diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD/content.rtf b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD/content.rtf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8122115 --- /dev/null +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD/content.rtf @@ -0,0 +1,18 @@ +{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\uc1\deff0 +{\fonttbl{\f0\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 Cambria-Bold;}{\f1\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 Corbel-Bold;}{\f2\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 Corbel;}} +{\colortbl;\red0\green0\blue0;\red255\green255\blue255;\red128\green128\blue128;\red108\green87\blue101;\red160\green54\blue91;\red170\green64\blue101;} +\paperw12240\paperh15840\margl1800\margr1800\margt1440\margb1440\fet2\ftnbj\aenddoc +\pgnrestart\pgnstarts0 +\pard\plain \tx560\tx1120\tx1680\tx2240\tx2800\tx3360\tx3920\tx4480\tx5040\tx5600\tx6160\tx6720\qj\ltrch\loch {\f1\fs58\b1\i0\cf4 <$Scr_Ps::0>Character Name<$Scr_Ps::1>} +\par\pard\plain \tx560\tx1120\tx1680\tx2240\tx2800\tx3360\tx3920\tx4480\tx5040\tx5600\tx6160\tx6720\sa480\sl216\slmult1\qj\ltrch\loch {\f2\fs36\b0\i0\cf5 Age \bullet Location<$Scr_Ps::2>} +\par\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\li737\fi-737\sa160\sb320\ltrch\loch {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Role in Story:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Goal:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Physical Description:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Personality:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Occupation:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Habits/Mannerisms:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Background:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Internal Conflicts:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>External Conflicts:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Notes:} +\par\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\sa80\ltrch\loch \f0\fs24\b0\i0} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD/content.styles b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD/content.styles new file mode 100644 index 0000000..448ce1a --- /dev/null +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD/content.styles @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +9876B2BD-65BB-4C5F-A9DF-E4836F5B131D,4BC1AF88-3547-406D-A419-43258E02323F,06A64B39-CB8E-42F9-96C2-CD5A6DDA715C,F4F739C7-F187-4CF4-A8C6-59FEE4EB7C71 \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD/content.rtf b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD/content.rtf index 1077505..884d11f 100644 --- a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD/content.rtf +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD/content.rtf @@ -1,5 +1,20 @@ {\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\uc1\deff0 -{\fonttbl{\f0\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 SitkaText;}} +{\fonttbl{\f0\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 SitkaText;}{\f1\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 SitkaTextItalic;}} {\colortbl;\red0\green0\blue0;\red255\green255\blue255;\red128\green128\blue128;} \paperw12240\paperh15840\margl1800\margr1800\margt1440\margb1440\f0\fs24\cf0 -\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\fi360\ltrch\loch {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Jake initiated the transfer of Nancy\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92s money, and was sitting in his office looking out the window when Mrs. Miller rapped on his open door.}} \ No newline at end of file +\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\fi360\ltrch\loch {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Jake initiated the transfer of Nancy\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92s money, and was sitting in his office looking out the window at his doomed tennis court when Mrs. Miller rapped on his open door. \u8220\'93Jake,\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93My friend Debi Whitehead is visiting. You should hear what she has to say.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Debi was the office manager for Sam Eugene, the local member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. She job-shared with her sister Donna. They\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92d been in the position for a long time and were well trusted by Sam and Punxsutawney. It was, in general, worth hearing what she had to say.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Jake stood and tried to look gracious while the two women settled into the visitor chairs the Mrs. Miller, who seemed to regard him as a local nobleman, insisted were befitting his position. Mrs. Miller briefly caught him up on Debi\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92s husband and grandchildren, avoiding the faux pas he surely would have committed if he\u8217\'92d tried, and then said, \u8220\'93Our new neighbor has been visiting Sam\u8217\'92s office.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Debi nodded and took up the narrative. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93That Hilda Kessler, prefers to be called \u8216\'91Doctor.\u8217\'92 She\u8217\'92s a visiting professor at IUP.\u8221\'94 Indiana University of Pennsylvania was thirty miles away, but had a branch campus in Punxsy. \u8220\'93Her field is analytical sociology, which she says is using math to look at what people do.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Mrs. Miller said, \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Dr. Kessler and her little sister Laurel are renting Edna McCall\u8217\'92s house.\u8221\'94 She gestured across the street. \u8220\'93I took them cookies when they moved in a few weeks ago. They seemed surprised. Laurel didn\u8217\'92t say a word the whole time I was there. She\u8217\'92s a tiny thing, probably less than a hundred pounds, and much younger than her sister. Maybe eighteen. Hilda\u8217\'92s forty or more, and\u8230\'85 well, I wouldn\u8217\'92t call her petite.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Debi made a tiny snort. