Mollie’s Saga Continues…

“Who -?”

“Allow me to introduce myself,” The guy stepped forward and took her hands in his, “I’m Quo.”

“Are you-“

“Yes.”

“How did you know what – “

“I can read what is in your head, and your heart.”

Mollie was frozen in place, not moving or even thinking now. Her thoughts were broken up and all put back together wrong. She could feel them swirling in her skull. She shut her eyes so she wouldn’t get seasick.

“You won’t get seasick, I promise.” Quo told her.

At that, Mollie opened her eyes and frowned.

“Enough of this crap!” She said through clenched teeth. “What am I doing here!?”

“Is that Holy, or otherwise?”  Quo did his best to hide his smirk, but Mollie was on to him. Normally this kind of conversation would lighten her up. Not today.

“Enough of  YOUR crap!”

“Okay then, I see you’re busy freaking out and want to continue, so I’ll go crap on somebody else.”

Quo waved a little wave, then blew her a kiss, and was gone. No fanfare, lightning or puffs of smoke. He simply wasn’t there anymore.

This was turning out to be a really crappy day.

As she stared at the photo, she desperately wanted to dismiss this evidence, and she began holding on to herself and rocking. Then her mind grasped on to the idea that probably Travis was the great-grandson who looked amazingly like the guy in great-grandma’s album. Yes! That had to be it, she decided.

The alternate explanation could not be possible.

When Travis came in for lunch he found Mollie sitting at the table, staring into space.

She had not heard him stomp or come inside, and when he put his hand on her shoulder, she startled.

“Did you fall?” he asked her. There was a touch of panic in his voice.

“No.”

“Are you hurt?”

“No.”

Mollie studied his face. She had to know. She didn’t want to know. It was making her crazy. Tears welled up and rolled down her face. I don’t, but I have to know. Damn!

Then she bluntly asked, “What year is this?”

His forehead furrowed with worry lines, she knew he was thinking she forgot.

“Eighteen and Ninety Five,”

She took in a long breath, then sighed, burying her head on the tabletop under folded arms.

There was no sense in trying to explain to Travis that she was his great-great-cousin, from the future.  She could not even believe it.

Where was Doc Brown when she needed him?

 

Chapter Four

We have 2 ears and one tongue so that we would listen more and talk less  -Diogenes

Mollie was a 21st century girl. Because history was her least favorite subject, she crammed before tests, then forgot most of it. She knew next to nothing about the 19th century. 1895 was after the Civil War and the Gold Rush was petering out. That was the extent of her knowledge. Her Great-Grandpa Richardson was born in 1896. She remembered his birthday because he was her favorite grandpa. 1896 was only one year away, she realized.

After finding out when she was, she figured out where she was. In Calaveras County, between Big Trees and Hathaway Pines. The very same place she lived in 2013. Although, the town was not called Arnold yet. She had not been transported anywhere. It was a matter of when.

This explained his shock when she wanted him to sleep with her. She grinned whenever she thought about that. The look on his face was one of surprise and fear, and she wondered if he was a virgin.

Mollie re-played that fateful Monday morning, second by second, over and over again. Looking for something unusual or forgotten. When she found nothing out of her ordinary routine, she started over. She was fascinated. She was intrigued. She could not let it go.

There has to be an explanation! Is this temporary? Am I stuck here in 1895 the rest of my life? She hated not being in the loop about this. It felt like being a little kid again. Having no say in her own life.

Her appetite vanished.  Her nightie (a worn t-shirt of Travis’s) began falling off her shoulders. That figures, she thought sarcastically. She was losing weight without even trying. The time-travel diet. It works, but you can’t show off your new figure to your friends because they haven’t been born yet.

Her thoughts would often vector off on a tangent, her brain taking a vacation from trying to figure out the mystery. She might just write a book about this – as soon as MS Office was invented. She would have to use Word because she could not write without spellcheck. She had the vocabulary, and most of the grammar down, but her spelling sucked.  Her mom blamed it on phonics. Here, phonics had not been introduced to public schools yet – maybe she could learn now. If she felt like it.

She didn’t feel like doing anything. She was miserably homesick and nothing about 1895 was going to interest her.

