“...and please watch over my dearest Elaine’s soul. Amen.” Mr. Brown said in a prayer before he lay down to sleep on the night of October 3rd, 1994. Mr. Brown was a very wealthy 34-year-old man who lost his wife a year ago. She died in a car crash, but he refused to accept it. Every night after she died, he would wait for her to come home. He would sleep on the couch near the front door of his grand mansion, but she would never return. Eventually, he gave up. Deep down, he knew she was gone from the start. Mr. Brown was now a man with nothing but his seven wonderful and obedient 12-year-old septuplets (Tara, Barbara, Caitir, Caitlin, Gabby, Jenna, and Mackenzie), multiple people working for him in his insanely large mansion, and his billions of dollars. Mr. Brown shut his eyes and was soon sleeping like a baby.
A sinister laugh echoed in the hallway. The door to Mr. Brown’s dark room slowly opened, and a black figure walked in.
“You have treated me terribly... all my life. And those kids... they were just as bad.” The figure said. Mr. Brown woke up to see a knife coming down at his heart. A small scream escaped his mouth before...
Clink. The knife hit the ground, crimson red blood dripping from the blade. The person bent down to grab the knife when they heard footsteps running down the hallway. The footsteps were coming closer and closer. The person hid in the closet and heard the door bust open. The mysterious person didn’t notice that they dropped their knife by the bed. The person heard heavy panting.
“Are you OK, sir?!” the woman panted. She turned on the light to see Mr. Brown lifeless on the bed, with a stunned expression on his face. She was moving to the other side of the bed when something cut her bare foot. She looked down and saw the knife on the ground. She picked up the knife and ran downstairs to her room.
That was close, the shady person thought. They wiped their forehead with a gloved hand.
The next morning, all the headlines said “Rich Man Murdered!” and the 11-year-old paper boys all screamed, “Rich man murdered! Read all about it in today’s newspaper!” Detective Ellis bought the paper from a boy and thanked him. He got in his car and drove to his office.
Detective Ellis slammed down the newspaper on his desk. Taking a pipe out of his mouth, he said, “Things like this are what get food on my table and money in my pocket. It’s sad, really, what happens to these poor people. ” Ellis headed straight out to the mansion. Wow, a mansion. So many possible suspects. So many places to inspect, he thought.
Bzzt! The sound of the doorbell echoed through the unusually quiet house.
“Kids, I have to get the door, continue working, please. You have a test tomorrow!” The children’s nanny said. She got up from her desk and went to the door. She looked through the peephole and saw a man wearing the clothing of a detective. She typed in the security code, opened the door, and said, “Come in.”
“Good day to you, ma’am.” Detective Ellis said.
“And a good day to you, sir.”
“Thank you.”
“Nobody called a detective yet, how did you find out about... you know.”
“It’s in all the papers. You do realize everybody in the house is a suspect, don’t you?”
“Yes, sir”
“Have you told his children?”
“Not yet, sir.”
“They’ll find out sooner or later, you know.” The nanny thought about this, then rushed into the living room where the children were being homeschooled.
“Children! Come, sit.” The children all sat on the couch. “I know you just lost your mother not that long ago, but,” some of the children were already on the verge of tears. “It pains me to say this, but last night, your father was... murdered.” Some kids cried to what seemed to be no end. Others stood strong, but you could tell they were about to cry.
“By who?” Tara sniffled.
“Well, Tara... we don’t know. There’s a detective here now. He’s going to look for clues to help us find out. Class is dismissed for a few days. No test tomorrow, kids.” All the children rushed upstairs except for Caitir.
“Will he help us?” she asked. She wasn’t crying, but she wanted to.
“We don’t know. But I’m sure he will.” After hearing this, Caitir slowly walked up to her room without a word. When Caitir left, the maid walked in.
“Did I just see the smallest... smile, Nina?” the maid asked the nanny.
“No, Mary. You’re seeing things,” the children’s nanny lied.
Confused, the maid said, “Okay...” and walked away.
In the girls’ room, everything was silent until Mackenzie heard a faint knock. She tucked her silky brown hair behind her ear and opened the door. Detective Ellis asked, “Can I talk to you girls?”
