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Author Topic: The Danger Family Apocalypse, Ch. 6 (Generation 2)  (Read 9094 times)
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zombiekim
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« on: September 04, 2008, 01:01:55 pm »

Hi, all! I've tried to do the apocalypse challenge a few times, but I've always lost interest. I hope that posting an apocalypse story will keep me from getting bored with it. If you aren't familiar with Pinstar's apocalypse challenge, it's viewable here, or you can view my summary of the rules here. Also, I just wanted to share that the family is named "Danger" because, uhh, well, because I got tired of thinking up interesting surnames. :D
Okay, I hope you enjoy my little story. This first chapter is short, but I have more coming very soon.



The "Danger" Apocalypse: Chapter 1
[/B]



Ansly Danger tried to remember how she’d gotten here, to this shack on the outskirts of the outskirts of Strangetown. She couldn’t, and she thought that might have something to do with the goose egg forming on her forehead, her dirty clothes, and her missing luggage.
Okay. What was the last thing she could recall?
The orphanage. Yes. She had gone there, to see if anyone remained, or if any of her old friends had come back, but there was no one. What did she remember before that? Why was she even back in her hometown at all? The empty airport—no, not empty; looted. The plane. The Pualos Islands.



“Ansly, you’ve been with the volunteer program for eight weeks,” the project director said, leaning forward over his industrial metal desk. A large fan swung its face lazily around to her, dispelling little of the room’s cloying heat.
“Yes? I’m here on the twelve-week stay,” she answered. The Pualos Islands were a difficult place to call home, what with the lack of basic amenities, sweltering tropical heat, and unusual food. But, fresh out of college, she loved feeling like she was making a difference. “Is there a problem with my papers, sir, my passport…?”
“No, nothing like that. But you’ve heard about the disaster in Strangetown, haven’t you?”
“Disaster?” She smiled nervously. “I’d heard there was an accident, but you know—news travels slow.”
“Yes. It does.” He looked uncomfortable. “Ansly, I want to apologize that we didn’t realize the urgency sooner. And But now, we really—we really think you will want to go back. Not to Strangetown, of course, but to the states—“
“Sir,
what happened?”



A nuclear disaster had happened. And she’d insisted on returning to her hometown, to find her loved ones—no family, of course, but the friends she’d grown up with at the orphanage, as well as the woman who’d lived in this shack, Jane. Jane had been the closest she had come to family outside the Home, a “Zen wannabe” with a sense of humor, a huge heart, and a sparse (really, impoverished) but lovingly kept home. Ansly had found no one at the orphanage, so here she was—able to remember only scattered images since she’d arrived at the airport, and unsure of how long it had taken to get here. She suspected it was days, and was suddenly grateful for her amnesia.
“Jane?” She knocked lightly, and the door swung open. A chill clenched around her heart. “Jane?”








Jane’s lovely things, simple though they were, had been stolen in the weeks since her death. Still, there was a bed, a sink, a toilet, a near-empty fridge; not much more or less than Ansly had had on the Pualos, in other words. Ansly had nowhere else to go, and was afraid to venture far from the house, so for now it looked like she was home.



Jane had kept a journal before her death. She wrote of the confusion after the accident, the terror in the streets, the fleeing survivors... Ansly’s heart went out to her, to all of them.
The last two entries were her goodbyes to the people she’d loved. Jane had always had a weak heart, and perhaps she’d known there was little more she could take. Ansly read them over with a sadness and deep reluctance, never more so than when she got to the end:
“Ansly: I’m so proud of you and grateful that you are at that college and far away from all of this. I know the world has a great need of you and wonderful things in store for you. You were a blessing in my life.
I’m not afraid of what will happen to me now. Life has to end because end is natural, and life is natural. And deep down I know that my soul will find Howard’s. That will be a relief.”


« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 02:27:18 pm by zombiekim » Logged

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« Reply #1 on: September 04, 2008, 02:01:20 pm »

I love it!  I played the Apocalypse challenge awhile back and wanted to do one sometime with a story behind it, but could never think of anything interesting.  I look forward to reading more and sharing the adventure!
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« Reply #2 on: September 04, 2008, 05:56:50 pm »

Ooh, I like the look of this Smiley Well written and well illustrated; I'll be following this one for sure Smiley
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« Reply #3 on: September 09, 2008, 07:05:30 am »

this looks really good so far i look forward to reading more, please update soon
and i hope this story will keep you playing the challenge:D
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zombiekim
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« Reply #4 on: September 18, 2008, 01:57:40 pm »

Life went on. Ansly took a job as a paramedic, and slowly began to fix up what had become her home. Mostly she furnished it with what she found while out driving, like the barrel that became a crude fireplace.



She had always been crafty and artistic—in college, which seemed a lifetime ago, she’d loved to dance and to sew her own clothes. Making things just for the joy of it? That now seemed incredibly luxurious, even wasteful. Her time was now spent driving the ambulance, looting and foraging for goods, and lying awake at night, too terrified to sleep.


She had no sewing machine here, but she did have an awful clunker of a car to fix up. It was nice to be able to work with her hands again, and on something that could ultimately be useful.
Of course, there were days when she wished a perfectly new Mercedes-Benz would show up in the driveway, instead of this...this monster.
“You…you…I’m feeding you to the zombies, you piece of junk!”


As the endless winter wound on, Ansly found that it was becoming second nature to talk to herself.
“What I wouldn’t give for some fruit, like…raspberries. Strawberries. What? I know they’re not in season, but I think that’s kind of moot. Because it’s a nuclear winter and so everything’s out of season, that’s why. I’m just so sick of hot dogs and hamburgers and hot dogs and hamburgers and I think I might be getting scurvy. Do zombies get scurvy? I guess not. Lucky.”
Her medical job was surprisingly lonely. She would drive through the streets looking for sheets hanging on doors, or for people running out to meet her, then simply deliver them to the hospital--there was no 911, and she had very little training. Besides, people had become strangely disconnected since the incident. It was almost as if they had forgotten how to feel, how to care. Even she felt numb. In her former life, she had been very nice, and playful, if a bit on the sloppy side (or so she’d been told). She’d had a love of knowledge. Now, all she cared about was getting home to bed at the end of the day. And she was sleeping more and more.


Desperate to feel again, she traded one of Jane’s heavy quilts for a hideous, but working, word processor, and began to keep her own journal. It was difficult at first, but after the first week, she felt emotions beginning to penetrate the haze of fear and survival.


She laughed when she burned her hot dog dinner. I’ve made this enough to know better, she thought, helplessly shaking with a strange joy. One day, she came home from work to find butterflies, and she cried from the beauty of it.

Ansly knew what her mission was, and it wasn't to be a medic-taxi. She had to make people care about each other, even about themselves, again. And she—she with a bachelor’s degree in drama—would do it through Shakespeare.
She sought out survivors to act with her, to perform. Every one of them thought she was crazy at first, but many stayed to give it a try, perhaps intrigued by her energy and passion.
Then, one night, he arrived.


There was a knock at the door. Ansly was poring over a copy of As You Like It that she’d been fortunate enough to find that day in a looted bookstore. Her muscles tensed and she reached instinctively for her baseball bat. Tonight she might actually have to use it.
“Ansly?” came a hesitant but somehow familiar voice at the door. “Ansly?”
She threw open the door. “George Schweber,” she whispered, not believing the sight until he pulled her into a hug.
“Oh, my God, Ansly. It’s really true. Someone said they’d seen you out here, but I thought no way, no way would you come back here.”
“I guess I wasn’t that smart, huh?”