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93}{\f1\fs24\b0\i1 Doctor}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Kessler wanted an appointment with Sam, and of course I asked the topic. She went all around the barn, didn\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92t understand why she should have to deal with a mere }{\f1\fs24\b0\i1 secretary}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 like me. Finally she said she\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92s been looking at Jefferson County finances going back several decades, and has noticed what she called anomalies over the last twenty years. More people are paying that occupational privilege tax than are on the tax roles, she says. We\u8217\'92re taking in too much money, she says.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Mrs. Miller said. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Not decades, though. Eighteen years. Since he\u8217\'92s been\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 she glanced at Jake \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93making sure they did their part for the government.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Debi nodded. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I don\u8217\'92t know, or need to know, everything, but Sam has told me you\u8217\'92re trying to make sure the Amish people up there\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 she nodded toward the woods behind his house \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93do their part. Sam thinks it\u8217\'92s great that they pay voluntarily.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Jake was sitting up straighter. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93What did you tell the professor?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Debi\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92s eyes went wide. \u8220\'93Well, nothing, of course. How is it her business?\u8221\'94 The administrator shook her head. \u8220\'93She didn\u8217\'92t like that, I can tell you. Seemed to think everybody should roll over and worship her PhD. I told her it was nothing to do with the Pennsylvania House, and therefore there was no reason for her to meet with Representative Eugene.\u8221\'94 She paused, biting her lip. \u8220\'93I didn\u8217\'92t realize she was renting a house in the area. That could make her into one of Sam\u8217\'92s constituents, and he prioritizes making his constituents happy, regardless of whether it\u8217\'92s his scope. It\u8217\'92s why I have a bunch of boys on retainer to shovel old ladies\u8217\'92 walks and mow old ladies\u8217\'92s grass.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Mrs. Miller said, \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Surely Sam wouldn\u8217\'92t\u8230\'85 well, blab?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Oh, he\u8217\'92s careful enough,\u8221\'94 Debi said. \u8220\'93I just like to keep him out of awkward situations when I can. I told the professor she might be better off talking to the county commissioners or the state auditor general\u8217\'92s office. After she left I called all of them and found out she\u8217\'92d already been all those places and nobody was inclined to help her. Anyway,\u8221\'94 she heaved herself to her feet, \u8220\'93I thought you should know.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Yes, thanks,\u8221\'94 Jake said, also standing.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Debi turned to her friend. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Thanks for the pie, Grace. Best in the county, at least now that my mother in law is gone. Nice to catch up with you, Jake. I don\u8217\'92t see you out and about very much. \u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92m a homebody, Debi. I make it to church, usually. Anyway, thanks again,\u8221\'94 he said.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 After she left he turned, again giving his attention to the tennis court.}} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C/content.rtf b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C/content.rtf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..561d736 --- /dev/null +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C/content.rtf @@ -0,0 +1,24 @@ +{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\uc1\deff0 +{\fonttbl{\f0\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 SitkaText;}{\f1\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 SitkaTextItalic;}} +{\colortbl;\red0\green0\blue0;\red255\green255\blue255;\red128\green128\blue128;} +\paperw12240\paperh15840\margl1800\margr1800\margt1440\margb1440\f0\fs24\cf0 +\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\fi360\ltrch\loch {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Mrs. Miller found him there a minute later, when she returned and handed him a mug of herbal tea. As the two of them stood shoulder to shoulder looking north, she asked, \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93How much trouble is this going to be?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He wrapped his hands around the mug. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93For them?\u8221\'94 He nodded toward the window. \u8220\'93None. They\u8217\'92re pretty much untouchable. For me?\u8221\'94 He hoisted the mug a few inches. \u8220\'93A bit. Contributing extra money to the tax authorities isn\u8217\'92t illegal, so that won\u8217\'92t be a problem. They\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 again he nodded toward the window \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93will grumble, saying I brought attention to them for no good reason, and that they\u8217\'92d warned me.\u8221\'94 He took a sip of tea. \u8220\'93Which they did.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93What about the professor?\u8221\'94 his housekeeper asked.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Yeah, that\u8217\'92s the rub,\u8221\'94 he said. \u8220\'93It would really, really be best if she doesn\u8217\'92t get onto their radar.