She tried to convince Travis that she was fine, but knew he didn’t believe her. The quieter she was, the more he checked her forehead for fever.  Physically she felt well. Better than well, even her leg was cooperating with the plan.

[This needs to move to later on – after her figuring out what Quo meant by NOT here for a “vacation”] After days of moping about, she decided that, like it or not, she was here and being a baby about it wasn’t changing anything. Mollie thought maybe she was sent back in time to learn something or do something important. But what about the butterfly effect, and all that?  Time-travel in the movies always had consequences. The whole space-time-continuum thing confused the crap out of her, and she usually stayed away from movies or books about it. Now look at her.

She hobbled out of the loft, and into the kitchen. Travis had come in, and set out her lunch on the table, and went back out. Jeez. I must have really been zoned out not to hear him.

Lunch was beef jerky and an apple. What she wouldn’t do for a peanut-butter and banana sandwich right now. And an ice-cold Cherry 7-Up.  The jerky was surprisingly yummy, and she wondered if Travis made it himself. The apple was a bit bruised and bird pecked, but oh!, such a sweet and tart crispness it had. It was the best freaking apple she’d ever tasted.

“Man, I hope your tree is near here,” she said to the apple.

“It’s out back.” Travis said behind her. He was leaning against the door frame. Spying on her.

She whirled around in the chair to look him in the eye. Her arms were folded tightly across her chest and her jaw tightened. Her enough of this crap, look.

“Would you please stop sneaking up on me?” “I almost dropped my apple.”

She actually did drop her apple when his booming voice surprised her, but had caught it between her knees before it hit the floor.

“Nice catch,” he smiled, completely ignoring her look. “I’m happy to see you out of bed and eating something.”

Damn that dimple! It made her all gushy. She wanted to talk (flirt) with him and ask a million questions, but now her brain was rapidly going to mush.

The sound of hooves galloping towards the house, saved her from an awkward moment. Thank God it was Doc!  She was so excited to get some real clothes. Travis’s shirts were long enough to cover her halfway to her knees, but she was not presentable to anyone but Travis, who had seen pretty much all of her by now. She couldn’t go out of the house dressed in a man’s shirt. Not in 1895.

Mollie had to sit on her hands and force herself to be patient, for what felt like an hour, while the guys exchanged pleasantries. Then, Doc wanted to check her wound, and that meant more waiting. It was agony.

He had her sit on the table top to examine her leg. Once again she felt like a little kid.

“Well, my dear,” Doc said.  “Your leg looks wonderfully healthy. How does it feel?”

“Ugly!” she complained. “And the stitches itch like crazy.”

Doc gave her a bottle of yucky (but better than the other crap) smelling stuff.

“This won’t help the ‘ugly’ any, but the itching should go away.”

Doc applied some around the stiches and Mollie felt immediate relief.

“Would you please bring me a bucket of that stuff next time?”

Doc shook his head. He had a ‘trying not to laugh’ look on his face.

“You won’t need it very long,” he told her. “You can put a bit of weight on the leg now – just a tiny bit. But keep using the cane.”

“I’ll make sure she does,” Travis assured Doc, giving Mollie a sideways look. He reminded her of dad just then.

“Oh Heavens!” “I almost forgot!” Doc pointed at Mollie. “I’ll be right back.”

Strapped to Henry, Doc’s palomino, were two bulging satchels. Doc unlashed them and carried them into the house.

“I swear, the woman gave you everything in her closet! Mark my words – she will be asking for money to go shopping tomorrow.”

Mollie took a peek in the bag closest to her. Wow, Mrs. Doc knew how to pack things in. On the top layer were skirts, blouses, and an apron.

“I need a bath,” she announced. Her right arm extended and her index finger punctuated her sudden statement. “Then I will get dressed.” Mollie felt a little silly after she spoke. No one made me the Queen around here, she told herself. Yet, her ‘command’ was being carried out.

Travis put a huge pot full of water on the stove, and lit the wood under it. He and Doc carried in a wooden tub and set it close to the fire. Then they hauled buckets of water from a well (she guessed, she didn’t get out much, har-har), and dumped them into the tub.

“Sorry to be such a pain.” Mollie apologized.

“It’s a pleasure.” Travis said.

She wondered if going without a bath for 9 days was making it a pleasure for everyone.