George had been her best friend growing up. While Ansly left for college on scholarship, he’d stayed to attend culinary school in town while working nights at the orphanage. It had been more than two years since she’d seen him. She’d hoped he’d come for her college graduation, but he’d been a poor pen pal in their time apart, and he hadn’t come.
At that moment, though, she was just overjoyed to see him. She didn’t want him to leave, but he promised he’d be back—he had to let the others know that he was safe.
“You could come with me,” he offered.
She couldn’t tell him that she was terrified of leaving home for any length of time, terrified that it would be gone when she returned. Even back when she drove an ambulance for a living, she would swing by home every hour or so, just to check. “Come back tomorrow,” she said.
He did come back the next day, and the day after that, and the day after that. Sometimes she came by the hotel where he and the others with him had set up camp. She was happy to see old friends there, but saddened when George told her the fates of others they’d grown up with: those who’d been killed in the blast, or in the ensuing chaos, or murdered.


Stronger for his friendship, Ansly poured herself into her work, and before long, she’d achieved her goal. People once again appreciated the dramatic arts, but more than that, they cared. They took care of themselves again, beyond basic survival, and they reached out to one another as a community again. And best of all, George moved in. The finicky water in the hotel had mysteriously shut off, and the others he lived with there were starting to leave, one way or another. Besides, and he couldn’t bring himself to tell her this, he worried about her safety.


“I know this is a little weird, but I only have one bed—not like there’s room in this house for two of them,” Ansly said, climbing in.
“It’s not that weird,” he said, thinking, This is weird.
“At least we can keep each other warm,” she murmured, falling asleep immediately.
Okaaay, time for a midnight snack. Or cold shower.

« Last Edit: September 20, 2008, 11:31:41 am by zombiekim » Logged

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Devomuffins
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« Reply #5 on: September 18, 2008, 03:00:21 pm »

This is great, can't wait to hear more!
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steelguy
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« Reply #6 on: September 19, 2008, 12:43:56 am »

Wow, cool. Things are moving for her.
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AjiDivine
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« Reply #7 on: September 19, 2008, 01:36:46 pm »

I love how you are telling a story as well as doing the challenge. I am trying to this challenge myself, though my founder is still in college at this time.
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zombiekim
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« Reply #8 on: September 20, 2008, 11:28:23 am »

Chapter 3: Heating Up The Nuclear Winter



Ansly was at work, and George was trying yet again to make hot dogs marginally more edible. It was useless. Until there was a better supply of food to this region, there would be nothing but Twinkies and whatever semi-foods had survived the blast.
Mostly, though, he was just trying to keep his mind occupied until Ansly came home. It had been more than a month since he'd moved in with her, and he still couldn’t help but worry whenever she left for work. There were just too many zombies and thugs and God knew what others out there to get her.
Suddenly, he heard a knock at the door, and he answered without thinking. And he never would have imagined who he would find standing there.
“Natasha?”
“George.”



“Natasha, I thought—I thought—“
“I know.”
“You left for work and never came back!” he said, holding her tight. It had been months since he'd seen her. Natasha, his old friend—his old girlfriend.
“I know. The Kalahachee Dam broke, north of the city, and it was my day to scavenge in the city, remember? And I was conscripted, George. By an army caravan going by to repair the Dam.”
“And they had you this whole time?” he asked, trying to stave off the uncomfortable emotions he was slowly recognizing. He was happy she was safe, of course, but…something was missing.
“Yes. Well, they told me that if I stayed voluntarily, they would get me safe transport out of the city after a few months. I tried to get a message to you a hundred times. But none of that matters, anyway. I got us passage out! There’s a plane leaving today, and we’re on it.”



“Passage just for the two of us?”
“Two was all I could get,” she said, still breathless. “What’s wrong?”
“Well, she came back. I’m—I’m living with her now, Nat. I can’t leave her behind.”
And at that moment, the front door opened. “Natasha, is that you?”



“You!” Natasha snarled. “Thank you so much for coming back. You ruined my life!”
“I don’t know what—what did I do?”
“Oh, of course, sweet little Ansly has no idea what she did wrong. You never noticed the way he used to look at you, right, sweetie pie?”
“Lay off, Nat,” George warned.
“Sure, sure,” Natasha said, eyes locked on Ansly. “Do you know how long I had to wait for him after you—“
“I said lay off, Nat!” George barked. She seemed to snap out of it finally, and she gave George a hurt look that he felt he would remember for the rest of his days. But he couldn’t let her talk that way in front of Ansly, could he?
Natasha ran out, and George (having always been a bit rough around the edges, but kind) followed her helplessly. Ansly stood rooted to the spot, reeling.