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93What do you think they\u8217\'92d do?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Their tradition, when somebody threatens them, is to make that person disappear.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93But you said they\u8217\'92re untouchable,\u8221\'94 Mrs. Miller pointed out.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Oh, I meant they\u8217\'92re untouchable }{\f1\fs24\b0\i1 legally}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 . They\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92re still totally fixated on avoiding human interference or even influence. If they think her interference could lead to humans encroaching into their space\u8230\'85\u8221\'94 He sipped his tea. \u8220\'93She\u8217\'92ll go poof.\u8221\'94 } +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Why are the so panicked about humans finding them? I\u8217\'92ve never really understood that,\u8221\'94 she said.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Well, look at the history of powerful cultures interacting with weaker ones. All the explorers. They brought disease, they stole land and anything that could be stolen, they enslaved them. It\u8217\'92s not a pretty picture.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Surely humanity has advanced past that?\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93We\u8217\'92re more civilized than those old Conquistadors.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He raised an eyebrow. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Do you think so?\u8221\'94 He gestured toward the window. \u8220\'93I don\u8217\'92t know how many Folk there are as of today, but something like six hundred. Let\u8217\'92s say a thousand to make the math easy. Their balance sheet shows they\u8217\'92re worth, collectively, a bit more than a billion dollars\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 } +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93}{\f1\fs24\b0\i1 What?}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8221\'94 she gasped. \u8220\'93How?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93There\u8217\'92s a long history. As you said, they\u8217\'92re industrious, and there\u8217\'92s the miracle of compound interest. So that means every one of them\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he pointed to the window \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93leader, laborer, or infant, is a millionaire. How many people in Punxsy are millionaires, do you think? Other than you, me, and Nancy?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93A few,\u8221\'94 she said.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Sure, a few. But I think the rest would be very envious, wondering why these }{\f1\fs24\b0\i1 aliens}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 should have so more than they do. But\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he held up a hand \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93that\u8217\'92s only public money. I know for sure they\u8217\'92ve been accumulating off-the-books wealth for years. Gold, silver. Drugs; I tried to get rid of the drugs, but who knows? More recently, Bitcoin. } +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93For that matter\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he put his mug down, becoming more agitated \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93how much do you know about the history of Bitcoin? It involves very clever math, and was originated by an anonymous person or group that called itself Satoshi Nakamoto. Nobody has ever figured out who Nakamoto was, in spite of a whole lot of investigation. I think there\u8217\'92s a possibility that the Folk came up with Bitcoin. It\u8217\'92s actually very logical, they\u8217\'92re mathematic and computer geniuses, and they\u8217\'92re really good at keeping a secret. But here\u8217\'92s the kicker: Nakamoto has a million Bitcoin, worth something close to a hundred billion \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 with a B \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 dollars.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Oh, my,\u8221\'94 she said.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He continued as if she hadn\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92t spoken. \u8220\'93So disease and envy by local people are one thing, but my real fear is when rumors get started. The Folk are Satoshi Nakamoto. The Folk have more gold than Fort Knox. The Folk have drums of cocaine. Or\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he waved a hand \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93a collection of Beanie Babies, or US State quarters. Whatever. It would be a modern gold rush, people from all over the country, all over the world, overrunning them. They wouldn\u8217\'92t last a day.\u8221\'94 He picked up his mug and sighed. \u8220\'93All they want is to be left alone.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain \f0\fs24\b0\i0} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046/content.rtf b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046/content.rtf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e6d5912 --- /dev/null +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046/content.rtf @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\uc1\deff0 +{\fonttbl{\f0\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 SitkaText;}} +{\colortbl;\red0\green0\blue0;\red255\green255\blue255;\red128\green128\blue128;} +\paperw12240\paperh15840\margl1800\margr1800\margt1440\margb1440\f0\fs24\cf0 +\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\fi360\ltrch\loch {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 She was, Jake thought, the least attractive human being he\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92d ever met.