoalhaven, were also named after Australian rivers but were.
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