“Nat, please, don’t cry. I’m so sorry.”
“How long did you wait after you thought I died, George?” she whimpered. “How long did you care about me before you fell for her again?”
“I never stopped caring, but I…”



“Save it,” she hissed. “I don’t want to hear your excuses. You have fun with her, Georgie. Play your end-of-the-world Adam and Eve games out here in this shack. You know where I’ll be? I’ll be in a penthouse in the city, living rich and not giving a damn about either of you. You see how long you last out here. You just see.”



After that, things were different. George was distracted, morose; their easy camaraderie had been replaced by silence. He did tell her a little, here and there, of his history with Natasha, and Ansly thought she knew what was bothering him—guilt. But after the things Natasha had said, Ansly needed him to want to talk to her. Was his ex-girlfriend telling the truth about his feelings, or was she just lashing out because he refused to leave Ansly, Ansly who was just a friend?
One morning, George came home from his overnight culinary job—preparing and distributing food with the Red Cross—to find Ansly waiting quietly. It was barely dawn, and she looked as though she’d been awake all night.
“Hey, are you okay?” he asked.
“Not really.” She shifted in her seat at the table, playing absently with a tarnished candlestick holder they’d “salvaged” from a burned-out house.
“What’s—did something happen, or…” he checked her over anxiously, wishing that he had medical training.
“No, it’s just…” She smiled down at the candle. “It’s my birthday.”
“Oh. Oh! I’m an idiot. I’ve been preoccupied, An, I’m sorry.”
“No, it’s fine, really. You can still get me a present, you know.”
“Anything. How about a zombie slave? Would that be good?”



She laughed. “No, easier than that.” Taking a deep breath, Ansly finally looked up at him. “George, for my birthday, I want you to tell me if she was telling the truth about…about how you feel about me.”
His eyes bulged and his breath came out in a strangled gasp. He felt a bit like he’d been punched.
“I guess I don’t have to explain what I mean. And if you’re reacting that way to what I think you’re reacting to…” she trailed off, turning red. He’d never seen her look this embarrassed (and he’d known her during puberty).
Rising slowly, Ansly made her way over to him—though exactly how, she wasn’t sure. Her entire body was trembling and electric as she came closer, closer, up to his chest. “George,” she whispered. “I hope I’m not ruining our friendship, but I have to know. I love you, George. Do you love me?”

« Last Edit: September 28, 2008, 10:14:08 pm by zombiekim » Logged

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« Reply #9 on: September 23, 2008, 06:10:05 pm »




It seemed that they were both eager to make up for lost time.
So eager, in fact, that they were very soon married. Not in the eyes of the state, maybe, but there wasn’t much of a state left. But certainly in the eyes of the new addition to their family that had, well, predated George’s proposal by more than a month.


“Oh, well. Who’s counting the days? We don’t even have a calendar,” George said, laughing.
“It’s not like there’s anyone around to call the kid a bastard,” Ansly said.
“Ansly!”
“Oh, come on. He can’t hear.”
“You think it’s a he?” he asked, mesmerized. In the midst of all the destruction and desperation, this miracle, this new fresh light, still had found a way into his life.
“I’ll say this, if it is a she, then she’s a fighter. Oof,” she said, “whoever it is, they’re kicking mommy’s bladder.”


In spite of her lighthearted teasing, Ansly was still worried. How could she not be? There was still barely enough food for her and George, and he was currently giving almost all of it to her. Clean water was a joke, and the cold was unending. All Ansly wanted was a safe delivery and a healthy baby, and then…Then they’d keep scraping by.