While her bath was getting prepared, Mollie hobbled to the loft to get a closer look at her new wardrobe. Dresses (2 for around the house and 1 fancy enough for church)

She absolutely adored Mrs. Doc! Not only did she send girl clothes, but girl stuff! Things she knew Travis wouldn’t have around. A comb and brush, hair ribbon ,scented soap. A mirror.

 

“O. M. G.”

Mollie was so miserable with pain, itching and emotions that she did not even think about her appearance.  With no mirrors in the house, she had no idea how she looked. Now her face was staring back at her and it was hideous! Her hair, pulled back into a ponytail when she left 2013, was now a rat’s nest of greasy, tangled hair. “A real dirty blonde,” she told herself.  When she combed out her hair, the comb felt greasy and dirty. “Another item to go into the bath with me,” she decided.

She chose a cute light-blue gingham dress, with lace. Her shoe choice was Mary-Jane like slippers made with leather. She didn’t have to guess if it was faux or genuine leather, did she? And then there was underwear. In fact there was more underwear than she could imagine. A corset, beautifully hand stitched with a silk lining for comfort, she guessed, otherwise the bones would chafe. Her BFF was always complaining about her big boobs and having to wear under wires. Wait till I tell her about this! Among the granny panties and crinolines, there was no bra to be found.

The corset must be the bra as well as a torturous waist slimmer. Yuk.

When she was nice and clean she would try it. I hope the dress fits without it. When she came into the kitchen, the men were setting up a curtain (a rope strung across two beams and a quilt hanging on it) to give her privacy. Travis went outside and sat on the porch. Doc turned to her before closing the front door,

“Don’t get those stitches wet,” He warned her, sternly.

Mollie nodded.

How the Hell was she going to take a bath and not get her leg wet?  I’ll figure it out. I can’t stand feeling so gross. Her well-worn granny-panties were going into the tub with her too.

 

The bath water was the perfect temperature. Steam rose off the water’s surface. The tub was tall, small and thinner than what she was used to, but it worked to her advantage.  To get in, she grasped the left side of the tub with her left hand, shifting her weight enough to allow her to grasp the right edge, and lower herself into the water.  There was a tiny moment where she had all her weight on her bad leg, and the pain took her breath from her. Perched over the tub, before lowering herself into it, she had a flashback to gymnastics, specifically the parallel bars. A sideways smile crossed her face. She really sucked on the parallel bars.

The tub was the right height to hook her right leg over the side and use her knee to support it.  Now she could lie back and immerse her head and torso in the warm water.

Mollie hummed while taking the girly soap and scrubbing her hair, then dunking her head under water to rinse. She even hummed underwater. Next up were her face, neck and ears. The bathwater was turning a shade of reddish-brown that grossed her out.  After sudsing up and rinsing her torso, she managed to reach her right leg and wash it without getting her stitches wet. She was transforming into a girl again.

Next, she quickly, because the water was getting cold and muddy, scrubbed her undies and Travis’s shirt, hanging them from the sides of the tub to dry.

Getting out was easier than getting in. She could step out using her non-injured left leg and swing her right one up and out. The towel he left for her to dry with was clean, but torn and rough. “Like getting exfoliated at the spa,” she told Zeus. His ears perked up and he tipped his head to the side, giving her a confused doggie expression. He had lain by the side of the tub all through her bath, like a body guard.

“Okay,” she patted his head. “It’s your turn.” Zeus turned and fled outside, like he understood what she meant.

Once her hair was combed and she was dressed, she looked into the mirror again. Was it her imagination or was her complexion better? It was most likely that the old mirror, combined with the shadowy light, made her skin look less flawed. Probably wishful thinking that made her pores look smaller. The best news was that she didn’t look like she needed more sleep. The dark circles under her eyes were barely noticeable. In bed by dark and up at dawn was the routine around here. No staying up late to watch movies or read novels.

She smiled at the 19th century Mollie. Her hair, already starting to dry, was blonde again. The corset (a fancy word for a bra and girdle combo), acted like a wonder bra. This has to be why women put up with the damn uncomfortable things, she decided. She had to admit that she liked looking this way. Vah-vah-vah-voom, stuffed into a demure gingham dress. At least that was what she saw in the small hand-held glass.

