A super short recollection of Wendy's last, disgraceful days.
Stray Dog's Story Corner presents: The Duchess and the Unmarried Mermaid. A short, tragic tale written as one of Gregory's storybooks.
Diana sulking in the basement. Inspired by Jennifer's revelation that Diana spent a lot of time in the basement, lamenting the fact that she wasn't growing up the way she'd envisioned.
Days, and years, and entire lifetimes have passed since Hoffman abandoned his post as the headmaster at the Rose Garden Orphanage, but those little brats are still a constant thorn in his side. But not Clara, his sweet Clara. His refuge, his salvation… his terrible sin. His sorrowful wife.
Wrote this way back when "regional gothic" was still a thing.
Jennifer's past eclipses the present and devours the future.
When Clara goes missing from the orphanage, Eleanor and Jennifer are the only ones who seem to care enough to search for her. As their amateur detective agency takes on the case, they uncover a great deal more about the orphanage's inner workings than they could have ever bargained for.
The kids aren't alright.
A Narrative of "What Really Happened" during Jennifer's time in the Rose Garden Orphanage. Noting that with the hints being very vague in the game, a lot of the story here comes from my own conclusion after reading as many files, documents and replaying the game as many times as I could.
Gregory no recuerda mucho sobre esa noche.
De cómo Wendy entrenaba a lo que sería el gran lobo feroz.
A Diana le gusta jugar con muñecas.
Dos niñas pequeñas que les encanta dibujar. Una con cabello como el sol, otra con cabello oscuro como el chocolate. Una con visiones del cielo, otra con visiones del infierno. Crossover.
Pensé que era la única adulta. Pero todos éramos niños en ese tiempo, incluyéndome.
No sabe dónde está, no sabe quién es en realidad la mente macabra de todo este "juego", lo único que quiere es poder obtener sus memorias de vuelta y poder irse a casa.
The death of the Bird of Happiness may have affected Eleanor much more than first thought, and there are very few who seem to show any empathy to her loss.
The bottom of the rabbit's hole, and what Jennifer found there.
When Eleanor is adopted by an American couple residing in Boston, will she finally be able to spread her wings and accept life away from the orphanage, or will her past sins forever inhibit her from having a normal life? Note: This is a meant to be a happy story not containing depressing elements, since I felt sorry for Eleanor in the game.
A wise person once said "The more things change, the more they stay the same." As paradoxical as the statement is, it has never more true than in the case of our poor, unfortunate girl. How it is blessedly wretched to end up in the orphanage once again, even if it has been planned all along. Wouldn't you agree?
It must be hard to be consistently on the same page but constantly on different lines
A viscous hierarchy, cruel children, and secrets swept under every bed. Covering the disputed story of Jennifer with a few variations and less aspects of horror than the game. Mature themes of child abuse, abortion, and bullying.