“GEORGE!”
“Wh—Oh, no, no, no, we have to get you to the hospital!”
“No, no hospital,” she moaned.
“Come on, sweetie, we have to go.“
“George,” she said, her voice deadly even through her panting. “I worked for the hospital.”
“I know—“
“Shut up. You listen to me. Most of the doctors there are sadists, half-rate mechanics, and whatever psychos just get off on playing with people’s organs.”
“They aren’t all bad, you know that, and I can’t deliver a baby!”
“You are going to," she said, "and if you don’t stop trying to get me in the car, than this baby is going to have two mommies by the time it’s born. You got that?”
“Uh. Yes.”


But in spite of George’s inexperience and Ansly’s threats to his manhood, their first home delivery went off with nary a hitch.
“You were wrong about a boy,” George said, smitten with his two beautiful girls.
“Yes, but she’s going to be a fighter, I can tell,” Ansly murmured.
“Good thing, too. What should we name her?”
“Rosalind.”
“You sound pretty sure of that.”
“It’s Shakespearean. From the play I was reading when you showed up at my door.”
He beamed at his baby daughter. “Rosalind.”


Rosalind was a fighter—rarely sick as a baby, she was walking precociously and teething her way through everything in the house. She seemed to grow faster than she should, but since George and Ansly were first-time parents, they couldn’t be sure. Anyway, if that was the worst effect of their living in a nuclear zone, then so be it. Ansly could sew her new clothes as quickly as she grew out of the old ones.
Like her mother, she had beautiful black hair and loved to play games. There weren’t many other children for her to play with, of course, but her parents usually let her win, so she liked them best, anyway.


Like her father, she had a bit of a grouchy streak, though it manifested more as tough playfulness than genuine ill-will.
“I like you, snowman. I shall call you Professor Stupid Face, and together we will fight the zombie hordes. What’s that, Professor Stupid Face? You say that you are afraid of zombies? Well, that’s too bad, because you are the front lines. I’m going inside to shave dolly’s head.”


“You’re pregnant?” George asked, dazed.
“Well, that is generally what happens, when, you know.”
“I know, I know. I just…Has it been that long already? It seems like just yesterday Rosie was born.”
“It does seem strange, doesn’t it? Time flies.”
“If only we had better food. I just worry about the food, Ans.”
“I know. I do, too.” She sighed. “But this is good news, right? Maybe I shouldn’t be, but I’m excited.”
“Yes. I am, too,” he said, and as the months went by, his words became truer. He was excited. How could he have ever known that he could love this much?


“Mommy! Can I play with him? I want to play cowboys and zombies. Please please please?”
“When he’s a little older, sweetie. He’s too small to play with.”
“Nuh-uuuuh. He would fit in the wooden car Daddy made me! I could push him around the house and outside and he’d really like it. I bet he’d even fit on my sled if I tied him on.”
“Babies are too fragile, Rosie.”
“I’ll tie him really good!”


“Mooom, I named the baby!”
“He has a name,” George said.
“Beckett’s a stupid name.”
“Rosie.”
“Sorry, Daddy.”
“What do you want to name him?” Ansly whispered.
“Umm. I have to remember…oh, yeah. Butt Face!” she giggled.
“Well, at least he won’t get picked on in school,” George murmured.


Rosalind, for all her teasing, helped out more around the house as she grew older. She had to. George was developing new food techniques that would hopefully make it possible for them to one day eat like real people again. Meanwhile, Ansly was pregnant. At night she lay awake, craving fruit and milk and fresh bread and salad—none of the junk they ate, food that somehow hadn’t perished in the dozen years since the blast. By day, she fought nausea. It was unfair.
“Rosalind, sweetie, I appreciate that you’re helping with Beckett—“
“Whee! Upsy-daisy!”
“—but could you please take him out of the room when I’m—oh, my stomach…”
“Uh, sorry, Mom. Gross."


Ansly gave birth to a healthy boy, Sacha Butt Face grew up, giving Rosalind a play mate. He was outgoing, though from a very early age, he showed a fondness for bugs and a propensity for science, a sort of curiosity for the world that was better sated by books than exploration. Or, as Rosalind put it,
“Nerd!”


