Tamsyn Muir

  • dust bynhas quotedlast year
    What greater debt could be accrued than that of being brought up?
  • Bluehas quoted2 months ago
    She didn’t run. Gideon never ran unless she had to.

    Yo cuando se me pasa el camión

  • escape from the ordinaryhas quoted2 months ago
    She gave a rather brusque hand-wave to the geriatric fan club behind her and they scattered: tottering, kissing the floor and rattling both their prayer beads and their unlubricated knee joints, disappearing into the darkness and down the tier.
  • escape from the ordinaryhas quoted2 months ago
    IT WOULD HAVE BEEN neater, perhaps, if all of Gideon’s disappointments and woes from birth downward had used that moment as a catalyst: if, filled with a new and fiery determination, she had equipped herself down there in the dark with fresh ambition to become free. She didn’t. She got the depression.
  • b5834347051has quotedlast year
    While we were developing common sense, she studied the blade. Am I right, Griddle?”
  • b5834347051has quotedlast year
    There were metal ladders going down into the pit, but why would you though.
  • reggiehas quoted4 months ago
    Gideon let herself rest on the apex extension of her arms, staring down sightlessly at the cold floor, the sweat frosting on her back.
  • reggiehas quoted4 months ago
    “Whoo,” she managed, scrubbing away tears of mirth. “Oh damn. Give me a moment. Okay—like hell I will, Nonagesimus.”
  • reggiehas quoted4 months ago
    Gideon said aloud, “Your parents must have been so relieved to die.”
  • reggiehas quoted4 months ago
    Gideon could only see the back of his head, but he kept looking at the girl who’d basically clouted him like a whipped dog, the arrogant line of his head and shoulders drooping.
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