The finishing touch – a dab of perfume from a sampler sized bottle. Courtesy of Mrs. Doc. The label had worn off the glass, so the name of the scent was unrecognizable. The perfume was nothing like any other scents she used. It was both delicate and powerful. It didn’t matter if it wore off in 5-minutes, she loved the scent and would enjoy it as long as it lingered about. Because this was the 1890’s, she assumed that Channel No. 5, and perfumes of its quality, had not arrived on the scene yet. Not that she wanted those hoity-toity ones. This unknown perfume was perfect for her.  [research what was available back then]

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

Travis and Doc were deeply involved in a discussion about the various mines in the area. Mollie managed to slip out the door, cane and all, without disturbing them. Now it’s my turn to be sneaky. She listened a few minutes to their unknown terminology, then cleared her throat.

Both men were startled. Now y’all know how it feels, she thought.

“Hi!” she said sweetly.

Travis awkwardly stood up and removed his hat. His smooth, self-confident manner had deserted him. He stared at her, mute.

“Wow!” Doc exclaimed. “You, my dear, are a vision of loveliness.” He took her hand and bowed down to kiss her knuckles. She nodded to him because she could not curtsy on cane. Pulling his chair closer to Travis, Doc told her to sit and went inside to get a chair from the table for himself. When he returned and settled in, the three of them sat silently.

Mollie felt Travis’ eyes on her when she was turned away from him. I am so loving this! For the first time since she arrived here, she relaxed and enjoyed the moment.

The two men were discussing local politics. She listened, curiously interested.

When relaxed turned into sleepy, Mollie excused herself, telling them she needed to lie down. Instead of assisting her, Travis scooped her up and carried her to the loft. He tucked her in and propped up her leg. He lingered around the loft as if gathering up courage. Every time she caught his eye, his mouth would open slightly, as if to say something.

Oh please! Just spit it out! Mollie thought loudly at him, hoping he would pick up on her thoughts telepathically. Sometimes she was successful passing along her thoughts. Not with Travis, however. He must be more thick headed than she thought.

“Sleep well,” he said, before returning to the porch.

Crap! He chickened out…

Still, Mollie pleasantly drifted away, on the bed of clouds. Perfume still lingering softly around her.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

She didn’t know what woke her – the loud explosion or Zeus’ yelping. Both sounds were ear splitting. Travis had already jumped into his jeans, loaded his shot-gun  and slapped his hat on. He put his index finger to his lips in a shushing motion and she nodded, replying by buttoning her invisible lip. He motioned “stay” with the gesture he used with Zeus, and slipped out of the house before she could silently protest.

The next sound she heard was Sam galloping down the dirt road towards Avery. Whatever it was, it was not close by.

The early morning air chilled her. Dawn was fast approaching and although she wanted to crawl back under the covers, she made herself get up and start a fire in the stove. She was already dressed – in the gingham dress she lay down in yesterday. It was as rumpled and droopy as she was. After changing into a plain skirt and blouse, she paced (more liked hopped) around the house, peering out windows when she passed by. What in the Hell was going on? Zeus had gone with Travis and she was completely alone for the first time since she ‘crossed over’.

Mollie knew, from experience, that the heebie-jeebies were right around the corner. So, when a stranger suddenly appeared at the kitchen table, she was not as freaked out as she normally would have been. That said, she was freaking out.

“Quo?” she asked warily.

“Yes.” the guy said.

He looked so different, and she would swear there was a faint halo hovering over his head. It was there, then it wasn’t. Dressed in worn Levi’s, a white sleeveless T-shirt and unlaced hiking boots, he could have played a James Dean type character in a movie. Except he was too tall and muscular- way more than old James was. Scarier too.

He sat with his hands folded in front of him. Not speaking, just looking at her, and grinning.

“Are you the one who put me here?”  Since his name was the Latin word for “time”, it was too much of a coincidence.

“Yes. And no.”

“That’s not an answer!” Mollie punctuated her statement by stomping her foot. Her left and uninjured foot.

“I needed to get your attention. That meant getting you away from all your electronic distractions for longer than five minutes.”

“I’ve been here longer than five minutes, bub. Go ahead, you have my attention.”

