trustfellows: (Default)
Trustfell Mods ([personal profile] trustfellows) wrote in [community profile] trustfell2017-09-17 11:48 am

WEEK 2.

WEEK 2

Two people are dead. Jean Kirstein and Caren have both died due to a tragic accident. Of course, you're not entirely innocent, are you? You voted, you played into this game the Coordinators are running. But you know the stakes now. You know what failure to complete Rule Seven really means.

No more excuses from here on out.

Saturday is given to regrouping and sleep; come Sunday morning, the clock chimes the hour at seven o'clock and there are no dead bodies to be found, so it can be assumed that all of you are safe for the time being. That said, you'll be feeling a little groggy when you wake up; it seems you've regained something that you didn't realize you'd lost...

Of course, exploring the building from here on will reveal something new: namely, a stairwell in the northeastern corner, leading upwards toward a new floor entirely. Another sign of how things are going to progress around here, maybe; chances are you'll enjoy what you've been given, but was it worth the lives of two people to obtain?

PARTICIPANTS REMAINING: 33


PARTICIPANTS REMAINING: 32


SUNDAY | MONDAY | TUESDAY | WEDNESDAY | THURSDAY
[OOC: Welcome to week two of Trustfell! Feel free to make as many top levels as you'd like and tag out to other characters! This post is for all of your interactions this week... at least until the weekend. Don't forget to save those threads for coins and the activity check!

If you'd like to get in contact with the Coordinators, you can do so through private meetings with Alena!]
bloodbiter: (i don't know who ate their popcorn)

[personal profile] bloodbiter 2017-09-21 11:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I see! They both sound interesting.

[A pause, then, but it makes her curious.]

You consider those types of subjects light reading?
notaccurate: (06)

[personal profile] notaccurate 2017-09-22 01:59 am (UTC)(link)
It depends on the material, but a basics book for either of them would be light reading, yes.
bloodbiter: (on a scale of one to stupid)

[personal profile] bloodbiter 2017-09-23 02:11 am (UTC)(link)
I see. Do you study them as a leisure activity, or is it related to your profession?
notaccurate: (06)

[personal profile] notaccurate 2017-09-23 02:33 am (UTC)(link)
Both, I would say. My profession and my leisure are, generally, related to each other.
bloodbiter: (on a scale of one to stupid)

[personal profile] bloodbiter 2017-09-23 02:36 am (UTC)(link)
And what is your profession, precisely?
notaccurate: (36)

[personal profile] notaccurate 2017-09-23 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
Taking care of laboratory equipment. The sciences are very much related to that.
bloodbiter: (what are you watching?)

[personal profile] bloodbiter 2017-09-23 03:54 am (UTC)(link)
It sounds very interesting! What do you enjoy most about it?
notaccurate: (44)

[personal profile] notaccurate 2017-09-23 04:06 am (UTC)(link)
Just being there to do the work. It's all absolutely fascinating, to see how the world works.
bloodbiter: (it's not okay if my ass is in pain)

[personal profile] bloodbiter 2017-09-23 04:48 am (UTC)(link)
We may not perform precisely the same careers in our homes, but... I agree. That kind of thing is fascinating indeed.
notaccurate: (04)

[personal profile] notaccurate 2017-09-24 03:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Then it is all the more a shame that we do not have those books here, if you are interested in the way the world works. I could probably share what I already know, but that pales in comparison to the libraries full of books on the matter.
bloodbiter: (pic#10914748)

[personal profile] bloodbiter 2017-09-25 04:44 am (UTC)(link)
It is a shame, but... [She shakes her head.] I would not ask you to do that. I'm certain it would be boring for you to explain concepts you already know.