#Office Chairs Casters
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casters026 · 1 month ago
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High grade office chair stem hollow caster
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caster1089 · 1 month ago
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Discover wholesale deals on office chair casters
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interiorergonomics · 6 months ago
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Key Features Considered on Ergonomic Chair Selection
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Back Rest: Mesh Fabric in Nylon Fiberglass Frame
Seat: Density Mold Foam Cushion Fabric Seat
Armrest: Fixed and Adjustable
Feature: Height Adjustable, Tilt, and Fixed Mechanism
Base: 320mm size BLACK nylon base
Casters: 50mm size BLACK nylon castor
Adjustable Seat: 100mm extended length BLACK gas lift
Explorer all the best ergonomic Chairs in Dubai
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corvidsindia · 7 months ago
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Caster Wheels Unboxing Video
Get High quality caster wheels online. These wheels are high-performance and make your heavy task easy. It is made of durable material like polyurethane, rubber and steel to ensure long lasting use. Their casters provide smooth rolling without harming the floor. So if you are looking for quality and convenience at best price, this is the best option for you.
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catalaans · 1 year ago
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Freestanding Los Angeles Study room idea: mid-sized modern freestanding desk, no fireplace, and white walls.
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castorwheels · 1 year ago
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Types of: Industrial castor wheels
Industrial castor wheels are an important component in a variety of industrial applications. They are used to facilitate the movement of heavy machinery, equipment, and products across the factory floor or other industrial settings. In this blog, we will discuss the different types of industrial wheel castors and their applications. https://flyrailfixwel.com/industrial.htm
Types of: Industrial castor wheels
Swivel Castors: Swivel castors have a 360-degree rotational capability, which allows for easy maneuverability of equipment or products. They can be found in various sizes and load-bearing capacities, making them ideal for a wide range of industrial applications.
Rigid Castors: Rigid castors are fixed in a particular direction, which makes them suitable for applications that require straight-line movement. They are commonly used in industrial settings where heavy equipment or products need to be moved in a specific direction.
Brake Castors: Brake castors are designed to stop the movement of equipment or products. They are commonly used in industrial settings where safety is a top priority.
Dual-castor wheel: Dual-wheel castors have two wheels, which provide more stability and weight-bearing capacity. They are ideal for industrial applications that require the movement of heavy equipment or products.
Low-Profile Castors: Low-profile castors are designed to be small and inconspicuous, making them ideal for applications where space is limited. They can also be used in situations where the equipment or products being moved are close to the ground.
Applications of Industrial Wheel Castors:        
Material Handling: Industrial castor wheels are commonly used in material handling applications, where they facilitate the movement of heavy machinery or products across the factory floor. They are also used in warehousing and logistics to move products and materials from one location to another.
Automotive: Industrial castor wheels are used in the automotive industry to move heavy equipment and vehicles across the factory floor. They are also used in automotive repair shops to move vehicles from one location to another.
Medical Equipment: Industrial wheel castors are used in medical equipment, such as hospital beds and medical carts, to facilitate their movement around hospitals and clinics.
Aerospace: Industrial wheel castors are used in the aerospace industry to move heavy equipment and aircraft parts across the factory floor.
In conclusion, industrial wheel castors are an essential component in a wide range of industrial applications. The different types of castors, including swivel, rigid, brake, dual-wheel, and low-profile castors, can be used to meet different industrial needs. Understanding the different types of industrial wheel castors and their applications can help companies make informed decisions when choosing the right castors for their specific.
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industrialwheelcastors · 2 years ago
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Industrial Wheel Castors
Industrial wheel castors are an important component in a variety of industrial applications. They are used to facilitate the movement of heavy machinery, equipment, and products across the factory floor or other industrial settings. In this blog, we will discuss the different types of industrial wheel castors and their applications. https://flyrailfixwel.com/industrial.html
Types of Industrial Wheel Castors:
Swivel Castors: Swivel castors have a 360-degree rotational capability, which allows for easy maneuverability of equipment or products. They can be found in various sizes and load-bearing capacities, making them ideal for a wide range of industrial applications.
Rigid Castors: Rigid castors are fixed in a particular direction, which makes them suitable for applications that require straight-line movement. They are commonly used in industrial settings where heavy equipment or products need to be moved in a specific direction.
Brake Castors: Brake castors are designed to stop the movement of equipment or products. They are commonly used in industrial settings where safety is a top priority.