George, meanwhile, finally reached his goal of becoming a culinary master. He’d invented new ways to preserve food, and better ways to cook the artificial food. This meant three things to the Danger family: one, delicious food, without risk of scurvy; two, Ansly would never have to cook again, which she hated after two many years of smelling hot dogs; and three, George looked so handsome in his new work clothes that she didn’t want him to leave the house in the morning.


It frightened her a little, sometimes. How much she’d changed. It truly seemed like only yesterday that she’d been a kid, fresh-faced and naively returning to her hometown in a disaster situation. It was a disaster that the region—the nation—hadn’t recovered from, even now, fifteen years later. Instead, she’d adapted, fallen in love, had three beautiful children (with another on the way—if it was a girl, Ansly wanted to name her ‘Portia’). Still, how was it possible that she had lived through this? Through the loneliness, the isolation; through the hunger that roared up in her stomach, the bone-deep coldness that made her forget what it was to be warm, the dirt and age of everything around her that made her long for something, anything new?
Maybe Jane, her long-lost friend whose home she’d taken as her own, had been right. Maybe Ansly was stronger than she’d thought.


And maybe it was because of the family she had, the family she’d made. Her children didn’t mind that they had to wear re-fitted hand-me-downs, or that they couldn’t leave home to even go to the park or make new friends. On cold nights, they all piled into Ansly and George’s big bed, and they would listen to their parents tell stories of their own childhoods—stories about sleepovers and sneaking into movies and first dances and baseball. But those things were from a world that they hadn’t been born into, and so they didn’t miss them.
And George still looked at her the way he had when they’d been teenagers in the orphanage. Or maybe with a little less awe, but more warmth, more real admiration. He didn’t mind the way her body had changed from her pregnancies, or the lines around her eyes, and she didn’t mind his gray hairs or softer body. She wouldn’t have given this up for the world—not even that glittering world that had been blasted apart.

« Last Edit: September 28, 2008, 10:15:49 pm by zombiekim » Logged

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« Reply #10 on: September 24, 2008, 09:09:10 am »

Awww Cheesy Had to catch up, but it's shaping up really well Smiley How're you finding it, just out of interest? I was thinking about trying it a while ago, still might once my legacy's over Smiley
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« Reply #11 on: September 24, 2008, 09:21:36 am »

Try what? The apocolypse? Is it some sort of challenge? (btw, i know what the word apocalypse means, but in sims)

oh yeah! I nearly forgot! Great chapter..woah! They should get some contraception. O_O four babies and barely any food...
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« Reply #12 on: September 24, 2008, 10:24:45 am »

Aw, what a beautiful family!  I'm wondering the same thing Sadie is - how do you like the challenge?  It's very difficult with the food restrictions.  Reading your progress makes me want to try the challenge again sometime.  Great job - I love Rosie - she's a fun girl.
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« Reply #13 on: September 24, 2008, 10:52:16 am »

LOL Zorom - yes, it's a challenge, and one of the restrictions that applies is, there IS no contraception Wink There's limits in place until you peak a certain career, and the challenge ends when they're all lifted. She's linked to the page in her first post Wink
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« Reply #14 on: September 27, 2008, 11:59:48 am »

Thanks to everyone for your kind words :D I'm glad people are enjoying this.
I really do like the apocalypse challenge, because I get too bored with just the regular sims (and the legacy challenge, because they get rich too quickly). Though I do have to admit I'm cheating on one rule--I left out the "Law" career, because you have to lift it before you can lift Politics, Law Enforcement, and one other. I just can't do it. That's way too boring, to build a sim all the way up in their career for no reward. So no lawyers in the Danger family, haha.
I'm excited for the chapters coming up...Ansly's kids grow up to be really fun adults.

EDIT: I also realized that the last two chapters ended with Ansly and George making-out. HA!
« Last Edit: September 27, 2008, 12:01:53 pm by zombiekim » Logged

"T-REX ARE YOU THE SASSIEST DINOSAUR"
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