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Since she was looking around, presumably assessing the house, he had a moment to look at her through the window, and he used it to question himself about that initial impression. He\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92d known people who didn\u8217\'92t, physically, have much going for them, and hadn\u8217\'92t reacted to any of them this way. He wondered why his reaction was different for her, why she repulsed him so. She was tall and broad shouldered, but no more so than Nancy, and he thought Nancy was the most attractive person he knew. } +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 It was the total lack of joy, he finally decided. This woman had no light in her eyes, not even a hint of twitch to her lips. She didn\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92t just look unhappy, she looked determined to stay that way.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 When she began impatiently eying his doorbell he decided it was time to open the door.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Hello,\u8221\'94 he said, trying to sound pleasant.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92m Dr. Kessler,\u8221\'94 she snapped. \u8220\'93Dr. Hilda Kessler. I\u8217\'92m currently an adjunct professor in computational sociology at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and my sister and I have taken the house across the street. I presume I\u8217\'92m speaking to Mr. Jake Deaver?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Yes, you are.\u8221\'94 Jake chuckled. \u8220\'93Technically Dr. Jake Deaver, but as my mother used to say, my PhD didn\u8217\'92t seem to take. Call me Jake. Please come in?\u8221\'94 Holding the door, he stepped to one side.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 She didn\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92t move. \u8220\'93Nobody told me you had a doctorate.\u8221\'94 Explanation was demanded.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Again he chuckled, though it sounded a bit forced in his own ears. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92m not surprised. In a small town people think the only real doctors are the medical ones. Of course it\u8217\'92s different for you in academia.\u8221\'94 He gestured, trying to look gracious. \u8220\'93Won\u8217\'92t you please come in?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Where\u8217\'92d you get it? Your degree?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Carnegie Mellon,\u8221\'94 he said. \u8220\'93In physics, if you can believe it. Not exactly applicable to my present life.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Hmph,\u8221\'94 she said. He had a prestigious degree from a prestigious school. Her degree, the private detective\u8217\'92s report said, was from a tiny school in central Indiana that had since lost its accreditation. One step above clipping a mail order coupon from the back of a magazine, the report said, but a small step.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Since he wanted her to be friendly \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 if that was even possible \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 Jake didn\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92t pursue discussion of any of this. He simply waiting, holding the door with his left hand out to invite her in, and started to feel foolish.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Finally, still glaring at him as if he\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92d deceived her, she stepped inside. \u8220\'93I have questions for you,\u8221\'94 she snapped.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93About my education?\u8221\'94 Jake was now sincerely confused. } +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93No, of course not,\u8221\'94 she said, waving her clipboard. \u8220\'93Why would I care about that when nobody else does? About the community behind your house. The little people, as the locals call them.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93May I get you something to drink? Ice water, or tea?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93No, no,\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93This isn\u8217\'92t a social call. It\u8217\'92s academic research.\u8221\'94 } +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Although the report said she was forty-eight years old, Jake would have guessed she was much older. His grandmother had acted more youthful at ninety.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He steered her to the dining room table and held a chair for her until she sat. Sitting across from her, he said, \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92m afraid I\u8217\'92m not going to be much help to you.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Why not?,\u8221\'94 she wasped. \u8220\'93People say you\u8217\'92re the one who knows. Somebody said you make your money off this community. You and\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 she looked at her clipboard \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93a Miller family. They\u8217\'92ve been prolific.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He imagined the matriarch of that family listening at the kitchen door. At least he hoped she was, because he\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92d want to discuss the visit with her.} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93If you\u8217\'92ve been asking questions,\u8221\'94 he said while trying to look pleasant, \u8220\'93I imagine you\u8217\'92ve learned that folks around here like their privacy. Myself included. It\u8217\'92s one of the privileges of living in a rural community.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Humph,\u8221\'94 she said. Without asking permission, she stood and crossed into his parlor, to a back window. \u8220\'93You\u8217\'92ve got a big playground out here. I see people in and out all the time. What\u8217\'92s the deal with that? Some kind of public park?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He stood and walked to stand beside her. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93It\u8217\'92s not technically public, but it\u8217\'92s open to anyone from around here to use. My family has a lot of land\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 } +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Over a thousand acres!