Dual-Wheel Castors: Dual-wheel castors have two wheels, which provide more stability and weight-bearing capacity. They are ideal for industrial applications that require the movement of heavy equipment or products.
Low-Profile Castors: Low-profile castors are designed to be small and inconspicuous, making them ideal for applications where space is limited. They can also be used in situations where the equipment or products being moved are close to the ground.
Applications of Industrial Wheel Castors:
Material Handling: Industrial wheel castors are commonly used in material handling applications, where they facilitate the movement of heavy machinery or products across the factory floor. They are also used in warehousing and logistics to move products and materials from one location to another.
Automotive: Industrial wheel castors are used in the automotive industry to move heavy equipment and vehicles across the factory floor. They are also used in automotive repair shops to move vehicles from one location to another.
Medical Equipment: Industrial wheel castors are used in medical equipment, such as hospital beds and medical carts, to facilitate their movement around hospitals and clinics.
Aerospace: Industrial wheel castors are used in the aerospace industry to move heavy equipment and aircraft parts across the factory floor.
In conclusion, industrial wheel castors are an essential component in a wide range of industrial applications. The different types of castors, including swivel, rigid, brake, dual-wheel, and low-profile castors, can be used to meet different industrial needs. Understanding the different types of industrial wheel castors and their applications can help companies make informed decisions when choosing the right castors for their specific needs.
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vivantesopvles · 6 months ago
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‘What, then, would you say defines Dark magic?’ Professor Potter asks, not even bothering to look up from the homework he’s grading. 
It’s long past his office hours, but that has never stopped Tom from finding all sorts of excuses to knock on his door. Tom wouldn’t say the professor indulges him, per se; it’s just that their conversation often turns out so stimulating it’s impossible not to crave for more. 
‘Depends on who you are and how you approach the subject,’ Tom ventures carefully. ‘A Spellmaker, I imagine, would focus on the energy composition of a spell; the Dark ones require a high amount of magical output from the caster whilst also draining the subject. A Healer, on the other hand –’
‘That’s quite all right.’ Professor Potter lays down his quill, gives Tom a knowing look over his spectacles. ‘I am familiar enough with what Fawson has to say. I want to know what you think, Mr Riddle, after your – ah, shall I say intensive,’ a half-smile curves his lips, 'research on the subject.’
Tom feigns a look of innocence. His mind whirs. His eyes catalogue every outward sign the professor displays. Nothing. Tom can’t even tell if he’s angry or not.
‘I’m trying to get an internship at St Mungo’s,’ Tom fudges. ‘The research … it’s just for academic purposes.’
‘That’s not true, is it?’ Potter spins on his chair, and makes to stand up. His cane comes flying into his hand. Tom’s eyes widen when he feels magic, wild and forceful, gather around them like storm clouds. ‘Ten points from Slytherin,’ he smiles, ‘for lying. Now, Mr Riddle, can you tell what I’m doing?’
Out of thin air, where the turbulent rush of magic has been, water comes. And with a snap of his fingers, Potter traps them both in the centre of the vortex.
‘A hint,’ he says, ‘it’s not Dark, but definitely illegal.’
‘It’s the Forming,’ Tom says, awestruck by the great churning around them, loud as a waterfall. For it is no mere water; a single drop of it on Tom’s skin would be deadly. It’s Professor Potter’s magic in its purest, most concentrated form. 
‘So that brings us back to our question. What makes a spell Dark?’
Belatedly, Tom realises that he’s not to be punished for reading up on the Unforgivables, on Necromancy, on Horcruxes, or whatever it was Professor Potter saw him doing. This is a proper lesson – an introduction to the Dark Arts.
‘Complications,’ Tom breathes. He feels giddy all of a sudden, like he’s inhaled fairy dust. ‘When the practitioner suffers lasting complications to a spell or ritual, the process should be labelled as Dark.’
‘Very good,’ Potter says softly. ‘And that is why you will study under me from now on – not as a Hogwarts student, but my own apprentice. I do care about your well-being, Mr Riddle, even if you yourself might not.'
24052024 | @microficmay | elation
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sssammich · 1 day ago
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cyborg alien + scientist AU
just gonna drop this bit and go
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Lena doesn't look up from her work desk when the handle of her door turns followed by the thudding footsteps that beeline for her, the sound growing louder with each step. Instead, she takes her time fiddling with the final bits of solder at the tip of her iron, investigating her handiwork through the large magnifying glass perched between her and her desk. Her movements are steady, at ease, even though her visitor has been standing by the doorway for close to almost five minutes now.
