Come together with EShare

 

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"I don't usually take passengers who don't have a pulse," Young-min muttered, shifting into gear. "But for a mother, I’ll make an exception. It’s a flat rate: one story and a prayer."

"The old bakery on Hwasung Street," she whispered. Her voice sounded like wind through dry leaves. "I need to deliver a message to my son. He thinks I’m still angry about the broken vase."

Young-min stared at the flickering digital clock on his dashboard: . The fog on the outskirts of Seoul was thick enough to swallow his headlights. He was ready to call it a night until he saw her—a woman in a white sundress standing perfectly still by a rusted bus stop.

He pulled over, the gravel crunching under his tires. She opened the door, but the interior light didn't seem to reflect in her eyes. "Where to?" Young-min asked, reaching to start the meter.

Young-min froze. He looked in the rearview mirror. The seat behind him was empty, yet the door had clicked shut and the upholstery was pressed down as if by an invisible weight. A chill crawled up his spine, but then he saw the sadness in the mirror where her face should have been.

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The perks of EShare

  • Share content from any device by selecting Share Screen on your devices.
  • Enjoy two way touch functionality
    * when sharing from a Windows device.
  • Utilise Screen Mirror function to stream the main display back to your device for localised viewing
  • Take control over your display with Two-way-touch, an annotation tool & a screenshot function
  • Stream and view up to 9 devices at the same time
  • Up to 50 users in one session: switch easily between devices
  • Works on all mainstream operating systems, like: Android, Chrome, iOS, macOS and Windows
  • AirPlay and Chromecast are supported natively

Delivery-man-s01e01-movizland-com-mp4 -

"I don't usually take passengers who don't have a pulse," Young-min muttered, shifting into gear. "But for a mother, I’ll make an exception. It’s a flat rate: one story and a prayer."

"The old bakery on Hwasung Street," she whispered. Her voice sounded like wind through dry leaves. "I need to deliver a message to my son. He thinks I’m still angry about the broken vase."

Young-min stared at the flickering digital clock on his dashboard: . The fog on the outskirts of Seoul was thick enough to swallow his headlights. He was ready to call it a night until he saw her—a woman in a white sundress standing perfectly still by a rusted bus stop.

He pulled over, the gravel crunching under his tires. She opened the door, but the interior light didn't seem to reflect in her eyes. "Where to?" Young-min asked, reaching to start the meter.

Young-min froze. He looked in the rearview mirror. The seat behind him was empty, yet the door had clicked shut and the upholstery was pressed down as if by an invisible weight. A chill crawled up his spine, but then he saw the sadness in the mirror where her face should have been.

man

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