Well, whoever commented we've seemed to get rather addicted to games is probably right.I think we have!
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But it's fun. Well. Here's the scoop. Someone, er, i.e. mestarts a story, in any way they like, and they can be as long (or short) as they like, only they have to stop at a very suspenseful moment, preferably in the middle of a sentence.
The next person continues from that point on, being as original and creative as they like, or even using writing styles of great authors (e.g. imitate Jane Austen, just for fun...), just so it doesn't get boring (though I think there is little chance of that).
Then, at a very suspenseful point, they, in turn, leave off...
And so you usually get a very inventive, very humorous, very varied sort of saga.
It makes a very good sleepover game...usually the only way to finish it is to fall asleep!I originally found this (game) in Little Women; from then on it's been a constant favourite with me and my friends.
Anyway, let's begin...
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Once upon a time, there was a gargantuan, stone mansion. It was situated on an enormous estate, with kilometres [or miles] of forest and fields around it. There was a little cottage in a small corner of its large gardens; here lived the gardener and his family. But as for the mansion itself, nobody had lived in it for decades. It was bleak, dreary, and dull, like a body whose soul had deserted it. The locals (not the Gardiners, they were very steady, sensible people with no regard for such nonsense) said it was haunted. But who knows...
It was a typical day at Roseberry Manor. Mr Gardiner had woken up pretty early (only four o'clock this time) and had just started tending the radish patch. All was perfectly normal: Mrs Gardiner had sent him some lettuce-and-egg sandwiches (the Gardiners were all vegetarian) for lunch, Toby and little Claire were playing on a sunspeckled patch of lawn a few hundred metres away, and the house looked melancholy, as usual.
But when Mr Gardiner went to fill up his watering can at the creek at the south side of the manor gardens, something peculiar caught his eye. On the road, which was well visible from the creek, a carriage was rolling by. This was extremely peculiar, as nobody ever came to Roseberry Manor. The last time somebody wholly unrelated to him had come by was when a threesome of frightened teenagers came to investigate if the Manor was really haunted (on a dare). But that was ten years ago. He now squinted, making his already small and short-sighted eyes even smaller and his vision even worse. He blinked. He still couldn't make anything out. So he took his watering can and quite forgot about the matter. Perhaps the carriage had the wrong address.
So everything continued as usual for a few more weeks. Until.