When she eventually deems her work adequate, she stops. She takes her safety goggles off, folding them and placing them in the breast pocket of her fraying lab coat. She pulls the ventilator mask down, unbuckling it from the back of her head, her cheeks exposed to the barely cool air. She brushes the back of her knuckle on her face, noticing the indentations of where the mask had kissed her skin. She curls her fingers until they make a fist before extending them, her joints aching and popping as she stretches her hands.
All the while, she pays her visitor no mind, her green eyes scanning her workspace and the monitor at the corner of her desk. Her visitor makes no noise, raises no complaints, simply exists somewhere behind her. It's not until the old cuckoo clock—bright springtime carnation yellow and baby blue hues of a pastoral relic so mismatched with the dullness and coldness of the wires and gadgets and tools scattered in her office—jumps out of its window to signal that it's the top of the hour that she finally glances over her shoulder.
Standing just in front of Lena's bookshelf full of haphazardly shelved research notes and half-abandoned projects is her visitor, a woman, with messy blonde hair that stops by the lobes of her ears, highlighting perfectly sunkissed skin. Her shoulders squared and her hands held behind her back, her body standing at attention. Truly a product of the military, Lena notes.
The only difference, of course, is the focus of oceanic blue eyes on Lena paired with a small but radiant smile etched on the woman's face, a smile directed right at her. A smile that her visitor flashes at her during every visit. If Lena didn't know any better, she might think her visitor was doing it intentionally.
"Hello, Dr. Luthor."
"You're late." Lena looks away, wheeling her office stool towards some metal drawers, one foot atop the casters, the other planted on the concrete floor, controlling her speed.
Her visitor huffs before striding towards the only other seating in her office, a metal folding chair with paint chipping off, and sitting on it backwards so her front pressed up against the backing of the seat. "I got held up."
"You're always held up," she retorts, the very same words echoing what she'd said when her visitor had shown up in her office for the first time, a gash across her face before Lena patched her up.
"Blame the war. Otherwise, I'd be here on time."
Her visitor unbuttons her shirt revealing the vast expanse of her back, littered with intersecting silver lines of intricate circuitry that are visibly more apparent up close, each and every one following the various paths of her body's muscles. This time, there is a darkened and jagged crater about the diameter of a tennis ball just left of center of the spine. Lena's index finger traces the crater, her mouth slanted in a frown. She can tell that it's begun the healing process, though if her visitor is here, then that must mean that the process isn't moving fast enough to return back to normal.
The first time her visitor had taken off her shirt, Lena had gasped despite herself, her gaze latching onto the slowly-healing injuries that adorned intertwined with inked circuitry that mapped her visitor's back. It wasn't until Lena began her first inspection that she had noticed the defined musculature of the woman in front of her. Piercing blue eyes had stared at her in a mixture of curiosity and concern, but she only shook her head and needlessly advised her visitor to be more careful.
No, her patient.
The woman in front of her is her patient, though Lena certainly doesn't feel qualified in the slighest.
The only patient that's been assigned to her because she's the only living person in the whole of Terran who is knowledgeable and capable of working with Kryptonian physiology. A particular fact that sat uneasily on her conscience. Not when the only reason she'd ever learned was due to the copious and obsessive notes and files that her now deceased brother had compiled about Kryptonians when they first touched down on terran soil for the first time fifteen years ago.
Not when she'd been entirely too late to stop her brother from murdering the only other Kryptonian—her patient's cousin—in the name of human advancement.
She wheels herself towards a dresser of drawers on her patient's other side, pulling on a lead-lined drawer labeled KZE, carefully extricating tools out and placing them on the table nearby.
"That can't always be your excuse," she murmurs, even as she puts on her gloves and quickly inspects the tools, each one more likely to be found in a surgical room than an engineer's workbench. Radiating green crystals are in every single one as a means to penetrate through what has otherwise been considered invulnerable skin.
"How about 'I was helping get a cat named Streaky unstuck from the top of a tree on my way here'?"
Lena stops to meet her visitor's gaze and goofy grin, even in the face of visible effects to the proximity of her glowing green tools. Lena narrows her eyes to avoid rolling them. She just knows that her patient will be watching, is always watching, just to give more meaning to her simple response.
"This is not a negotiation, Ms. Zor-El."
Her patient sighs. "Zor-El was my father. You know you can call me Kara. I've never heard of anybody ever once wearing it out."
