Ma boi is too proud after killing t2s ToT

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Ma boi is too proud after killing t2s ToT
Budapest belvárosában, a Szentkirályi utcában, a zsidó negyed közvetlen közelében nyílik meg Budapest jelenleg egyetlen kóser szállodája.
"A hotel jelenleg 150 apartmanszobával és kóser étteremmel rendelkezik, az imahelyiség, a medencével felszerelt wellnessrészleg kialakítása pedig folyamatban van. A későbbiekben mikvét (rituális fürdőt) is biztosítanak majd a vendégek számára."
vaelith lore
The drawing is weird, I know, it's just that I'm not very good at realistic drawing and I was looking for tutorials 😭😭.
LOREEEE
Vaelith was a single mother. After her partner died at the hands of a Kavouradis, she was depressed but stayed strong for her two cubs. They lived in the mountains, far from other creatures. She always fed them berries since she didn't want them to depend so much on meat. That was until famine came and she was forced to look for food elsewhere. She searched and searched and found nothing until she finally found berries in the flower cave. She quickly went back to the mountains where she had left her cubs.
Upon arriving, she gently grasped the smallest one (born two days prior) by the scruff of the neck, and the other, an adolescent who couldn't yet fly, she placed on her back before taking flight. However, the weight of her adolescent pup made it difficult to maintain her balance, forcing her to land amidst the plateaus near the desert. She lowered the adolescent grimcorr from her back and began walking at a moderate pace so as not to leave it behind. Suddenly, the pup she was holding by the scruff of the neck began to cry from hunger; it hadn't eaten in over four hours. This caused her to panic and quicken her pace, forgetting about the adolescent. The other grimcorr's cry made her stop abruptly, and she turned around to see a heiboktoruk holding it menacingly with one paw on the grimcorr's head.
Vaelith lowered the pup slowly and went on the defensive, growling. This caused the Heiboktoruk to press down on the adolescent Grimcorr's head. Not expecting an attack, Vaelith lunged, knocking it down, but the Heiboktoruk reacted by biting Vaelith's neck. Vaelith screamed and, in agony, told her pups to run—a bad idea.
While they continued fighting, she didn't notice a felisio heading towards her young. This prompted her to respond to the heiboktoruk's attack, managing to seriously wound it in the neck with the spikes of her collar, killing it. She turned to face the felisio only to see that it had killed the teenager and was carrying off the baby. Tearfully, she took flight after the felisio, managing to bite its tail and pull it back, causing it to lose its balance.
Taking advantage of the felsio's vulnerable moment, she bit its neck with rage and violence, plummeting downwards and causing the felsio to release the baby. Since they were on the coral reef, the baby fell into the water.
Seeing that her only offspring could die, Vaelith dived down, falling into the water with her baby. Weak and powerless, the baby sank. Driven by adrenaline and panic, Vaelith forced herself deeper into the water, but began to drown.
After what felt like an eternity, Vaelith awoke on the shores of the Flower Cave, wet and weak, only to realize her child was gone. She quickly searched the lake for any trace of her offspring, but sadly, she found nothing. With tears in her eyes, she went to see if her teenage child was still there, but found only a pool of blood and its vanished body. Breaking down in tears, Vaelith collapsed onto the hot desert floor.
For several days after the accident, Vaelith went to the mountains to see the moon, remembering when she and her family would gaze at the serene and peaceful sky.
sir captain koser
Anthony Fineran (B 1981), 'Sun Koser', 2025
“In der Führungsspitze Räuber und Mörder, die sich auch noch erwischen lassen? Das kann sich eine kleine, aber solide Bank nicht leisten.” Der Mann, seinen Kopf verlor, Michael Koser, Jacques Futrelle Der Mann, der seinen Kopf verlor | Professor van Dusens vierter Fall – Hörspiel | ARD Audiothek Bankdirektoren als Räuber? In Deutschland wäre das undenkbar!
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Chloe Koser, Thank You For Coming Out – gaycitynews.nyc
http://dlvr.it/R9W4mQ
Fish it out, dry it out, throw it out — how one family is coping with the Houston flood
This is the first in a series of articles that will follow the Koser family as it rebuilds after Hurricane Harvey.
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The house on Turf Valley Drive in the Bear Creek neighborhood of Houston had never flooded before — not once in the 26 years since Larry and Brenda Koser had moved in, not once in the 41 years since the subdivision was built. So although the couple and two of their grown children, Matthew and Micah — had packed bug-out bags just in case, they didn’t think they would use them as Hurricane Harvey arrived.
And, at first, they didn’t. The night of Sunday, Aug. 27, was rainy, Monday morning more so. Then, by 4 in the afternoon the water was knee deep on the front lawn of the single-story home, making it impossible to use any of the cars that were parked uselessly in the driveway. So the Kosers grabbed their bags and left through their backyard, cutting a hole in their fence and wading to a nearby community center that was serving as a makeshift shelter.
Larry Koser Jr., left, speaks on his phone as he and his father, Larry Koser Sr., look for important papers and heirlooms inside the family home, which flooded on Aug. 29. (Photo: Erich Schlegel/Getty Images)
Two hours later, though, the water was threatening the shelter, too, and they moved to the home of friends, and then on Tuesday morning moved again to the home of their oldest son, 44-year-old Larry Jr., who made his way to them in his truck, taking more than two hours for what is normally a 30-minute drive from his home in the town of Katy.
