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Spirit Stone
e19cdf
>investigate the letters and boxes, are they blank / empty ?
> look in the boxes…Well, maybe we can look at the letters too.
>Read the letters, look in the boxes
There are too many LETTERS for you to read at once. You pick two random ones and skim them.
Dear sir,
Please accept my most sincere gratitude for the completion of the music boxes I commissioned! They are perfectly wonderful. I look forward to the completion of the chest – presently, however, I am more than pleased with the boxes themselves! They are lovely and they do so soothe me, quite possibly even more than collecting does. The cylinders you have included are exquisite – pray did you compose them yourself? If so, you are talented in more than craft!
I do compose music myself, though I cannot say I am more than a casual dilettante. I hope I am not too forward if I suggest that I send you some of my work, though my songs are nothing like the ones these boxes play – but wouldn’t it be lovely if everyone could have their own personal music boxes that played whatever tune was in their mind? It would certainly help with composition!
But forgive me, I’m prattling. I’m afraid the loneliness of this old place does affect me. You would never guess that I do not live here alone – my parents barely even speak to each other, let alone me. It is frightfully quiet and sometimes I feel as if I should enjoy some company, no matter who it was.
I must be boring you – I will be brief! Again, I am terribly pleased with the boxes, and I would so appreciate if you would send word once the chest is complete. I suppose it will be more of an ordeal to get that here than the boxes were!
I wait eagerly but most patiently for our next correspondence.
Yours, most sincerely,
Mlle. M. Harwood
Boring as hell. You hope the second one will be more interesting, but you doubt it.
Dearest Elizabeth,
I am very sorry to hear that you cannot visit this summer! I had been quite looking forward to entertaining you for a month or so, and I was quite surprised to hear of your Great-Aunt Edith’s illness. In fact I was quite surprised to learn that you have a Great-Aunt Edith, as I don’t believe you had ever mentioned her before. But of course I cannot expect you to tell me everything!
The strangest thing is that no one else I have invited is able to come, either! Everyone is either terribly busy or has had some sort of terrible accident come up. I am quite beside myself with worry. You know I am not superstitious, my dear Elizabeth, but I must say I am quite unnerved by the amount of misfortune befalling my friends lately! And everyone seemed so uncomfortable telling me, as if it was something of an embarrassment – not that I expect anyone to bear bad news merrily!
On another note, I do hope the post is more reliable now. I’ve been quite afraid that perhaps some of my letters have not been reaching you, as I send them and never receive a response! I do miss you terribly and it is very bothersome when I must wait so long only to realize that it must have never arrived. It has been too long since we last spoke and even longer since you visited!
I hope I do not sound too insistent, and if I do, I apologize. I do become terribly lonely, and it seems I can never find a chance to spend time with any of my friends.
Please do respond! I know you are busy, but I hold your friendship and your favor in such high regard, Elizabeth. It does pain me how we seem to grow apart.
Most lovingly,
Magdalena
Jesus Christ, this girl is an asshat. You don’t even want to read the rest of this drivel.
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