"Face forward, Ms. Zor-El." She says, waiting until her patient turns around. This is a familiar song and dance between them starting from the moment Kara Zor-El was assigned to her care only four months ago, the Cadmus Council providing Lena very little room to protest or decline—not when she wanted to avoid any ramifications for her experiments at Mount Norquay.
When they first shook hands (Lena noting the faint traces of circuitry that adorned her patient's perfectly sculpted body), the Kryptonian had insisted on being called by her first name. Yet, Lena did not budge, citing a need to maintain professionalism. Naturally, her patient has attempted to change her mind ever since.
Truth of the matter is that Lena can't allow herself an inch of this familiarity. Not when she knows what she knows, not when she carries the burdens of her family's sins, of their legacies, not when her healing hands learned everything from the success of a murder.
Instead, she focuses on the tasks in front of her, fixing and healing the fresh new injuries to the Kryptonian's systems.
"Hope," she calls out to her virtual assistant, surveying the damage on her patient's back. The damage isn't so severe, she surmises, but she does need to re-update internal systems before she can physically patch the massive crater on the Kryptonian's back so it can heal eventually itself. "Roll back to an old Myriad update, please."
"Of course, Lena." The voice responds from somewhere up above, her centralized computer system whirring in the background. She then opens another drawer and pulls out more traditional wound treatments.
"Howcome your robot gets to call you by your first name, but this robot can't?" The Kryptonian asks, thumb pointing at herself, befoere twisting to look over her shoulder. Lena immediately pauses, ensuring that she does not cause any unnecessary harm to her patient.
"Hold still, Ms. Zor-El."
The Kryptonian exaggerates her sigh, resigned to what Lena can only assume is another bout of failure, all while she attempts to ignore the jut of pouting lips as blonde head rests on strong forearms.
Lena, steady yet gentle in her touch, tips the Kryptonian's head down so she has better access to the nape before inserting a trapezoidal rod from her tray of fine tools. The silver circuit lines begin to emit a green glow, as if powering her patient's body on, matching the glowing from the green crystals embedded in it, in the center of the diamond markings inked on alien skin. The penetration causes indigo blood to trickle out, Lena quick to use the back of her sleeve to wipe it off.
"Alright?" she asks after her patient sucks air through her teeth before releasing a shaky breath. Lena subtly rubs a couple of gentle circles using the side of her palm on the skin just to the side of where the rod sits.
"Never better."
She does roll her eyes then knowing that the Kryptonian can't see her. Lena proceeds by turning the rod ninety degrees until the expanse of her patient's back begins to glow around particular inked lines, three stacked panels along the spine appear, revealing the Kryptonian's internal systems. It's a technological marvel to witness every time, a perfect combination of mechanical innovation so well integrated with organic lifeform.
She makes quick work of the more technical components of her patient's body, fiddling with some delicate wiring amidst flesh and updating and upgrading where necessary. All the while, she keeps a close eye on her patient's skin, the circuitry glowing green, and her breathing—steady in parts, haggard in others. She tries to speed the process along as much as she can, even knowing that this truly requires a deft and delicate touch, the knowledge not lost on her that the Kryptonian must be in immense pain while her internal systems are meddled with.
As expected, her patient does not complain, does not react save for an occasional twitch or stiffness in tension. After a silent twenty minutes, she finishes with a relieved sigh. She's quick to treat the injury with specialized antibiotics before properly dressing it, more than eager to cover that wound. Regardless of how she feels about her patient, she genuinely does not want to further the pain the Kryptonian experiences, war soldier or not. She pushes her stool back after placing her tools back on the table.
"Go ahead and put your shirt back on."
"Not so bad this time, right?" The Kryptonian asks with her own sigh of relief, already shrugging her shirt back on.
"Just be more careful next time," she advises, though she knows that these words mean nothing, have never been heeded. Not for what the Terran government and Cadmus Council want from their superpowered alien.
"You got it, Doc." Her patient then rises from the chair and begins walking towards the door. By this point, Lena has come to expect that on her fifth step towards the door, she will turn around, hands in her pockets like she's just a regular woman, and opens her mouth. "Say, Dr. Luthor, would you like to join me and some of the others for drinks later at Noonan's? I think it'd be nice."
The Kryptonian stands to her full height, another smile on her face. Lena doesn't know what's more tragic to watch: how her patient continues to try to invite her out to spend time together after every visit, or the fact that her patient truly believes it'd actually be nice to spend time with her cousin's murderer's sister.
Lena has since rolled back in front of her workbench and pointedly stared at the Kryptonian. Admitting defeat, her patient only widens her smile and nods in understanding.