\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93That\u8217\'92s unheard of in this part of Pennsylvania. Farms are seventy acres, eighty at most.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He paused until he was sure she was done, and then continued as if she hadn\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92t spoken. \u8220\'93And we share these facilities with the community. It was a priority for my grandmother and my mother.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 She peered. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Tennis court, swimming pool \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 what all is out there?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He smiled. She found a way to make the most reasonable question into a rude demand. Pointing, he said, \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93The swimming people is by arrangement only, for safety. We provide a lifeguard for groups. There\u8217\'92s a trap shooting range up behind that barn for which we also require arrangements in advance. The rest of it is open all the time. The court you\u8217\'92re seeing used to be tennis, now it\u8217\'92s pickleball. There\u8217\'92s a children\u8217\'92s playground, and badminton. Horseshoes and corn hole over there. Inside that barn there\u8217\'92s a ten meter range for air guns, no firearms. And over there\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he pointed \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93are two trail heads. One is gentle, about a mile without serious hills. It\u8217\'92s very pretty, with flowering shrubs and streams. Some beavers have been flirting with it, and we\u8217\'92re hopeful. The other is five miles and somewhat demanding. Then there are several acres for general use. Picnics, things like that.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He stepped away, back toward the dining room, but she wasn\loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8217\'92t finished. \u8220\'93You pay to maintain all this just because you\u8217\'92re a\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 even hampered by the clipboard she made air quotes \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93\u8216\'91nice guy\u8217\'92?\u8221\'94 } +\par\plain \f0\fs24\b0\i0} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90/content.rtf b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90/content.rtf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8122115 --- /dev/null +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90/content.rtf @@ -0,0 +1,18 @@ +{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\uc1\deff0 +{\fonttbl{\f0\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 Cambria-Bold;}{\f1\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 Corbel-Bold;}{\f2\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 Corbel;}} +{\colortbl;\red0\green0\blue0;\red255\green255\blue255;\red128\green128\blue128;\red108\green87\blue101;\red160\green54\blue91;\red170\green64\blue101;} +\paperw12240\paperh15840\margl1800\margr1800\margt1440\margb1440\fet2\ftnbj\aenddoc +\pgnrestart\pgnstarts0 +\pard\plain \tx560\tx1120\tx1680\tx2240\tx2800\tx3360\tx3920\tx4480\tx5040\tx5600\tx6160\tx6720\qj\ltrch\loch {\f1\fs58\b1\i0\cf4 <$Scr_Ps::0>Character Name<$Scr_Ps::1>} +\par\pard\plain \tx560\tx1120\tx1680\tx2240\tx2800\tx3360\tx3920\tx4480\tx5040\tx5600\tx6160\tx6720\sa480\sl216\slmult1\qj\ltrch\loch {\f2\fs36\b0\i0\cf5 Age \bullet Location<$Scr_Ps::2>} +\par\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\li737\fi-737\sa160\sb320\ltrch\loch {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Role in Story:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Goal:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Physical Description:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Personality:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Occupation:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Habits/Mannerisms:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Background:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Internal Conflicts:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>External Conflicts:}{\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \line } +\par\plain {\f1\fs24\b1\i0\cf6 <$Scr_Cs::3>Notes:} +\par\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\sa80\ltrch\loch \f0\fs24\b0\i0} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90/content.styles b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90/content.styles new file mode 100644 index 0000000..448ce1a --- /dev/null +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90/content.styles @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +9876B2BD-65BB-4C5F-A9DF-E4836F5B131D,4BC1AF88-3547-406D-A419-43258E02323F,06A64B39-CB8E-42F9-96C2-CD5A6DDA715C,F4F739C7-F187-4CF4-A8C6-59FEE4EB7C71 \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957/content.rtf b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957/content.rtf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4f1d104 --- /dev/null +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957/content.rtf @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\uc1\deff0 +{\fonttbl{\f0\fmodern\fcharset0\fprq2 SitkaText;}} +{\colortbl;\red0\green0\blue0;\red255\green255\blue255;\red128\green128\blue128;} +\paperw12240\paperh15840\margl1800\margr1800\margt1440\margb1440\f0\fs24\cf0 +\pard\plain \tx0\tx360\tx720\tx1080\tx1440\tx1800\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\fi360\ltrch\loch {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 Jake and Mrs. Miller stood silent for a minute, and then she asked, \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93So what are you going to do about this professor?