- role pm:
- Kiyoko wrote:
Your daughter brings home the school newsletter that day, crinkled into a pulp from being shoved ungracefully into her knapsack. You raise an eyebrow as she disappears up the stairs, before unfurling the pulverized piece of paper and laying it flat against the coffee table, your mug the only thing holding the darn thing flat.
The newsletter contains typical school fare: there was going to be a chocolate bar fundraiser next month to raise money for end-of-year trips. Other notable items included tickets for a play, notices on report cards, and a reminder to wear red for school spirit day. As you stir your coffee, you conjure up a list of family friends and acquaintances that you'd fire off a quick email to; you didn't want to be stuck driving around town with your daughter and a box of chocolates for hours. Once you finish with the newsletter, you toss it into the recycling bin.
The next newsletter comes a month later. You remember your daughter sliding it across the table before mentioning that her teacher had told them all to be careful. Though she didn't elaborate, you knew the reason why: there had been a murder near the school, down a block from the neighbourhood convenience store. As you pour over the newsletter, you realize that your daughter’s route to school cuts through that very store’s parking lot.
Over dinner that night, you ask your daughter if you could drive her to school the next day, but your daughter resists. She's not a kid anymore, she says, and she can walk home by herself if she needs to - plus, she’d feel embarrassed if you dropped her off. Your face twitches a little, but you decide to place your faith in your daughter. Maybe you were just being a little overprotective…
A month passes. Your daughter brings home newsletters almost weekly from the principal's office, mass-printed cautionary warnings and appeals for calm. You didn't need a newsletter to tell you any of that, though; every night the evening news would play a clip from the mayor, urging everyone to stand together as the body count climbed higher and higher.
You knew your daughter wasn't immune to all of this, either. One night, she had appeared in the doorway of your room, barely holding back tears before she crawled onto your bed. Safe in the confines of your sheets, she whispered to you that her friends had found a bullet hole in the wall of one of the classrooms, a bullet hole that none of the teachers were willing to explain. Her friends had concluded it was a grisly sign from the murderer, but she wasn’t so sure. Gone were the airs of a confident pre-teen, replaced with the shaky voice of a child. You had responded by simply pulling your blanket over her, but other than that you had no idea what to say.
The final newsletter comes soon after. It's not so much a newsletter as it is an ultimatum: a letter stating that school has been cancelled indefinitely for student safety. Your throat tightens when you read the reason why: the parents of a student at the school had been brutally murdered a few days prior, with the student in question missing...
You glance over at your daughter sitting on the couch. Without warning, you stride towards the living room, your arms wrapping around your daughter's waist as you pull her tightly towards you. Your daughter chokes out a half-hearted laugh and asks you if you're alright, but you don't respond. For what feels like an eternity, you hold her like that, as if she'll disappear from this world the moment you let her go.TOWN
As long as you are alive you will
enforce a curfew, preventing all players
from sending in actions after 4pm PST.
'crawls into thread
I've had a pretty bad headache all day so not up much for speculating.
@Cure we had similar thoughts after we died I think. When I saw I flipped as mafia I was like "omg what if murdering other players made people mafia"
I guessed three times for my name but was wrong each time.