Georgia Williams
5
2Y/n: This is an account of the last murder mystery the Detective Society will ever solve together.
My name is Y/n Y/l/n, and I am heartbroken. I used to think that nothing could ever change, not really, not with my best friends Georgia, Daisy and me. The rest of the world could spin out of true and and smash like a Christmas bauble on the floor, but still nothing would be able to touch us. We were Wells, Williams and Y/l/n, after all. We were the Detective Society, and we always came out on top.
But I see now that I got caught in the trick of thinking like Daisy. Her voice in my head and my own have become so mixed up by now that I hardly know which is which unless I pause to think about it, and I never wanted to pause, not about this. And, besides, Daisy promised me and Georgie - she promised -
I ought to be grown-up enough now to know that promises can be broken, that no one is safe, and that the myth of Daisy Wells, the girl that can walk through mortal danger without even a scratch on her cheek, is only that. A myth.
I am begging this account on the day before Christmas Eve, at Daisy's home, Fallingford. This Christmas is quite different. The house is cold, and somehow still dark, no matter how many lamps and candles Chapman and Hetty light. Mrs Doherty, the cook, has burned the mince pies, and even the dogs look miserable. My little sister, May, tries to feed them biscuits, but they ignore her, so she shouts at them.
'I think I hate English Christmas,' says my order sister, Rose, and I agree with her.
But it isn't England I want to write about now, it's Egypt: the wide light of it, the sparks of the sun off the Nile, the hum and churn of our cruise ship moving under my feet- and Daisy. From the moment we stepped into the cabin and saw the blood, I thought that this was just another exciting adventure, another puzzle to solve, but I see now how wrong I was. This is the story. Perhaps that way I can bring Daisy back to life.
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