[HECK YES mabel, you are the best partner a mystery hunter/detective/paranormal investigator could ever ask for.]
[He takes her hand and taps the pen to his chin for a second, before using his mouth to take the cap off and begins writing.]
Okay, so let's say we're somewhere only four hours away from us. That would only be possible if we were one of the last stops, or the last stop. We'd be traveling by plane, car, train or boat, but we can probably cross boats off of our list, because they travel like, really slow if they're not speed boats and we'd probably end up in the middle of the ocean.
[He pauses, before writing "(x) = mph" on her arm.]
If x, our variable, is equal to how many miles our mode of transportation travels, then we'd have to multiply it by how many hours we've traveled. [Writing some more. This time he's written a small list. "Car, Train, Plane." He flips her arm over and writes
"Car: (x) = 60, (x) = 70"]
I'm guessing we'd only be able to travel at the most 70 miles per hour by car.
Anyway if we were to multiply sixty by four, we'd have two-hundred and fourty. ["(x) x 4 = 240"]
That means we couldn't have traveled very far. We'd still be in Oregon, Idaho, or Nevada. ["(x) x 4 = 280"]
Even if we traveled two-hundred eighty miles, we'd still be only in Oregon, Idaho, or Nevada. [He stops for a second, placing a hand to his chin, getting ink on his cheek.]
1/?? im breaking it up so its not like ONE HUGE ASS TAG
[He takes her hand and taps the pen to his chin for a second, before using his mouth to take the cap off and begins writing.]
Okay, so let's say we're somewhere only four hours away from us. That would only be possible if we were one of the last stops, or the last stop. We'd be traveling by plane, car, train or boat, but we can probably cross boats off of our list, because they travel like, really slow if they're not speed boats and we'd probably end up in the middle of the ocean.
[He pauses, before writing "(x) = mph" on her arm.]
If x, our variable, is equal to how many miles our mode of transportation travels, then we'd have to multiply it by how many hours we've traveled. [Writing some more. This time he's written a small list. "Car, Train, Plane." He flips her arm over and writes
"Car: (x) = 60, (x) = 70"]
I'm guessing we'd only be able to travel at the most 70 miles per hour by car.
Anyway if we were to multiply sixty by four, we'd have two-hundred and fourty. ["(x) x 4 = 240"]
That means we couldn't have traveled very far. We'd still be in Oregon, Idaho, or Nevada. ["(x) x 4 = 280"]
Even if we traveled two-hundred eighty miles, we'd still be only in Oregon, Idaho, or Nevada. [He stops for a second, placing a hand to his chin, getting ink on his cheek.]