Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Category: year26 (Page 34 of 92)

I posted an entry each day during my 26th year of life.

Day 233: ultrasound

Today was a pretty amazing day.  Most of the day was relatively normal.

I went to work.  I closed some bugs.  I wrote some loose storylines.  I ate a Rueben.

But then, Katie and I went to the hospital and I got to see my baby in the grainy black and white world of the ultrasound.  I got to see its head, its brain, its arms and legs, even its spine!

There is definitely some kind of organic being growing inside my wife.  It was awesome and unbelievable and a little scary.

The only thing our unborn child didn’t want to show off were its naughty bits.  So…we don’t know a definitive answer on the big gender question yet.

I’ll put up a scan so you can look at it and pretend to be as enthralled and interested in it as I am, although that can’t possibly be true when it’s not your baby (and probably even less interesting for those of you who already have one or multiple children).

Still, seeing its spine?  That was something else.

Day 232: a winter’s tale, part 3

“Winter?  You still down there?”  Argon’s voice came crackling over the ship intercom.  His voice, as always, was smooth and confident, but there was a note of urgency in it that wasn’t often there.

“I’m here,” replied Winter.  “What’s going on?”

“I wanted to let you know that we’re leaving hibernation mode.  So, stay away from the engines.”  Winter sighed.  Great.  “Oh, and did you fix the diagnostic systems yet?”

“No, sir,” Winter replied.  “Not yet.  I narrowed it down to an overheating panel, though.”  There was a moment of silence before Winter plowed onward.  “With all due respect, Captain, bringing the ship’s power up will probably fry this panel.”

Another few seconds of silence, before Argon’s voice came back onto the intercom, slightly louder, slightly more aggressive than before.  “OK Winter.  Here’s the situation.  We’ve got incoming Invaders and our ship might as well be a cardboard box for all the good it does us in hibernation.  I’m sorry you’re stuck down there during this, but I can’t allow any marmots onto this ship.”

A mixed blessing, then, thought Winter.  With a marmot attack, he’d be able to get out of this sauna of an engine – only sure to get hotter once those engines were going full blast – and maybe even get a chance to nap while locked down in his room.

“Thanks for letting me know, Captain.  I’m going to head over to my room, then.  Let you military types do what you need to do.”  Winter stepped away from the panel and toward the door.  Behind him, the engines were starting to spin.

“No can do, officer.”  Argon sounded more and more apologetic with each sentence.  “We’re locking down all the doors now, and besides, we need someone in that engine room.  If that panel is overheating, we’ll need someone to contain any potential fires that break out.  Also, that engine room is one of the weak points on the ship.  We’re dispatching a team to meet you, but if an Invader latches on before they get there…”  Argon’s voice trailed off as he let his words sink in.  Winter looked over at his standard kit, which he had left hanging from the handle of now-locked door.

“You’ve got your kit, right?”

Winter clenched his jaw and closed his eyes for a few seconds.  He opened them again, confirming that this wasn’t just a bad dream, before striding over and grabbing his standard issue pistol from his kit.

“Yes, sir.  Of course I do.”

Day 231: electricity?

An electrician came over today and helped us get our lights back on.

Then, he said some stuff about lines and fuses and breakers that I didn’t fully understand, but I think the gist of it was that although all our lights and outlets work again, there’s some funky wiring that causes our fuses to be bypassed by some loop/crossing of wires somewhere that – although not dangerous – is not the “right” way to do things.

So, maybe we’ll have an electrician over again in a little bit to do some more wiring work.  But, for now, everything is back on and humming again!

Also, I discovered where our master breaker box is, which should be useful should anything similar to what happened a few days ago happen again.

If you follow this blog, you might have noticed another post earlier today that mentioned Welkin’s Journal.  This is a experimental podcast that I’m trying out that is the journal of a character in the video game Valkyria Chronicles.  This is probably of interest to only a few of you, but if you like hearing my voice, maybe you could get something out of it without knowing what the video game is about.

Time for a fudge bar and some sleep.

Day 230: a winter’s tale, part 2

Six hours earlier, Winter stood amongst the engines, those behemoths, with his hand tentatively reaching out toward a glowing panel on the wall.  The ship shook momentarily and the momentum drove his palm directly onto the panel.

“Damn!”  He pulled his hand back quickly from the hot metal.  “Turn it off!” he shouted, over the churn of the engines.  The whine slowly died down, while Patrick Winter examined his hand.

“What happened?”  The voice came from around the corner, followed shortly by the face of Jason Kapers, partially concerned, partially amused.  “I’ll assume it didn’t work?”

“No, it’s still overheating.  And I may have burned my hand.”  Winter held up his hand for Jason to see.  Jason winced silently.

“Why don’t you take a break,” said Winter, “and go grab us something to eat.  I’ll bandage my hand and take another look at the panel.”

Winter cursed to himself as Jason ran off, closing the hatch the engine room behind him with a clang.  This was all wrong.  The ship was brand new, top of the line stuff.  It self-diagnosed problems and could fix them automatically, while the entire crew slept.  So it was unlikely enough that anything would require maintenance.

But of course, if the diagnostic systems themselves fail, they’d need manual repairs.  In a perfect storm of coincidence, the Starcruiser’s diagnostic system just happened to break when the majority of engineering team had been on a research mission on the planet’s surface.  So Winter, the only officer and “engineer” on board, had been tasked with repairing the system.

Winter had tried to argue, in vain, that he was an electronics engineer and that this problem was almost certainly mechanical, but Argon would have none of it.  An engineer was an engineer to him, with all other adjectives preceding the title as superfluous bits added on by unnecessary academy classes.

So, Winter was here in the engine room, trying to trace power lines, burning his hand, missing meatloaf day.  Winter only hoped that Jason would bring him some meatloaf instead of the distressingly hardened evaporated sandwiches they had in the vending machines around the ship.

“Damn!” Winter shouted, as he hit the malfunctioning panel with his good hand.  The cover flopped open, mockingly, as a few lights lit up inside.

Well, now, thought Winter.  That’s interesting.  That’s a lot of power being drawn into the starboard shields.

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