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#cheroline
xebecdav · 2 years
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ok fine. blorbos from my sketchbook.
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giuliamihairoumania · 23 days
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My dreams love-Giulia Mihai feat CHEROLINE-remix
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444namesplus · 1 month
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Agnèse Alanny Anique Axelia Bodega Béanue Charce Cheina Chrion Claine Claula Colied Corich Cyrith Dianzo Emmaga Emmard Evione Fabean Fabine Floise Flouis Frandt Frarle Freina Friste Gabieb Gaétia Georey Georis Geritz Gerste Gilhel Gilyne Gitise Gus-pe Gélène Harand Heilia Heinad Heinra Helaus Heline Herich Jandra Jeanda Josier Julese Juline Justia Justin Jörgel Klaule Kurane Lierin Loisel Lucian Lydiel Lydise Lütona Magnès Manlor Massan Meinah Milors Minrid Mirène Monike Monine Muntia Mélian Mélène Océdra Olanna Othene Ranuen Redmut Renang Rolaud Roline Romara Rorger Régitz Shelie Sigitz Sonine Stimie Svelle Svenne Thilie Tobery Tomine Udomen Ulinah Vérier Wigitz Wolgan Wolian Xenick Xenine
Audelvied Audonifer Aulinerta Aumenjane Bastinath Beriamick Berisance Cheroline Chrichrie Clainaude Colfrandt Colfriste Corenièle Corgabery Corielger Cécilinra Delgettel Dianlonia Doladiesl Eingériel Elsarille Emmagance Essabritz Fanniette Fermilise Florgebke Frankarle Garinrick Gebhancen Genalvale Georinale Gerielian Gothéraul Géradriko Géraliant Haelmured Haettelke Hancietin Hanpathéo Heidolgeb Hubermata Imorguelm Ingeorein Irgermild Jocenista Jocéciste Joharanne Joselydin Juliertie Jus-petth Jérômedel Katrudemi Lanichèle Lastrient Laulaulie Lianuelle Lienriana Lorgerice Louistéph Lukevinna Lémictore Manmarles Mariedien Marisèlen Marlheile Marnhomar Maromadie Marstelle Martalber Maximonra Miedriete Milbelyne Miliedild Minemmene Mélilheli Nicharona Niennanny Niquelyne Ranmarise Redildert Rolgessig Roliolaus Romaricel Rémichein Settschel Sichiline Sicolgaël Stelganer Stéphilie Sveslauke Udelgernd Uliedagot Valouenie Virgertin Volivicka Walphande Wiegaétie Élinhelle Éliquelke Émichelle
First list has names 6 letters long. Second: 9 letters long. Together they can form a 69 fullname. Nice.
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2/?
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horribletestsubject · 3 years
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Fic I just wrote based on These Two art pieces that I’ve drawn and THIS POST by @body-utensil-travels-terrain
———
You’ve spent your life being told you couldn’t. Now there’s a voice telling you that you can.
You remember it distinctly. You were fourteen at the time, just really starting to figure out what you wanted to do with your life (it certainly isn’t what society expected from you— but then, society doesn’t expect someone like you anyway, does it?) when you first heard her voice over the radio in your living room. The words she said resonated with you, the promise and ambition that she spoke with. It was almost like she was talking directly to you.
You do your research. You study hard. You tinker away at things in your garage, supplementing your studies in your own way. And five years later, after you’ve graduated, you put in your application.
A letter arrives a few weeks later, emblazoned with the circular symbol you’ve kept in your mind’s eye all this time, and bold lettering on the front— Aperture Science Innovators. It’s addressed to you. You open it, and your fingers tighten around the smooth paper— “congratulations” it says. You’ve been accepted. At the bottom is Her signature. You trace over it with your fingers. Delicately, as gently as you’d handle an irreplaceable machine part.
Two weeks later your bags are packed and you’re boarding a flight to Detroit. The attendant greets you. You hold up your boarding pass and get on. You land a few hours later. Getting a cab would be too complicated— people don’t like to take the time to read, and most can’t speak the way you do. So you walk to the train station, it’s not too far. Just an hour or two. You’ve walked further before.
Flat fields flow by endlessly as the train rattles down its tracks. You lean your head against the window, watching the hues of gold rush by, blurring on into infinity.
The sun is gone when you pull up outside a strange little town, surrounded by chain link fence. You fish through your bag for the packet you’d been sent— and pull out the temporary ID you’d been given. You show it to the gate guard. He lets you in. A man is waiting to show you your dormitory. You shake your head at his offer of a tour— you’ll explore the place yourself tomorrow. There are a few days before you’re actually needed for orientation.
