Short Full Throttle Quotes

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One corner of Carlos's mouth quirked as he continued to shake his cargo pants and boxer shorts. "Please tell me you've seen a penis before." "Y-yes," she rasped. "But I've never seen one so...pretty." Yep, and maybe she should consider not saying the first thing to pop into her head. His eyebrows pinched together, his grin disappearing. "My penis is not pretty," he grumbled, glancing down at the organ in question. She begged to differ. Because he was thick, long, deeply tan, and still partially erect. And with a plump head and two identical veins running up his length, she'd go so far as to say that, in the world of phallus beauty contests, his could make a run for the money as Mr. Universe. "If anything," he said, still staring at it, "it's a handsome penis, a manly penis." "Whatever you want to call it" - her voice was a husky parody of its usual timber - "I'm just saying I visually enjoy it.
Julie Ann Walker (Full Throttle (Black Knights Inc., #7))
Here is the story, which I have abridged (with acknowledgement to Sergey Parkhomenko, journalist and broadcaster, who reported it): The River Ob makes a turn at Kolpashevo, and every year it eats away a few feet of a sand cliff there. On April 30, 1979, the Ob's waters eroded another six-foot section of bank. Hanging from the newly exposed wall were the arms, legs and heads of people who had been buried there. A cemetery at least several yards wide had been exposed. The bodies had been packed in and layered tightly. Some of the skulls from the uppermost layer rolled out from the sandbank, and little boys picked them up and began playing with them. News of the burial spread quickly and people started gathering at the sandbank. The police and neighbourhood watch volunteers quickly cordoned off the whole thing. Shortly afterwards, they built a thick fence around the crumbling sandbank, warning people away. The next day, the Communist Party called meeting in the town, explaining that those buried were traitors and deserters from the war. But the explanation wasn't entirely convincing. If this were so, why was everyone dressed in civilian clothes? Why had women and children been executed as well? And from where, for that matter, did so many deserters come in a town of just 20,000 people? Meanwhile, the river continued to eat away at the bank and it became clear that the burial site was enormous; thousands were buried there. People could remember that there used to be a prison on these grounds in the late 1930s. It was general knowledge that there were executions there, but nobody could imagine just how many people were shot. The perimeter fence and barbed wire had long ago been dismantled, and the prison itself was closed down. But what the town's people didn't know was that Kolpashevo's prison operated a fully-fledged assembly line of death. There was a special wooden trough, down which a person would descend to the edge of a ditch. There, he'd be killed by rifle fire, the shooter sitting in a special booth. If necessary, he'd be finished off with a second shot from a pistol, before being added to the next layer of bodies, laid head-to-toe with the last corpse. Then they'd sprinkle him lightly with lime. When the pit was full, they filled in the hole with sand and moved the trough over a few feet to the side, and began again. But now the crimes of the past were being revealed as bodies fell into the water and drifted past the town while people watched from the shore. In Tomsk, the authorities decided to get rid of the burial site and remove the bodies. The task, it turned out, wasn't so easy. Using heavy equipment so near a collapsing sandbank wasn't wise and there was no time to dig up all the bodies by hand. The Soviet leadership was in a hurry. Then from Tomsk came new orders: two powerful tugboats were sent up the Ob, right up to the riverbank, where they were tied with ropes to the shore, facing away from the bank. Then they set their engines on full throttle. The wash from the ships' propellers quickly eroded the soft riverbank and bodies started falling into the water, where most of them were cut to pieces by the propellers. But some of the bodies escaped and floated away downstream. So motorboats were stationed there where men hooked the bodies as they floated by. A barge loaded with scrap metal from a nearby factory was moored near the boats and the men were told to tie pieces of scrap metal to the bodies with wire and sink them in the deepest part of the river. The last team, also composed of local men from the town, worked a bit further downstream where they collected any bodies that had got past the boats and buried them on shore in unmarked graves or sank them by tying the bodies to stones. This cleanup lasted almost until the end of the summer.
Lawrence Bransby (Two Fingers On The Jugular)
Buy Old Gmail Accounts: Risks, When People Do It, and Safer Alternatives Buying an older Gmail account — one that’s been active for months or years — looks like a tempting shortcut. People say aged accounts have better deliverability, fewer verification snags, and a more natural history that can help with outreach, profile creation, or quick tool access. That’s true in a very narrow, surface sense: an account with history can appear more “established” to automated checks. But there are important downsides you must understand before deciding to buy one. Many purchased accounts were created with questionable data, may be flagged by Google, or are tied to someone else’s recovery info. If you rely on them for business-critical work, the short-term convenience can turn into frozen balances, lost access, or permanent bans — and possibly legal trouble depending on how the account was obtained. ✅ Contact Now: ✅ Telegram: @topsmmusa ✅ Website: topsmmusa.com Why people buy old Gmail accounts Some common motivations are practical and easy to relate to: running multiple marketing campaigns without setting up dozens of fresh addresses, creating multiple social profiles, or getting past new-account throttles when testing tools. Agencies and growth teams sometimes want bulk accounts to separate projects and reduce the chance that a single suspended account stops all activity. Others want accounts “with history” to link to services that are suspicious of brand-new emails. The real risks (what most sellers won’t advertise) Accounts sold cheaply often come with hidden problems that bite later. They may have been built with recycled numbers or fake IDs, used for spammy activity previously, or registered with recovery emails the seller still controls. Google actively looks for unusual access patterns; if the account suddenly logs in from different countries, or begins automated sending at scale, it can trigger an immediate suspension. When that happens you lose every linked service — and a suspended Gmail can be notoriously hard to recover. There’s also reputational risk: if your outreach starts bouncing or lands in spam because recipients flag those accounts, your brand suffers. Quality checks you should demand (not instructions to hack or break rules) If you’re evaluating providers, rely on transparency and proof rather than promises. Ask for verifiable creation dates, proof that recovery options were handed over, and a clear refund policy if an account is suspended soon after delivery. Look for sellers with long, consistent reviews from real customers and avoid anyone who refuses to confirm transfer of full control. Even with all checks, understand there’s residual risk — nothing is guaranteed. Safer, legal alternatives that accomplish the same goals If your goal is better email deliverability, scaling outreach, or creating multiple identities for projects, there are safer, more compliant approaches: • Use a reputable email service provider (ESP) for outreach and bulk sends. ESPs are built to manage reputation, warm up sending IPs, and track deliverability. • Warm up new accounts gradually: send low-volume, legitimate messages first and build activity over days or weeks. This avoids the sudden spikes that trigger flags. • Use domain-based emails (yourname@yourdomain). When you control the domain and DNS, you can set up SPF, DKIM, and DMARC which improves deliverability far more reliably than an aged free email. • For multiple users, use Google Workspace (business accounts). It’s legitimate, scalable, and gives you centralized admin control over multiple verified addresses. • If you need quick verification for tools, use vendor integrations that accept business accounts or provide official onboarding for scaling customers.
Buy Old Gmail Accounts: Risks, When People Do It, and Safer Alternatives