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Dear Condor,
I saw the letter that Velia sent you, and the photograph that she sent along
with it. I knew that she was curious about you, I just didn’t realize how
attached she had become to the idea of getting to know you more personally.
She’s been very lonely here. As you can see, she’s quite good-looking, but
she has a little trouble communicating with others. I think she jumped at
the chance to correspond with you, because the medium allows her to rethink
and revise her thoughts before they ever reach you. Just be careful with how
you approach the situation. A long-distance love story is romantic, but not
very practical. You and she will never meet in person, and even if
you can accept that, it will probably eat at her over time. Be nice,
and don’t just ignore her, but really try not to lead her on. She deserves
to be happy with someone who is living on the same planet, and she doesn’t
deserve to be distracted from such fulfillment and contentment. Okay, that’s
enough of me scolding you for something that may never be a problem. That’s
exciting news about your nurse, please let me know how that goes when she
gets back to you. It reminds me of that book two development where Roscoe
tracks down his estranged grandfather, and learns that he’s the one who
protected Audrey’s grandmother from that storm when they were young. It was
a cool symmetrical twist, and the writer handled it well. Though, I admit,
the adaptation could have done it better. I don’t like when the leads are
double cast into entirely different characters for flashbacks. It’s a little
cute, but mostly annoying. That’s just my opinion, I guess. Anyway, it would
be great to reunite with someone who was so important in your past. I hope
it goes well. She sounds lovely. I’m worried about Pascal and his trip,
though. I don’t like it when you have to breach the safe confines of your
floating platform at all, but I’m more worried than I was before; probably
because I know you two better now than when you were first telling me your
whole situation. I know he’ll have already left, but remember to tell dad to
be careful. I’m sure you always say something to that effect, but a lot has
changed since he last saw your neighbor. He could be dangerous, even if he
had nothing to do with our separation. A part of me hopes that he’s dead, or
simply can’t be found, just to avoid the risk of an encounter that does not
go well. Just be safe, and get him back home quickly.
Lounging on an imaginary beach,
Corinthia
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