The room is small and plain. A bed, desk, and dresser, and a small closet. That’s alright. You don’t need much. You hang up your few articles of clothing and tuck your shoes next to the door. The bed isn’t soft, but it isn’t hard. You fall asleep quickly, exhausted from your travels.
The next few days are spent wandering. Visiting the little shops, the stations. Peering into labs where you can. Climbing over fences (they could never keep you out) before quickly retreating as a security guard passed. You don’t want to get in trouble before your internship even begins. You wonder if you’ll see her. But you only hear her voice in announcements as you trigger motion sensors throughout the complex.
When work actually starts, it’s tedious. Getting coffee. Taking documents to the shredder and the incinerator. You don’t usually see the labs. Or, well, much of anything. It’s just a lot of running here and there, back and forth at your superiors’ beck and call. It’s tiring. But you do it— after all, you want to be here, you want to do this— and you never give up.
It’s a few months before you see her— before your internship takes you to the main complex. Now you’re checking inventory, sorting mail, sorting records (and chucking the casualty lists into the incinerator as instructed). Occasionally they’ll call you in to fix the coffee maker or the refrigerator.
You hear her voice once, muffled— she’s talking to someone, to a group it seems, just outside the room you’re in. You look over your shoulder and catch a glimpse. Rosy cheeks and bright-red lips, wavy dark hair flowing around her shoulder, a smile on her face (manufactured, you can tell with just this glance that she’s concealing so very much), a bright red scarf tied around her neck.
Your eyes lock for just a second, and the corner of her mouth creases, dimpling her cheeks. Your heart races— that, that was a hint of a true smile. Warmth flushes your own cheeks and you tear your gaze away. Suddenly shy— much shyer than you’ve ever been before.
It doesn’t make sense to you. Not yet. Not until you start seeing her more. Not until her smiles become more frequent and pointed. Not until her gaze lingers on you a little longer than before each time. The fluttery feeling doesn’t go away— and you’re determined more than ever to reach her.
Of course, it happens sooner and easier than you think. She starts requesting you specifically to bring her her coffee. You take a red pen and draw a little smiley face next to her name before giving it to her. When you come up to her office, there’s a sticky note left on the monitor, in that oh-so-hard to read yet absolutely beautiful cursive of hers. At the end of it is a smiley face, so much more elegant and less childish than yours. You keep the note. On her next cup, you add a heart to the dot of the ‘i’ in her name. You start responding to her notes with little notes of your own, your rounded, sometimes scratchy handwriting a stark contrast.
The notes are never there when you get back. You like to think she kept them. You’re pretty sure she did.
A year after you arrive, your internship is over, and you’re up for a promotion— junior mechanic. Probably still more of the same, but you’ll be getting a salary now (not that you really have any use for it since Aperture provides your housing) and you’ll have a permanent place. But you’ll see her less. You’ll miss that, of course— but you’re finally moving beyond your station, moving up in the company.
The day before your internship ends, you get another note. “Wanna get coffee together tomorrow?” Your heart leaps. You scribble out your answer just beneath her writing.
You’re sitting across from her at the cafe table. The cafe serves the same stuff as the cafeteria, but it’s decorated more quaintly, and always costs more for some reason. Maybe because there’s sunlight coming through the windows.
“So, headed up the ladder,” she begins after the two of you sip your drinks (well, she sips her drink, you’re too caught up in the crimson of her lips). “I guess I won’t be seeing as much of you now.”
There’s something behind her cheery voice, a sadness that you’ve caught glimpses of before, a wistfulness deeper than her words. You look up, catching her gaze for a moment and nod in response.
“Well, this is nice. Maybe we should do this more often. Once a week, at least? Or you could come over to my place. We could spend time together. As friends, or something.” With that, she gives you a wink. Your cheeks flush bright red.
You catch the implication right away. Your hero, your inspiration— and now here you are sitting across from her at a cafe while she all but outright asks you out.
You thought you’d be excited for things to grow beyond the notes and the gestures. But you feel different than that. After the initial jolt, the initial flutter, you look back over at her and you see the chasm yawning out between the two of you. The mountain she’s perched on, the valley you’re standing in. Your scratchy print against her elegant cursive, your short, bitten nails against her sharp manicure, your messy ponytail against her shiny waves. You look down at your simple intern’s badge, then over at her emblazoned one. She doesn’t even have a title listed— everyone knows who she is.
