Sister Spy (Alias, Number 4)

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Sister Spy (Alias, Number 4)

Sister Spy (Alias, Number 4)

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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Adopting the same stance she used to while seeing Virgin Mary as a kid — that is, kneeled with her arms stretched as if tied to a cross — Narcisa stared directly into the eclipse. Don't try this at home, kids.

NARRATOR: Jean would have known an enormous amount of classified intel. Just like her sister Pat, the codebreakers in Baker Street were sworn to secrecy. No one could know she was a spy. Although, sometimes, people did figure it out. NARRATOR: At some point or another, we’ve all wondered what job we would have done had we lived during the war. A pilot? A nurse? A codebreaker? If you fancy the latter, then let’s see if your skills match up. NARRATOR: It’s 1942. War rages on almost every continent and 18-year-old spy Pat Owtram is posted to watch over the British coastlines. Her days and nights are spent intercepting secret messages sent by the enemy German Navy to their fleet prowling the North Sea and the English Channel. She has signed the Official Secrets Act that binds her by law to never speak of the clandestine work she is doing in those little camouflaged outposts. She has no idea that at the same time, her younger sister Jean is also a spy, working for the Special Operations Executive in Europe, decoding the encrypted messages sent by the Allied secret agents from their reconnaissance missions behind enemy lines. PAT OWTRAM: The blitz was going full blast. The housekeeper took me around to show me my bedroom, and that's when the window bulged in like a bubble. All the glass burst and a landmine went off right outside the window. The housekeeper and I shot under the bed and there was glass everywhere. We were all right. It was a German landmine and they used to come down silently by parachute and then explode. So, that was my introduction to London and the Blitz really.

JEAN OWTRAM: I had to take the urgent messages - or ones which have to be done in a hurry - about an agent. He'd got it mixed up. I had to try and un-wrangle it so that I could read what he was asking for, what he needed. They were desperate to get material out before they themselves were killed or taken prisoner or something terrible would happen. And you were aware that their life was what you were trying to save. PAT OWTRAM: We saw quite a bit of each other, didn't we, at the end of the war? I think we were both in London. Jean and I went out to have dinner at the Mayfair Hotel. And I remember he said: “We can have a drink before dinner. What would you girls like?” And Jean and I both said: “Whiskey.” And he looked quite appalled. And he said: “Girls don't drink whiskey. Have a sherry.” And he just hadn't realized it, since he went away, that we had grown up quite a bit. Her sight is severely damaged. We already know she will eventually go completely blind, since that's how we meet her in Verónica.

Ainsley Holloway had come to Gooseberry Bay to find answers about her past. She’d come to find an explanation for the dreams that haunted her after the death of the cop who’d both rescued and raised her. And she’d come to identify the family she couldn’t remember but knew in her heart she’d once belonged to. They have high production value, meaning top pornstars, unique locations, and major fantasy vibes (cosplay and parodies)NARRATOR: These were the messages spies would send when in the grips of the enemy and desperate to send words before they were taken hostage or worse. JEAN OWTRAM: I think we'd done things as children with our parents, connected with jigsaw puzzles, with all sorts of things where you had to use your mind to try and sort out what could have gone wrong if we didn't get the right answers. So it was very familiar, this business of trying to correct the corruption. You would think: “What is the most likely thing? This person is working under pressure, at speed. They got confused with another word. Something has happened.” JEAN OWTRAM: We were required to have pretty fluent German because you never knew what would come up. They considered you. You had to have the right kind of temperament to deal with periods of very intense activity and long periods of nothing happening, which would be very boring. And of course, you'll have to have very good hearing, which at 18 years old you normally would. But they then trained you, and a lot of the messages were going to be in four-letter enigma code. Although you won’t get to see any intercourse, StasyQ VR offers a unique, more intimate experience. This is in large part thanks to the binaural sound they offer, which enhances the already-more-intimate feel of VR porn to begin with.

Alright Jade, what do you want to do?" I beam with my most entertaining voice as sit down on the couch with her.That's why she pushes young Rosa, who seems to be the only one able to see the invisible forces at play. Sister Narcisa assures her no harm will come to her if they draw together the last leg of the hangman game that has appeared on her bedroom wall. USA Today Bestselling author Kathi Daley brings you a heartwarming mystery series about finding answers and fostering hope while building friendships and embracing the magic of life by the sea and small town holidays. As she’s hanging on, this happens… “‘Ainsley,’ I heard someone say from just above me. I knew I needed to focus all my attention on hanging on, but I couldn’t help but look up. ‘Avery?’”

NARRATOR: It sounds like an incongruous question to ask in a job interview but if you’ve seen the movie The Imitation Game, about the codebreakers of Bletchley Park, you’ll remember a scene where cryptanalyst Joan Clark - played by Keira Knightley - turns up to a job interview, only to be sat down to complete a crossword in a room full of others furiously scribbling away. She completes it in record time and is then taken to Bletchley Park to join the other codebreakers deciphering the Enigma code. This was actually how the British War Office found many of its brightest cryptologists during the war. They’d put out particularly challenging crosswords in national newspapers and ask for responses. Crosswords are human ingenuity vs. human ingenuity. It’s lateral thinking about getting inside the mind of the game setter - in the same way, codebreaking is about getting inside the mind of your enemy. So, if you have a penchant for crosswords then maybe you should be considering a career in espionage. On the plus side, this means that they have a huge variety of VR content. As you might expect, there are lots of categories and these are conveniently sortable by resolution, softcore/hardcore, teledildonic-supported, and other features. JEAN OWTRAM: Although the Germans were retreating, they weren't retreating everywhere by any means. There are still a lot of people in great danger and we wanted to help them as fast as we could.When it comes to buying that subscription, however, you might need to spend a few minutes figuring out how you want to do it.



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