“Yes,” they all answered.
“Girls, I know it’s hard. You know, the same thing happened to me, but with my mother. My father killed himself to be with her—and I didn’t know anything about my dad until somebody came to my house to tell me two days later. I was 10. Every night in the orphanage, I promised to my mother that I would find out who killed her. Here I am, 27 years later, trying to find out who killed your father.”
“Did you ever find your mother’s murderer?”
“As a matter of fact, yes. It was her maid from many years back. In her defense, the maid said that she treated her horribly. She got the death sentence for murder not too long ago. It turns out that she was the murderer of many people she worked for.”
“Oh, goodness...” the girls said.
“The woman was also a great friend of mine. It was sad to find out that it was her that did it.”
“I’m sure it was.” Barbara and Jenna said in unison.
Detective Ellis dabbed his eyes and asked, “Who do you think murdered your father?”
All the girls were silent except for Gabby. “I don’t want to think about who could’ve done it. I mean, we’re so close to everybody in this house, and Dad was, too. Why would anybody have a reason to hurt—or kill—him?”
“I don’t know, honey. But we’re going to find out, OK?” Gabby nodded. “What’s your name, sweetheart?”
“Gabby.” All the while, the nanny was outside the door. She put on some gloves ran to the maid’s room. She got one of the maid’s shoes and threw it where the knife was.
When the nanny was away, Mackenzie said, “I think it was the maid. Dad was always sending her to work, and more often than not, she would curse under her breath about it. We’re not being sent to an orphanage, are we, sir?”
“Maybe so. And no, you won’t be. You have plenty of family and people serving you. They will definitely help you. I’m going to check your father’s room. Stay safe, girls.”
When Detective Ellis walked in Mr. Brown’s room, the first thing he saw was the maid’s shoe and the knife. He took them in for examining and found the maid’s fingerprints on the shoe and doorknob, but none on the knife. He was confused, but he had the maid put in court and arrested for murder. No matter how much she protested, the judge and jury stuck to their decision.
Ellis returned to the house to tell the girls who was guilty. He walked in the room to find all the children missing, except for one, Barbara. She was pretending to be asleep.
Detective Ellis said, “I know you’re awake.” Barbara slowly opened her eyes. She was shaking. She started to get up, but Ellis told her to sit back down. “Tell me what happened.”
Barbara resisted for a moment, then gave in. “Sisters... gone...” was all Barbara managed to say before she broke down into tears. She ran to the detective and squeezed him as hard as she could. She was the most timid of them all, and all she knew was that her sisters were gone and she wasn’t there to help.
Please voice your opinions!
Last edited by imnotbob (2011-12-18 18:32:41)
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Not found
Error 404
Last edited by RedRocker227 (2011-12-18 18:09:13)
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Oh GEEZ
I typed up the whole link because this dumb laptop won't copy/paste.
I'll try to type it AGAIN
EDIT: I looked over it and it was all right
>:(
Last edited by imnotbob (2011-12-18 18:14:20)
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imnotbob wrote:
rufflebee wrote:
It moves fast
Had to be short D:
make it longer D:
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videogame9 wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
rufflebee wrote:
It moves fast
Had to be short D:
make it longer D:
No, if I make it more than 5 pages, I get less credit
D:
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*Snores*
*Summarize this please?*
*Yawn*
Oh, you wrote this? Cool.
A murderer mystery. C:<
Last edited by Solarbuddy (2011-12-23 01:31:56)
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Creepy, but awesome!
Just a suggestion, though, maybe you could make the line when the girls say "Oh. goodness..." a bit more realistic. Maybe "Yikes" or something.
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imnotbob wrote:
The figure said. Mr. Brown woke up to see a knife coming down at his heart. A small scream escaped his mouth before...
Clink. The knife hit the ground, crimson red blood dripping from the blade. The person bent down to grab the knife when they heard footsteps running down the hallway. The footsteps were coming closer and closer. The person hid in the closet and heard the door bust open. The mysterious person didn’t notice that they dropped their knife by the bed. The person heard heavy panting.
Large overuse of "the" here. It's not adding anything to the theme or mood and ends up sounding choppy and takes the reader away from the moment.