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92m open to suggestions,\u8221\'94 he said. \u8220\'93I guess I have to talk to her, but I have no idea what to say. Under other circumstances I\u8217\'92d ask them\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he nodded toward the window \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93for a script, but they\u8217\'92d say I created this problem by being too scrupulous about taxes, and now they\u8217\'92d clean up my mess. And the worst part is they\u8217\'92d be right.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Maybe you could seduce her,\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93You know, wine and dine her. That\u8217\'92s what James Bond would do.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 He burst out laughing. \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92m a forty year old confirmed bachelor who rarely leaves his house, hasn\u8217\'92t done more than drink tea with a woman in\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he squinted for a second, calculating \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93twenty-two years, and your first thought is of my romantic appeal?\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93You\u8217\'92re not so bad,\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93You\u8217\'92re rich.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93And I have a wonderful housekeeper,\u8221\'94 he added. \u8220\'93Until she decides to stay home and put her feet up.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Why would I do that? You know my husband. What are we going to do, look at each other all day? Neither of us is interested in travel, and we don\u8217\'92t have any grand \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8221\'94 She cut herself off, glancing sidelong at him. \u8220\'93Anyway, I enjoy coming here. It occurs to me that seducing the professor is unappealing, but her little sister is quite pretty and seemed much more demur.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93You said she was eighteen!\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92m probably wrong about that,\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93Everybody looks young to me these days.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Well, maybe we\u8217\'92re fretting about nothing. Debi and the others have blocked her, so she might give up. Meanwhile, I\u8217\'92m going to hire that private detective in Dubois to do a deep dive on her. Maybe she can be bribed.\u8221\'94 He shook his head. \u8220\'93Financially incentivized to do something else. Offer her a million dollars to write the history of Punxsutawney Phil, or research the financial inequity of the Johnstown flood.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93I\u8217\'92d start lower,\u8221\'94 she said. \u8220\'93People get suspicious when you throw big money at them.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Good point,\u8221\'94 he said. \u8220\'93Meanwhile, let\u8217\'92s hope they\u8221\'94 \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 he nodded toward the window \hich\f0 \emdash \loch\f0 \u8220\'93don\u8217\'92t get worked up about this.\u8221\'94} +\par\plain {\f0\fs24\b0\i0 \loch\af0\hich\af0\dbch\af0\uc1\u8220\'93Poof,\u8221\'94 said Mrs. Miller. Then she shrugged. \u8220\'93It\u8217\'92s a solution.\u8221\'94}} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/docs.checksum b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/docs.checksum index e3856da..87d9225 100644 --- a/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/docs.checksum +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/Data/docs.checksum @@ -1,4 +1,5 @@ -052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD/content.rtf=ba368906e99afb2f584a4cf9678b972622d6d340 +0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60d69714e9b +052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD/content.rtf=5f716e5c20520d594d33eb8ba2fba0e10d9cc83e 07FD89DE-D4A6-411A-8801-E4FEAC27A03B/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60d69714e9b 0863BD1D-FA0F-4B8F-9B3F-3A0A2ACF174C/content.rtf=4bd5d00e38801be7dff7639df362ea463964349f 0871C25F-7EAA-498A-9508-7C5B21B5F705/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60d69714e9b @@ -8,6 +9,7 @@ 24F8457D-EC72-41BF-92CD-0254660D0ACB/content.rtf=c441730c25d86d2125959be7f6c6f718a77f5940 28AFDB37-2FF4-4BD4-A273-1AEFF4E9EAE4/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60d69714e9b 2DBC63C8-31D9-42DF-BDBB-3ADE52E9F42A/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60d69714e9b +2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C/content.rtf=1393828a622d0555371cea9168c6244c716dac94 323E42B8-881A-4A72-938C-1D683D78D8DF/content.rtf=7ba3224e09d420d06bd94d74a09110b0c20f58c1 323E42B8-881A-4A72-938C-1D683D78D8DF/notes.rtf=d78c686f4e812554ca81eec073fa7f27c4c6b473 323E42B8-881A-4A72-938C-1D683D78D8DF/synopsis.txt=b10607ccc99f8ddbc1e078e8c4acb271e82625b9 @@ -18,6 +20,7 @@ 57ECC98D-8199-4935-B5F1-D1F7A2D60646/notes.rtf=9a607bd2ae2a0fe91fc1e0d3be97bac0daba01a7 5F40F985-59BA-43CC-8650-9EDD1E6A62B5/content.rtf=4a2994b2d46eb96988d8b86ccc95824af0b1c958 5F40F985-59BA-43CC-8650-9EDD1E6A62B5/notes.rtf=e4e29be9e4564aff2ec558a77643d792178b8cd1 +6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046/content.rtf=3dbb42d77b6f41910dd19ed48945a023d9586152 7860D6AF-64D1-442A-AADD-2DBE41773A98/content.rtf=f823d80b3d347198eb5d5f207d18f14651e0f034 7CCAC679-51EB-49B0-8108-99792FD58C5D/content.rtf=d0c8cb99880da4a6f77a1c833c0fbe294c648bee 84FC50EC-D392-469C-8A60-56D926655BD3/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60d69714e9b @@ -28,4 +31,6 @@ AD69467C-4A63-4D69-805E-C4812C3E4FF3/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60 B23591A4-8EC3-4E1F-B242-ECCA0207561C/content.rtf=f9c6376a74649e419a116595cb1335593b317b40 B23591A4-8EC3-4E1F-B242-ECCA0207561C/notes.rtf=a30965f66b194948242b0109078812012aaf3c1e B4DF4523-4873-4165-862F-94931395730E/content.rtf=43a178983b2b4c314e00f4e7408305bd5d2ad720 +BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90/content.rtf=230f97a3583ef52a4b6863a91881e60d69714e9b F8F9FDEF-FD9F-4A8C-B33D-3434A1220ADC/content.rtf=1dcc5cb22adc250826c861e1486fd58a1f325ff7 +FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957/content.rtf=c0aa2f67772e8bf33efc5bacf2c75f2daf725e50 diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.autosave