FUCK
A FRIEND ( @sheepcup ) SURPRISED ME WITH THIS
LOOK AT HOW FUCKING CUTE... I HAVE NEVER SEEN THIS MANY OF MY CHARACTERS IN ONE PHOTO
AND ESREY LOOKS SO GRUMPY HOLDING THE CAKE
AHHHHH I’M GOING TO DIE

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seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
FUCK
A FRIEND ( @sheepcup ) SURPRISED ME WITH THIS
LOOK AT HOW FUCKING CUTE... I HAVE NEVER SEEN THIS MANY OF MY CHARACTERS IN ONE PHOTO
AND ESREY LOOKS SO GRUMPY HOLDING THE CAKE
AHHHHH I’M GOING TO DIE
"On my world [Aruza], when two people love each other, they share more than their bodies. They do more than take pleasure with each other. They bond with the Attanni, sharing their thoughts and emotions completely, sharing their memories and their knowledge. All of the subterfuges between them are stripped away, and they become one person.
Tales of Bounty Hunter
Camino Day 37: November 29, 2010
Melide to Arzua: 13 km
It was cold. That we knew. The walls of the hotel with it's radiator we'd paid for in the hopes of heat, could not combat the cold in the rock building. The hotel was run by a cute older couple that had a restaurant/cafe on the bottom floor. As we stepped out this morning, they waved from the window. We were desperate for warmth having miserably slept all night! Please. We knew we'd not get anything better in their cafe, and at the same time, we decided we'd say thanks for their hospitality, so we stepped in.
We were offered to have breakfast made. This was no day for a cold continental breakfast. No, we sought out something warm. They offered soup. We said yes. So we sat in front of our steamy coffees and waited for some steamy soup and in a glance, we realized being still as bundled up as we were outside, that we could see our breath here in this restaurant—a first in my life! We could only laugh at everything and enjoy a big pot of soup.
With the cities being located as they were, we would only do about half a day's walk in distance. We arrived in Arzua still in the afternoon and enrolled in the municipal albergue. It had a factory feeling—rooms and rooms of bunks, but at this time, there were just a few pilgrims that all shared the same drab room. A Korean and Japanese man and woman; a couple of other Spaniards. We'd said goodbye to Antonio the night before, but of course who should we find, but Antonio too!
The bathroom/shower facilities were co-ed. Normally a shower without a shower screen would have be a little strange, but co-ed! Antonio laughed as he'd stayed in this same place four years earlier which hadn't changed at all. I actually watched the door for him as he showered and he did the same for me such that nobody else would come through the bathroom.
We attended a little mass with Antonio, followed by beers and finally dinner. Here we found the Korean and Japanese dining. They were cute and it looked like a romance was budding—he spoke Japanese! It was here we met also met our neighbors and the adjacent table, Pilar and Santiago. A brother and sister couple from Madrid, they proved to be relaxed and very social and spoke only Spanish. We toasted a few drinks and I thoroughly enjoyed Santiago's humor! More would come of our new Spanish friends.