Knowing an individualized motive may help you narrow down your suspects in future cases and may prove why, precisely, those who have died were targeted at all. Even if the motive is as simple-minded as HK-47's it provides a context so you are not left floundering for the rest of your time here.
You say so, but we've killed all of the obvious scoundrels already. Without more, we're left guessing - perhaps Vlad was a pompous, irritating man who was tired of being voted for and wanted company for curfew. Or perhaps he was a more dangerous man, who saw which way the wind was blowing with respect to the votes, and decided to frame someone else.
It is all speculation. It was speculation when I decided Beauregard did not seem like a skilled liar who would deceive even her friends, and it was speculation when I decided Fukuda's interjections had become a pattern. One was correct, and one wasn't.
But it is, as you say, all speculation. [they don't entirely believe that given how things have gone, but they don't really think elaboration will help either.] At least until you decide on an action to take to obtain an answer.
I understand what you say. But I am sick of putting all of our hopes on finding out what happened afterwards. By the time the trials begin, we are already far behind where we ought to be. And then we fail, and are even further behind.
[So - it's fine, to think on the evidence better or whatever, but she just doesn't have the patience to hear it right now.]
Nothing you're saying to me is solving this problem!
Then do better to create a solution prior to the problem.
[that's all they seem to say though and they put down their tea. i hate to do this because my siz threads but also gestures at greed being who he is as a person.]
[No, don't worry, it's very good. She probably won't even try to talk to him again for a while but it is also absolutely the correct way to handle this.
She's - very angry with him, for cutting her off so abruptly, as though he no longer finds anything she's saying worth responding to. But also very angry with herself. Angry and sad and feeling extremely lacking right now for reasons that are hard to understand but have everything to do with her regretting having reacted so emotionally and disappointing him.]
That will be all, yes.
[She will get up very coldly, but she storms out.]
no subject
Knowing an individualized motive may help you narrow down your suspects in future cases and may prove why, precisely, those who have died were targeted at all. Even if the motive is as simple-minded as HK-47's it provides a context so you are not left floundering for the rest of your time here.
no subject
It is all speculation. It was speculation when I decided Beauregard did not seem like a skilled liar who would deceive even her friends, and it was speculation when I decided Fukuda's interjections had become a pattern. One was correct, and one wasn't.
no subject
But it is, as you say, all speculation. [they don't entirely believe that given how things have gone, but they don't really think elaboration will help either.] At least until you decide on an action to take to obtain an answer.
no subject
[So - it's fine, to think on the evidence better or whatever, but she just doesn't have the patience to hear it right now.]
Nothing you're saying to me is solving this problem!
no subject
[that's all they seem to say though and they put down their tea. i hate to do this because my siz threads but also gestures at greed being who he is as a person.]
Will that be all, Miss Nonagesimus?
no subject
She's - very angry with him, for cutting her off so abruptly, as though he no longer finds anything she's saying worth responding to. But also very angry with herself. Angry and sad and feeling extremely lacking right now for reasons that are hard to understand but have everything to do with her regretting having reacted so emotionally and disappointing him.]
That will be all, yes.
[She will get up very coldly, but she storms out.]