b/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.autosave index 4741390..394c41a 100644 Binary files a/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.autosave and b/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.autosave differ diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.backup b/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.backup index 0807b86..2b04db9 100644 Binary files a/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.backup and b/The Folk.scriv/Files/binder.backup differ diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/search.indexes b/The Folk.scriv/Files/search.indexes index 71c0391..fbaf0ef 100644 --- a/The Folk.scriv/Files/search.indexes +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/search.indexes @@ -1,9 +1,40 @@ + + Sam Eugene, PA state rep + Character Name +Age • Location +Role in Story: +Goal: +Physical Description: +Personality: +Occupation: +Habits/Mannerisms: +Background: +Internal Conflicts: +External Conflicts: +Notes: + + Professor interest - Jake initiated the transfer of Nancy’s money, and was sitting in his office looking out the window when Mrs. Miller rapped on his open door. + Jake initiated the transfer of Nancy’s money, and was sitting in his office looking out the window at his doomed tennis court when Mrs. Miller rapped on his open door. “Jake,” she said. “My friend Debi Whitehead is visiting. You should hear what she has to say.” +Debi was the office manager for Sam Eugene, the local member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. She job-shared with her sister Donna. They’d been in the position for a long time and were well trusted by Sam and Punxsutawney. It was, in general, worth hearing what she had to say. +Jake stood and tried to look gracious while the two women settled into the visitor chairs the Mrs. Miller, who seemed to regard him as a local nobleman, insisted were befitting his position. Mrs. Miller briefly caught him up on Debi’s husband and grandchildren, avoiding the faux pas he surely would have committed if he’d tried, and then said, “Our new neighbor has been visiting Sam’s office.” +Debi nodded and took up the narrative. “That Hilda Kessler, prefers to be called ‘Doctor.’ She’s a visiting professor at IUP.” Indiana University of Pennsylvania was thirty miles away, but had a branch campus in Punxsy. “Her field is analytical sociology, which she says is using math to look at what people do.” +Mrs. Miller said, “Dr. Kessler and her little sister Laurel are renting Edna McCall’s house.” She gestured across the street. “I took them cookies when they moved in a few weeks ago. They seemed surprised. Laurel didn’t say a word the whole time I was there. She’s a tiny thing, probably less than a hundred pounds, and much younger than her sister. Maybe eighteen. Hilda’s forty or more, and… well, I wouldn’t call her petite.” +Debi made a tiny snort. “Doctor Kessler wanted an appointment with Sam, and of course I asked the topic. She went all around the barn, didn’t understand why she should have to deal with a mere secretary like me. Finally she said she’s been looking at Jefferson County finances going back several decades, and has noticed what she called anomalies over the last twenty years. More people are paying that occupational privilege tax than are on the tax roles, she says. We’re taking in too much money, she says.” +Mrs. Miller said. “Not decades, though. Eighteen years. Since he’s been” — she glanced at Jake — “making sure they did their part for the government.” +Debi nodded. “I don’t know, or need to know, everything, but Sam has told me you’re trying to make sure the Amish people up there” — she nodded toward the woods behind his house — “do their part. Sam thinks it’s great that they pay voluntarily.” +Jake was sitting up straighter. “What did you tell the professor?” +Debi’s eyes went wide. “Well, nothing, of course. How is it her business?” The administrator shook her head. “She didn’t like that, I can tell you. Seemed to think everybody should roll over and worship her PhD. I told her it was nothing to do with the Pennsylvania House, and therefore there was no reason for her to meet with Representative Eugene.” She paused, biting her lip. “I didn’t realize she was renting a house in the area. That could make her into one of Sam’s constituents, and he prioritizes making his constituents happy, regardless of whether it’s his scope. It’s why I have a bunch of boys on retainer to shovel old ladies’ walks and mow old ladies’s grass.” +Mrs. Miller said, “Surely Sam wouldn’t… well, blab?” +“Oh, he’s careful enough,” Debi said. “I just like to keep him out of awkward situations when I can. I told the professor she might be better off talking to the county commissioners or the state auditor general’s office. After she left I called all of them and found out she’d already been all those places and nobody was inclined to help her. Anyway,” she heaved herself to her feet, “I thought you should know.” +“Yes, thanks,” Jake said, also standing. +Debi turned to her friend. “Thanks for the pie, Grace. Best in the county, at least now that my mother in law is gone. Nice to catch up with you, Jake. I don’t see you out and about very much. ” +“I’m a homebody, Debi. I make it to church, usually. Anyway, thanks again,” he said. +After she left he turned, again giving his attention to the tennis court. Characters @@ -12,15 +43,15 @@ Debi Whitehead Character Name Age • Location -Role in Story: -Goal: -Physical Description: -Personality: -Occupation: -Habits/Mannerisms: -Background: -Internal Conflicts: -External Conflicts: +Role in Story: +Goal: +Physical Description: +Personality: +Occupation: +Habits/Mannerisms: +Background: +Internal Conflicts: +External Conflicts: Notes: @@ -156,6 +187,29 @@ Background: Internal Conflicts: External Conflicts: Notes: + + + + How much trouble? + Mrs. Miller found him there a minute later, when she returned and handed him a mug of herbal tea. As the two of them stood shoulder to shoulder looking north, she asked, “How much trouble is this going to be?” +He wrapped his hands around the mug. “For them?” He nodded toward the window. “None. They’re pretty much untouchable. For