“What?  Are you expecting a lecture?” Quo laughed. “Like telling you anything would sink in – Ha!”

“What do you mean?”

“You’re a smart kid. I have every confidence that you will learn many life lessons during your stay here.”

“Oh No! You can’t just leave me here,” Mollie blubbered. “My leg will probably get infected and need to be amputated.”

“Is that what you fear the most?” Quo puzzled over this.

“Please!!  Just tell me what I am here for!”

When Quo held up his palm to quiet her, Mollie realized she would not be able to cry or beg her way out of this one.

“What I can tell you is what you are NOT here for.”

Mollie groaned.

“OK, I’ll play the game. What am I NOT here for?”

“You are NOT here for a vacation.”

She opened her mouth to ask another question, but he already vanished.  A wispy trace of glow lingered for half a second, then it too was gone.

“What the Hell?” she exclaimed, waking herself and Travis.

“What -?” he mumbled.

“Sorry, I had a nightmare,” she mumbled back. “Go back to sleep.”

“Awl-right,” he mumbled. He rolled from his back to the side facing away from her, still asleep.

She was still in her gingham dress and it was pitch black outside. She knew she had a dream. But it didn’t feel like a dream. Although their short encounter happened while she was sleeping, she knew Quo was real. Mollie could not explain to someone how she knew. It was more of a deep feeling.

It took a couple days for Mollie to catch on.

After Travis carried her to and from the outhouse, fixed her lunch and tucked her in for her afternoon nap, it hit her. OMG!

Travis was waiting on her like some kind of princess. He did everything for her except wipe her butt in the outhouse – thank God she could handle that herself.  She began to notice the effort required to do anything in this technology deprived world. There were no microwaves. The oven’s temperature had to be regulated by fire and not a digital read out.  A simple stew took hours to cook, even hanging over a hot fire.

No cans of soup or chili in the pantry. Just raw potatoes, carrots, onions. When Travis had luck hunting, they had meat in the stew. She knew better than to ask what kind of animal it was. She doubted there were cows or chickens living in the forest for his hunting pleasure. Unfortunately. Her pallet was too refined for gamey meat, and she only ate small portions, just enough to have protein in her diet. She craved a cheeseburger with French fries in the worst way.

It’s time to suck it up and pull my weight around here.” she told herself. “I don’t know why I’m here, but I know it’s NOT for a vacation.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Chapter Three Begins…

Journey to the Other Side

Our saga continues-

Chapter Three

The next couple days melted into one another, separated by dozing and sleeping. Mollie was only out of bed when carried to the outhouse. After breakfast, he removed her bandages, applied medicine and carried her back to bed. She only wore bandages at bedtime now, so she learned to ignore her leg. It was too hideous and upsetting to look at even though the swelling was subsiding.

Travis did not own any books, or a computer. Apparently he didn’t believe in electricity so that ruled out radio and TV as well. The lack of available water was barbaric. No telephone was cruel and unusual punishment.

Mollie came to the conclusion that Travis was one of those survivalist nuts.  She envisioned the barn to be stocked with lockboxes of rifles, ammo, dried and canned foods, gallon jugs of water. Camo colored fatigues and jackets, gas masks, binoculars, rain hats & slickers.  This mental survivalist inventory list kept her amused for a while, but then she would move on to thinking about how many men might be in the ‘militia’ with Travis. Were there women too? Probably. Men did not have exclusivity when it came to fears and paranoia. How often did the militia meet? Where did they hold their meetings? Since she didn’t see anyone visit Travis, either they met elsewhere, or did not meet often.

Mollie allowed her imagination to attended some clandestine militia meetings. She sat in the back, hoping to hear something interesting.  Most of the meeting was rednecks venting over how this country was “going to have a rebellion soon”.

Travis left the house once she was propped up and tucked in and did not return until lunchtime. After feeding her and escorting her to the outhouse, he left and did not return until almost dark.

In case she needed him, Travis put his cowbell on her night stand. Mollie often got tempted to ring it, just to have him come in and be with her. If only she could think of a valid excuse to ring it.

At least he slept inside the house now. The first few nights she was there, Travis slept in the barn and she got no sleep at all. Every noise and every creak frightened her. At breakfast, she pleaded with him to sleep in his own bed, where they both could be warm and comfortable. He sat looking at her in disbelief.

