[ rolls over, stares at the bunk above her, then speaks up again. ]
Well. In any case. Quick rundown of what I remember from the mansion, in case this place decides to keep copying it:
[ i'm bullet noting this for readability let me live ]
- The good news is... you'll probably feel fine by the time the trial starts tomorrow, if these conditions are like with the mansion. - Those strange side effects tend to tie in with wherever it was you slept. Anyone who slept in their own rooms didn't wake up to anything the next day unless it was involved in a murder, but people sleeping in the library, for example, usually ended up inexplicably knowing things tangential to how the murder happened. - The bad news is, no matter how hard you look, if you aren't one of a few arbitrarily decided people who can see the trace amounts of a particular piece of evidence, you won't be able to find anything at all before the trial starts. Everyone else just sees, feels, smells... an illusion, I suppose, of everything being perfectly normal.
Illusions... that makes an unfortunate amount of sense, and lines up well with what others have experienced. Perhaps not to the same extent, but I think many of us have had our senses affected in some way the first time around.
no subject
[ rolls over, stares at the bunk above her, then speaks up again. ]
Well. In any case. Quick rundown of what I remember from the mansion, in case this place decides to keep copying it:
[ i'm bullet noting this for readability let me live ]
- The good news is... you'll probably feel fine by the time the trial starts tomorrow, if these conditions are like with the mansion.
- Those strange side effects tend to tie in with wherever it was you slept. Anyone who slept in their own rooms didn't wake up to anything the next day unless it was involved in a murder, but people sleeping in the library, for example, usually ended up inexplicably knowing things tangential to how the murder happened.
- The bad news is, no matter how hard you look, if you aren't one of a few arbitrarily decided people who can see the trace amounts of a particular piece of evidence, you won't be able to find anything at all before the trial starts. Everyone else just sees, feels, smells... an illusion, I suppose, of everything being perfectly normal.
no subject
[that's... surprisingly straightforward]
Illusions... that makes an unfortunate amount of sense, and lines up well with what others have experienced. Perhaps not to the same extent, but I think many of us have had our senses affected in some way the first time around.