As wrenching as it was to flee their home, it was worse to return. On Tuesday afternoon, Larry and Larry Jr. borrowed kayaks and paddled back to Bear Creek, where water nearly covered the mailboxes and almost lapped the roofs of cars. Reaching the house on Turf Valley Drive, they floated through the front door on three and a half feet of water. When they returned the next day it was almost a foot higher, owing to the controlled release from a nearby dam by the Army Corp of Engineers.
The Kosers’ son Larry Jr. and their grandson Matthew look for important papers and heirlooms in the flooded house. (Photo: Erich Schlegel/Getty Images)
The house beneath all that water had long been “the heart of everything” for the family, Larry Jr. said. “This is where everybody gets together. Now you come here in a kayak and you’re floating around in a house, and all your belongings are just kind of floating around. To see everything like that, it’s surreal. It’s just sad.”
Photographer Erich Schlegel was paddling by as the Kosers first entered and came back again during the next few days as the water began to recede. He plans to return regularly over the months to chronicle what it takes to rebuild the lives of one of the thousands of families upended by Harvey. This is the first installment of what will likely be a yearlong project for Schlegel — chronicling the story of one typical family among thousands. No one story can stand for all, however. “There are people who have it a lot better, and there are people who have it a lot worse,” Larry Jr. says.
Larry Koser Sr. and Larry Jr. cleaning up on Sept. 7. (Photo: Erich Schlegel for Yahoo News)
In the early visits, he says, the goal was to “salvage a few little treasures for each person,” necessarily small and light because that was all the kayak could carry. Photo albums. Passports. Documents from the safe. The purse that 19-year-old Micah had left on her bed, and some of the most recent canvases she had painted, which she had propped atop a tall dresser.
At one point a pocketknife floated by, and Larry Sr. felt something that was almost happiness. “My son had given that to me on my retirement,” he says. (His career had been as a speech pathologist.) He’d lost it soon after, and “I had turned that freaking couch over, I don’t know how many times, trying to find it because I knew it was in here. I knew it was in the house, I just couldn’t find it, and I couldn’t bear to tell him that I had lost the knife.” Harvey had found it for him.
Once it became possible to drive up to the house, the real work began — hauling out furniture and belongings, creating a pile 8 feet high on the front lawn. Yanking out the Sheetrock down to the studs. Bringing in fans and dehumidifiers. Treating everything with peroxide to fight mold.
Larry Koser Jr. helps clean up on Sept. 7. (Photo: Erich Schlegel for Yahoo News)
They are all bunking at Jr.’s three-bedroom, two-bath, 2,100-square-foot home in Katy. The youngest son, 22-year-old Matthew, takes the couch. Their biggest challenge is getting around the sprawl of Houston without any of their four cars, which were all destroyed in their driveway. All four were paid for, and they carried only liability insurance, so the adjuster has offered them just $900 total. For the moment they are borrowing from family and friends.
The insurance on the house was also insufficient. The house too is paid for, and they had flood insurance, but only up to $100,000 for the building and $40,000 for the contents, far short of what it will take to replace. And even were they to bring the house back to livable condition, Larry Sr. says he is not certain he would want to move back in.
“I’m not sure what we’re going to do with regards to living in it,” he says. “Maybe we will rent it or sell it, assuming I can do either of those, but I don’t know whether I want to go back there.”
Larry Sr. and Brenda Koser at work on Sept. 7. (Photo: Erich Schlegel for Yahoo News)
He fears that by returning he risks re-losing it all, should the impossible happen twice. “It’s disheartening to see all the contents of your life lying ruined in a pile outside,” he says. “I can’t go through that again.”
For the moment he is trying to focus on what he has — the photographs taken gingerly from their albums, wiped off with antiseptic and dried on the floor; the few pairs of underwear, pants and shorts that he carried in his bug-out bags; the gifts of more clothing from church groups and friends; and his good fortune in having a bedroom to sleep in.
“We’ll get through this,” he says. “We’ll be a stronger family.” He reminds himself that there are others who are struggling more than he is, saying “I was blessed I had someplace to go.”
Cookie jars are seen at the Koser home on Sept. 7. (Photo: Erich Schlegel for Yahoo News)
And in about a month there will be something to celebrate — Larry Jr. is getting married. His father sees that as both a blessing and a looming complication. “We don’t want to upset the newlyweds,” he says. “You want to have some kind of privacy when you are just married. I’m not sure where we’re going to go after the wedding.”
His son assumes they will stay. “It’s not a new relationship, we’ve been dating for 12 years,” says Larry Jr. “We really don’t need the privacy. Family comes first.”
“He’ll probably try to move out and we’ll try to keep him there as long as we can. I can’t imagine what it feels like for him, to be recently retired and then to watch everything you built, everything you had, just completely gone.”
Read more from Yahoo News:
Too close for comfort: How social media changed how we talk to (and about) each other in America
Houston’s historic Alley Theatre is flooded but unbowed
Matt Bai: Is sexism what happened to Hillary?
Donald Trump, softy
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