"Until next time?" she asks, now at the threshold. Lena offers her a polite smile, the best she can do.
"See you then."
So it goes.
Each visit near identical.
Lena fixes her patient.
The Kryptonian pursues the impossible.
A month later, it all changes.
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o-craven-canto · 19 hours ago
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The greatest fictional portrayal of Americans ever is the opening of Jules Verne's From the Earth to the Moon (1873):
But the point in which the Americans singularly distanced the Europeans was in the science of gunnery. Not, indeed, that their weapons retained a higher degree of perfection than theirs, but that they exhibited unheard-of dimensions, and consequently attained hitherto unheard-of ranges. [...] Now when an American has an idea, he directly seeks a second American to share it. If there be three, they elect a president and two secretaries. Given four, they name a keeper of records, and the office is ready for work; five, they convene a general meeting, and the club is fully constituted. So things were managed in Baltimore. The inventor of a new cannon associated himself with the caster and the borer. Thus was formed the nucleus of the "Gun Club." In a single month after its formation it numbered 1,833 effective members and 30,565 corresponding members. [...] The estimation in which these gentlemen were held, according to one of the most scientific exponents of the Gun Club, was "proportional to the masses of their guns, and in the direct ratio of the square of the distances attained by their projectiles." [...] It is but fair to add that these Yankees, brave as they have ever proved themselves to be, did not confine themselves to theories and formulae, but that they paid heavily, in propria persona, for their inventions. [...] Crutches, wooden legs, artificial arms, steel hooks, caoutchouc jaws, silver craniums, platinum noses, were all to be found in the collection; and it was calculated by the great statistician Pitcairn that throughout the Gun Club there was not quite one arm between four persons and two legs between six. [...] "This is horrible!" said Tom Hunter one evening, while rapidly carbonizing his wooden legs in the fireplace of the smoking-room; "nothing to do! nothing to look forward to! what a loathsome existence! When again shall the guns arouse us in the morning with their delightful reports?" "Those days are gone by," said jolly Bilsby, trying to extend his missing arms. "It was delightful once upon a time! One invented a gun, and hardly was it cast, when one hastened to try it in the face of the enemy! Then one returned to camp with a word of encouragement from Sherman or a friendly shake of the hand from McClellan. But now the generals are gone back to their counters; and in place of projectiles, they despatch bales of cotton. By Jove, the future of gunnery in America is lost!" [...] "Nevertheless," replied Colonel Blomsberry, "they are always struggling in Europe to maintain the principle of nationalities." "Well?" "Well, there might be some field for enterprise down there; and if they would accept our services----" "What are you dreaming of?" screamed Bilsby; "work at gunnery for the benefit of foreigners?" "That would be better than doing nothing here," returned the colonel. [...] "Ridiculous!" replied Tom Hunter, whittling with his bowie-knife the arms of his easy chair; "but if that be the case there, all that is left for us is to plant tobacco and distill whale-oil."
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andmaybegayer · 1 year ago
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Got a new office chair for my desk, and by new office chair I of course mean I got a used ergonomic office chair that was inscrutably thrown out when it hit two years old for $90 at a second hand office furniture wholesaler.
Your irregular reminder that office chair casters are usually a standardized part and you can just get new ones when they start making horrible scratching sounds and not turning very well.
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casters026 · 1 month ago
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caster1089 · 1 month ago
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hello-eeveev · 2 years ago
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Beau had half a mind to march over to the Candles and kill Ludinus Da’leth herself, if only so she didn’t have to spend another day looking over the same documents, trying to find something they could use to get him out of power. She didn’t trust him—hadn’t from the start—but the more she walked in similar circles, the more she had to deal with the Assembly’s bullshit, the more she was convinced that whatever Ludinus was up to at any given moment, it couldn’t be good. But he had spent centuries navigating Dwendalian politics; of course he knew how to cover his tracks well.
She was halfway through plotting out the assassination when Caleb, who was sitting at the desk across from her, closed his book and looked up at her. “It’s five o’clock,” he said.
“Finally.” Beau sagged in her chair, taking in a deep breath. As she exhaled, she let thoughts of work fade from her mind. Once she felt suitably non-murderous, she slapped her hands onto her desk and stood. “Let’s get going then.”
