Author's Note - Please read from Chapter 1 to best make sense of this. This is not a quick stroke story. There will be sexy-times, but they will only happen as the story's pace dictates, and that won't start quick.
Edited 9 November 2019
All characters participating in sexual activities are 18 or older.
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Chapter 10
They walked across campus hand-in-hand, companionably silent on the surface but exploring each other via Hinn. Ray was amazed at how comfortable he was feeling information appearing and becoming instantly useful for him while navigating the real world. He'd always had a problem bumping into things as he tried to walk while using his smartphone, to the point where he no longer would pull out his smartphone until he sat down somewhere.
Entering Subterrania, one of the cafés under the university stadium, Ray saw Jess and Piet talking with high energy while Jules sat back and looked amused as he often did. Walking over, Ray said, "Jess Dougal, Piet van Dijk, Jules Arenson, this is Tauriz Aoud. We've recently started dating, and as I mentioned earlier, these are some of the brightest minds in the faculty, my dear."
"It is a pleasure to meet you," Tauriz responded.
"Dating? Ray? Quick, invest in ice skate manufacturers - Satan'll be calling in a huge order soon!" joked
Jess. Short, feisty, and with a short mop of blond curls, Jess looked a lot like if a young Shirley Temple grew up without changing much at all.
"Now, Jess. Just because you're our resident quantum computing professor and thus on speaking terms with all things demonic and sanity-shattering doesn't mean they have anything to do with me!" complained Ray.
"Ray, man, Jess never let that stop her before," said Piet. Moderately sized, spare in all ways, Piet was a linguist with few peers. After years of translating for the UN, he'd grown bored with political blather - his term - and joined the faculty to train the next generation to try to make self-serving politicians sound acceptable in other tongues.
"And Ray not having to deal with them doesn't mean they won't deal with him," Jess shot back.
Turning aside to Tauriz, Ray mentioned, "Jess is also our lapsed Catholic and expert in all things demonic. Punnily, being comp sci, she's also the expert in all things d-a-e-monic too."
Jess groaned and flipped a straw at Ray. "How you keep pulling out abstruse trivia of everyone else's fields won't make you many friends, Ray."
Jules seemed to ignore the wordplay and address Tauriz, "Welcome, lovely lady. As you can see, we have a historian, a quantum computer scientist, a translator,"
"Linguist!" corrected Piet.
"Your pardon, a not so cunning linguist," he continued to groans from the table.
Piet asked, "How long have you been holding that zinger, Jules?"
"Piet's happily monogamous for the last fifteen or so years to his husband," Ray explained in an aside to Tauriz. Adding the cunnilingus pun context via Hinn let her appreciate his friends' wordplay.
"And I am your kindly English composition prof, feared and hated by undergrads everywhere," Jules continued as if uninterrupted.
"Well, greetings again, everyone. You are all with the university, then?"
"Indeed."
"I just accepted a job here as well, in the physical education department. I will be teaching self-defense and Aikido this coming semester."
"Ah, the mystery evaporates! You two met on the mats!" said Jess.
"We did, Jess," confirmed Ray. "She flipped my tail all over the place out in Toronto. Quite demoralizing, but she was kind enough to go out for drinks with me after and soothe my wounded ego."
"Wuv, twoo wuv," quoted Piet.
"Well, we're not there yet, Piet! Sheesh!" Ray let a big exasperated grin show.
"'Yet'? Oh my, it IS serious, isn't it," Jess commented.
"If I'm lucky, Jess. Only if I'm lucky."
"The question is not if Ray's lucky or not, Jess. The question is if his luck is good or bad!" quipped Tauriz, to chuckles from around the table.
The group continued their banter as they ordered and enjoyed their meals. A pleasant hour later, they parted happily, returning to their various tasks.
"So, what did you think, m'dear?"
"They love you, Ray."
"They're very good friends of mine."
"Indeed, and they seemed to accept me easily."
"They're good people, Tauriz. They're curious about you, you'll get more questions over time, but they'll accept you as you are. In part, it's because we're dating, but also because they're just good people."
"I can see that, Ray. I was impressed - both Jules and Jess eyed my collar, but neither asked about it."
She smiled teasingly at him and gently squeezed his hand. They headed back across campus to his office in the quiet building as Ray wondered what his friends and colleagues thought about him now.
Back in the office, Ray suggested, "So, rather than wearing down your wrist scribbling away on paper, would you prefer to type them out?"
"One second, Ray," she asked. She seemed to be listening for something.
Reaching out to her via Hinn, he also heard his voice suddenly echoing as he said, "OK, m'dear."
Her head snapped to the left, and she bent at the waist to glare up at the bottom edge of his desktop. Both of them heard a quiet pop, and the echo disappeared.
She warned him via Hinn that she'd just disabled a device from his time, a 'bug.' Someone was paying special attention to them.
He looked around and didn't see anything out of place. He felt out the door and realized someone else had used a key on the door between his leaving and return.
She didn't much like that, implying preparation or social power, and he couldn't disagree with her.
She felt something change, and they realized someone had put a different bug on the outside of one of the windows. There was no physical component, it was just light, but they could hear the echo of their breathing at the far end of the steam of brightness.
One human controlled the physical device directing the light, and three other humans worked several hard plastic packages connected by a swarm of multi-colored wires. All were wearing headsets, and the headset connected wirelessly to one of the heavy plastic boxes that, in turn, forwarded the sound a long distance where many more listened to their work.