You’re miles apart, even if you might have seemed to be closer.
You stand up, your throat knotting up as you shake your head. You can’t look at her now, but you can practically feel the disappointment in her face as she murmurs “oh.” You want to explain but you can’t, your thoughts racing a mile a minute. The last thing you want is to turn Her, your idol, the one who makes your heart flutter, the reason you came here in the first place, down.
But you can’t do this now. Not yet. Not until you’ve reached the top of the mountain. Not until you’re close enough for her to reach out her hand and pull you the rest of the way up.
“Let me know if you change your mind,” she says.
You pause, halfway to the door. You turn back just enough so that you can glimpse her, and give a tiny nod.
After that you throw yourself into your work. Up to senior mechanic, then technician, then engineer— you’re working on Aperture’s new technology now, its most important projects. But you’re still not close enough. Into the test chambers you go at the CEO’s behest, defying death and physics at breakneck speeds, trusting in the tech you’ve helped create to ensure your survival.
Sometimes you look up and see her watching from the observation room, the tell-tale flash of red. You don’t look too long.
The CEO falls ill. He leaves a disturbing message. You try not to think too much of it— you’re almost there.
Your superior fails a test. You’re not surprised. Not hurt, not sad. It just happens and now you’re in the upper echelon. Now you’re at the top— now, you can reach out to her again. Tell her you’ve changed your mind. You can be equals now.
You go to her office. She isn’t there to answer the door. “Don’t you remember Mr. Johnson’s last request?” They say to you. You tried to block it out, but you remember.
You use your pass on a high security door. It opens. Your name is emblazoned too now. Just like hers was.
Before you is a massive operating system. On the screen reads a message: “transfer complete. transfer successful. writing data : do not disconnect subject.”
She’s lying inside a tube-like compartment. A transparent coffin. Wires hooked up to her. Eyes closed. Lips still ruby red.
You reach out and touch the glass. There’s no response. There won’t be a response.
This technology is untested. This is the first human-AI interfacing project Aperture has conducted. There’s only a fifty percent chance it will work, and even if it does, it doesn’t change the fact that she’s gone. You’ll never clasp her small hands inside your own calloused ones, tuck your head against her shoulder, press your lips against hers.
You’ve finally reached the top of the mountain. Finally reached her. But it was too late. When you crested the summit, she was already gone, and there was only a spatter of crimson left behind to show that she was ever there at all.
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papuabaratonline · 5 years
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Keluhkan Air Bersih dan Lampu Jalan, Ini Respon Anggota DPRD Manokwari MANOKWARI, Papuabaratonline.com – Guna menyerap aspirasi masyarakat di masa reses pertama tahun 2019. Anggota Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Daerah (DPRD) Manokwari Cheroline C.
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flipdowntempo · 5 years
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Não esquece que o pai tá online I got no time Pra ouvir suas rima “Cheroline” . . . #felipeflip #mynameisflip #rapnacional #rap #hiphop #opaitaonline . Look @van_nobre (em Chama Que O Pai Ta Online) https://www.instagram.com/p/B2wkFkEhju6/?igshid=1q6w77rz5cc03
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arizonamugshots · 5 years
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Cheroline Mailo http://ARRE.ST/AZ-112814714
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orideknews · 5 years
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Masa Reses Cheroline Makalew, Air Bersih Hingga Lampu Jalan Jadi Keluhan Warga
Masa Reses Cheroline Makalew, Air Bersih Hingga Lampu Jalan Jadi Keluhan Warga
Orideknews.com, MANOKWARI, – Anggota Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Daerah (DPRD) Manokwari Cheroline.C. Makalew pada masa resesnya, dia bertemu warga dan sejumlah kepala Kelurahan di Distrik Manokwari dikediamannya, Sabtu (14/12/2019). Pada kesempatan itu, sejumlah aspirasi disampaikan warga. Salah satunya Yance Maniagasi yang mengeluhkan sulitnya air bersih di kompleks Brawijaya dan lampu jalan. “Di…
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xebecdav · 2 years
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hm. cheroline au. for the soul.
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giuliamihairoumania · 4 years
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(Giulia Mihai)
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1/?
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xebecdav · 2 years
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hiiiii
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xebecdav · 2 years
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good morning
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xebecdav · 2 years
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i had this idea while i was making hamburgers idk why
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giuliamihairoumania · 5 years
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(Giulia Mihai)
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