She and Caleb fell into their routine as easily as they fought side-by-side. Caleb collected all the files and documents and organized them as he saw fit, while Beau stacked the books in the order that she knew would be most convenient for whoever reshelved them. Then they switched. Beau ran the papers back to her tiny office and locked them in her desk drawer, and Caleb passed off the books to the nearest archivist to be put away. When they met back up, Caleb walked Beau all the way to the teleportation circle on the other side of the Archive. Outside of going home to Yasha, this was Beau’s favorite part of the day, because regardless of what they ended up talking about, they made sure that, for at least these fifteen minutes, neither of them had to think about their country’s corrupt systems and the horrible people running them.
By the time they arrived at the teleportation circle, her half thought-out plans of murdering the Martinet had been shoved into the back of her mind by Caleb’s fond tales of the kids he tutored and the progress they were making.
She really hoped he would take the Soltryce job, if not for the good he would do there, at least for himself. He seemed so happy when he talked about teaching, almost as much as when he was nerding out about spells with Essek or Veth.
The caster in charge of the circle beckoned Beau into the center of the room, and she jogged into position as they began drawing the sigils for the Zadash Archive circle.
“Hey, so tomorrow night, Yasha’s trying out a new recipe that she got from Martina,” Beau said, turning to face Caleb who lingered at the edge of the casting space. “It’s a stir-fry sorta thing that she learned on a trip to the Menagerie Coast. I think it’ll be really good, especially if we use some of your green beans. You down?”
The invitation was more of a formality at this point. Caleb joined them for dinner almost every weekend. But Caleb shifted awkwardly, looking down at his feet.
“Ah, I would love to,” he said, “but I already have plans for tomorrow. Maybe another night.”
“Eating a boba and reading all night doesn’t count as dinner plans.”
Caleb huffed a laugh. “No, it is a, um…” He picked at some fuzz on his coat sleeve. “A date.”
“Wha—” Beau blinked. Shook her head and blinked again. “What? With who?”
Caleb caught her gaze, expression completely neutral except for a growing redness on his face. “A friend,” he said.
She furrowed her brow. “I’m gonna need a little more information than that, dude.”
He glanced down at the runes being drawn beneath her. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw him run his thumb over the ring on his index finger—his Ring of Telepathy, it looked like—and his voice entered her mind.
“Essek.”
Beau’s eyes widened, but then the bastard smiled and waved like nothing happened. “Have a nice evening, Beauregard.”
Faster than she could run over and punch that smug look off his face, the chalk on the floor flashed and suddenly she was back at the Zadash Archive.
She fumbled for her Sending Stone. “Fucking piece of shit—I’m gonna—” She yanked it out of her pocket and activated it. “Caleb!” she shouted. Some poor young monk tried to greet her while an older expositor threw a stern expression her way, but Beau paid them no mind. She was already running out the door.
“The fuck kinda timing was that? What do you mean you’re going on a date with—” Shit, she couldn’t use Essek’s name in the middle of Zadash. “—with him? When did this happen? How? Who else knows?”
“You are the first, unless someone else has figured it out already,” he replied. “Unfortunately Sending is limited to twenty-five words, so I cannot say more. Goodnight, Beauregard.”
“I know for a fact that’s not how these Sending Stones work, you asshole!” She did a quick count of Caleb’s message in her head. Twenty-six words.
She could practically hear his shit-eating grin in the silence that followed.
Forget Ludinus, she had another wizard to kill.
Before long, Beau was sprinting up to her house. She waved off Martina’s sickeningly sweet hello and threw open her front door.
“Yasha!” she yelled. “Babe, you’re not gonna believe what Caleb just told me. Can you message Jester today?”
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corvidsindia · 11 months ago
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i have a sort of decision paralysis specifically around wasting things
any other topic i’m generally pretty good at recognizing and avoiding decision paralysis by breaking things down logically. but if i have something that’s not entirely broken, i can’t bring myself to toss it, but i don’t want to keep it, but i don’t have the energy to give it away, and i’d feel bad because it’s partially broken.
the example of the day is the cheap recliner from amazon sitting in my lab. i wanted to use it as an office chair, so i swapped out the feet for casters. turns out the chair itself is kind of not great, but also, the fiberboard in the bottom was not thick enough to handle the dynamic stresses of casters, so now the mounting holes are shredded—i don’t expect you could put the regular feet back on. i could build a furniture dolly essentially, fitted to the chair and put casters on that, but at this point it’s too big and not an effective solution in the lab anyways. so i need to get rid of it, but the chair part is still fine? (not great but fine.) add to that the psychological weight of carrying it down the stairs, and now i have a stupid big-ass chair taking up space in my lab and impeding projects. i don’t know what to do about this
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