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well
you shouldn't just say things like "he refused to accept it"
you have to say it in a different way or else imply it psycologically
I like post-modernism but starting it with a quote is weird
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soupoftomato wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
The figure said. Mr. Brown woke up to see a knife coming down at his heart. A small scream escaped his mouth before...
Clink. The knife hit the ground, crimson red blood dripping from the blade. The person bent down to grab the knife when they heard footsteps running down the hallway. The footsteps were coming closer and closer. The person hid in the closet and heard the door bust open. The mysterious person didn’t notice that they dropped their knife by the bed. The person heard heavy panting.Code:
Large overuse of "the" here. It's not adding anything to the theme or mood and ends up sounding choppy and takes the reader away from the moment.
Thanks, but the person's supposed to stay unknown (even the gender)
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imnotbob wrote:
soupoftomato wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
The figure said. Mr. Brown woke up to see a knife coming down at his heart. A small scream escaped his mouth before...
Clink. The knife hit the ground, crimson red blood dripping from the blade. The person bent down to grab the knife when they heard footsteps running down the hallway. The footsteps were coming closer and closer. The person hid in the closet and heard the door bust open. The mysterious person didn’t notice that they dropped their knife by the bed. The person heard heavy panting.Code:
Large overuse of "the" here. It's not adding anything to the theme or mood and ends up sounding choppy and takes the reader away from the moment.Thanks, but the person's supposed to stay unknown (even the gender)
'the person" is not the only possible pronoun for them, that remains genderless, though! Starting a sentence with They, It, them, and male-pronouns often go for anyone, until gender is cleared up.
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soupoftomato wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
soupoftomato wrote:
Code:
Large overuse of "the" here. It's not adding anything to the theme or mood and ends up sounding choppy and takes the reader away from the moment.Thanks, but the person's supposed to stay unknown (even the gender)
Code:
'the person" is not the only possible pronoun for them, that remains genderless, though! Starting a sentence with They, It, them, and male-pronouns often go for anyone, until gender is cleared up.
Fair enough.
Thanks!
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imnotbob wrote:
Detective Ellis slammed down the newspaper on his desk. Taking a pipe out of his mouth, he said, “Things like this are what get food on my table and money in my pocket. It’s sad, really, what happens to these poor people. ” Ellis headed straight out to the mansion. Wow, a mansion. So many possible suspects. So many places to inspect, he thought.
I'm doing this one piece at a time but, there is absolutely no reason for him to say this. He is not explaining to anyone why he does such gruesome work (which is what seems the context SHOULD be).
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Wickimen wrote:
Some grammar stuff but I'm guessing you don't want me to nitpick over this
I, however, was born for tearing apart the hard work of others piece by piece.
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soupoftomato wrote:
imnotbob wrote:
Detective Ellis slammed down the newspaper on his desk. Taking a pipe out of his mouth, he said, “Things like this are what get food on my table and money in my pocket. It’s sad, really, what happens to these poor people. ” Ellis headed straight out to the mansion. Wow, a mansion. So many possible suspects. So many places to inspect, he thought.
Code:
I'm doing this one piece at a time but, there is absolutely no reason for him to say this. He is not explaining to anyone why he does such gruesome work (which is what seems the context SHOULD be).
I was thinking of changing it to, like
Off to solve another case, Detective Ellis thought. He was a cunning detective, and to say he loved his job would be an understatement.
And the end to
Barbara now sits at the same desk Detective Ellis sat at 16 years ago. She's one of the best detectives New York has ever seen.
Last edited by imnotbob (2012-01-19 18:55:38)
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soupoftomato wrote:
Wickimen wrote:
Some grammar stuff but I'm guessing you don't want me to nitpick over this
Code:
I, however, was born for tearing apart the hard work of others piece by piece.
That just goaded me into it
I'll be back shortly
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Wickimen wrote:
Some grammar stuff but I'm guessing you don't want me to nitpick over this
It's pretty good but you could have been a little bit more vivid with your descriptions
I caught all my grammar errors...
I think.
Would've been easier had I had a peer reviser (I checked out before I could get one)
Thanks!
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