“Wait. You want us to sleep, in the same bed, together?”

“People do it all the time.”

“Married people!“

Mollie laughed, “I won’t make you marry me.”

“Really? What if I roll over in my sleep and brush against you?” he asked. “I’d rather not be bashed in the head with a cane.”

Mollie giggled. “I promise I won’t bash you either.”

“It’s not a -”

Pleeeease!” She interrupted. She didn’t want to hear his reasons why it wasn’t a good idea. She just wanted him inside the house with her. “It’s your house, it’s your bed – you should be sleeping in it.”

Travis opened his mouth to say something, changed his mind and sighed instead. Mollie smiled to herself. He was almost convinced, now she just had to wait for him to make the final decision.

Why did she feel so comfortable and trusting with this man? She had no clue. The weird thing was, she didn’t really care what the reason was. Normally she was Miss Analyze Everything to Death. Maybe she knew him in a past life. Maybe it was the laudanum.

All she knew was that she didn’t feel like a scared little girl when he was close by.

When she woke up the morning after Travis slept next to her, she lay there comfortable and cozy; in fact for the first time since she found herself in these woods, she felt completely safe.

She woke up alone. Feeling the sheet on his side of the bed and finding it warm, she knew it had not been very long since Travis left. The smell of coffee was enticing. She hated drinking it black, but the man had no sugar or coffee creamer in the pantry.  Determined to do something herself, Mollie reached under the bed and grabbed her cane. She wished she had slippers to wear. Her already chilled foot protested the ice-cold floorboards.

She made her way to the wood stove and poured herself half a cup. Then she held the cup with both hands close to her face, to enjoy the aroma and to warm her hands. When she heard Travis stomping his boots on the porch to knock off dirt or whatever before entering the house, she smiled. He was right on time for her much-needed outhouse run.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Today, after breakfast and Travis left the cabin, Mollie snuck out of bed. She was getting pretty good at using the cane since she went “exploring” twice a day. That, and she could tuck and prop her leg up nearly as good as he did, to keep him from knowing she had gotten out of bed. She kept her mouth shut about these new skills because she loved him tucking her in and carrying her everywhere. She caught herself thinking about it often.

She had already explored – OK, snooped – around the kitchen and the loft. Today’s mission was to check out a picture on the front wall, above the table. She just noticed it last night while they were eating supper. Now that she was only taking the laudanum before bed, her mind was a lot clearer and more observant.

In the bright of day, she saw that it was a framed photograph that hung in the corner. It was black and white with an old-fashioned setting, and it was Travis in the picture. He was so HOT, she could hardly stand it.

And that’s when it came to her. She had seen him before – it was in a photo that was nearly identical to this one. The closer she looked, she remembered in the other photo he was wearing the very same flannel shirt. He had the top two buttons undone and chest hair was peeking out. She nearly drooled when she looked at it.

Except, in the other photo, the black and white image was faded, and the border had cracked and turned yellowish brown, as old photos are known to do. He still looked very hot in that photo, which was why she remembered it, and where she’d seen it before, so vividly.

No. Way!”  

She denied even thinking about it, it was so absurd! It was only her imagination and the result of watching too many movies. Way too many sci-fi movies to be specific.

And yet, it would explain everything going on, except for the why and how. She had seen the evidence, pasted into her great-grandmother’s family album, with her own eyes. This very same photo of him. Under it, written in great-grandma’s neat and precise handwriting, read “My Cousin, Travis Richardson- at the County Fair. 1894.”

“Holy Shit!” she said.

“I beg your pardon?”  A voice that was not Travis’s spoke behind her. “I assure you that shit is not, nor ever will be, holy.”

After a short pause, giggles burst out from this person.  Why didn’t I stay in bed next to the cowbell? Mollie got up from the table and turned to face the comedian. He was not much taller than she was, and he could not have been older than 20. What she noticed next about him was his halo.

 

To be continued…

Looking Back

You know how people look at baby photos and go all soft and gushy?

Well, I get that way when I look at my dog’s puppy pictures. and when I found an old video we made (I filmed and she played herself), I had to share it.

It’s titled,  Meet Ziva To fully enjoy the clip, turn up your sound.

Enjoy!