me?” He hoisted the mug a few inches. “A bit. Contributing extra money to the tax authorities isn’t illegal, so that won’t be a problem. They” — again he nodded toward the window — “will grumble, saying I brought attention to them for no good reason, and that they’d warned me.” He took a sip of tea. “Which they did.” +“What about the professor?” his housekeeper asked. +“Yeah, that’s the rub,” he said. “It would really, really be best if she doesn’t get onto their radar.” +“What do you think they’d do?” +“Their tradition, when somebody threatens them, is to make that person disappear.” +“But you said they’re untouchable,” Mrs. Miller pointed out. +“Oh, I meant they’re untouchable legally. They’re still totally fixated on avoiding human interference or even influence. If they think her interference could lead to humans encroaching into their space…” He sipped his tea. “She’ll go poof.” +“Why are the so panicked about humans finding them? I’ve never really understood that,” she said. +“Well, look at the history of powerful cultures interacting with weaker ones. All the explorers. They brought disease, they stole land and anything that could be stolen, they enslaved them. It’s not a pretty picture.” +“Surely humanity has advanced past that?” she said. “We’re more civilized than those old Conquistadors.” +He raised an eyebrow. “Do you think so?” He gestured toward the window. “I don’t know how many Folk there are as of today, but something like six hundred. Let’s say a thousand to make the math easy. Their balance sheet shows they’re worth, collectively, a bit more than a billion dollars” — +“What?” she gasped. “How?” +“There’s a long history. As you said, they’re industrious, and there’s the miracle of compound interest. So that means every one of them” — he pointed to the window — “leader, laborer, or infant, is a millionaire. How many people in Punxsy are millionaires, do you think? Other than you, me, and Nancy?” +“A few,” she said. +“Sure, a few. But I think the rest would be very envious, wondering why these aliens should have so more than they do. But” — he held up a hand — “that’s only public money. I know for sure they’ve been accumulating off-the-books wealth for years. Gold, silver. Drugs; I tried to get rid of the drugs, but who knows? More recently, Bitcoin. +“For that matter” — he put his mug down, becoming more agitated — “how much do you know about the history of Bitcoin? It involves very clever math, and was originated by an anonymous person or group that called itself Satoshi Nakamoto. Nobody has ever figured out who Nakamoto was, in spite of a whole lot of investigation. I think there’s a possibility that the Folk came up with Bitcoin. It’s actually very logical, they’re mathematic and computer geniuses, and they’re really good at keeping a secret. But here’s the kicker: Nakamoto has a million Bitcoin, worth something close to a hundred billion — with a B — dollars.” + “Oh, my,” she said. +He continued as if she hadn’t spoken. “So disease and envy by local people are one thing, but my real fear is when rumors get started. The Folk are Satoshi Nakamoto. The Folk have more gold than Fort Knox. The Folk have drums of cocaine. Or” — he waved a hand — “a collection of Beanie Babies, or US State quarters. Whatever. It would be a modern gold rush, people from all over the country, all over the world, overrunning them. They wouldn’t last a day.” He picked up his mug and sighed. “All they want is to be left alone.” @@ -251,7 +305,7 @@ Your dedication here. The Judge - Mrs. Miller + Mrs. Grace Miller Character Name Age • Location Role in Story: @@ -302,9 +356,46 @@ ISBN: ISBN-13: Feel free to delete this document if you don’t need it, or edit it for your needs. + + The professor calls + She was, Jake thought, the least attractive human being he’d ever met. +Since she was looking around, presumably assessing the house, he had a moment to look at her through the window, and he used it to question himself about that initial impression. He’d known people who didn’t, physically, have much going for them, and hadn’t reacted to any of them this way. He wondered why his reaction was different for her, why she repulsed him so. She was tall and broad shouldered, but no more so than Nancy, and he thought Nancy was the most attractive person he knew. +It was the total lack of joy, he finally decided. This woman had no light in her eyes, not even a hint of twitch to her lips. She didn’t just look unhappy, she looked determined to stay that way. +When she began impatiently eying his doorbell he decided it was time to open the door. +“Hello,” he said, trying to sound pleasant. +“I’m Dr. Kessler,” she snapped. “Dr. Hilda Kessler. I’m currently an adjunct professor in computational sociology at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and my sister and I have taken the house across the street. I presume I’m speaking to Mr. Jake Deaver?” +“Yes, you are.” Jake chuckled. “Technically Dr. Jake Deaver, but as my mother used to say, my PhD didn’t seem to take. Call me Jake. Please come in?” Holding the door, he stepped to one side. +She didn’t move. “Nobody told me you had a doctorate.” Explanation was demanded. +Again he chuckled, though it sounded a bit forced in his own ears. “I’m not surprised. In a small town people think the only real doctors are the medical ones. Of course it’s different for you in academia.” He gestured, trying to look gracious. “Won’t you please come in?” +“Where’d you get it? Your degree?” +“Carnegie Mellon,” he said. “In physics, if you can believe it. Not exactly applicable to my present life.” +“Hmph,” she said. He had a prestigious degree from a prestigious school. Her degree, the private detective’s report said, was from a tiny school in central Indiana that had since lost its accreditation. One step above clipping a mail order coupon from the back of a magazine, the report said, but a small step. +Since he wanted her to be friendly — if that was even possible — Jake didn’t pursue discussion of any of this. He simply waiting, holding the door with his left hand out to invite her in, and started to feel foolish. +Finally, still glaring at him as if he’d deceived her, she stepped inside. “I have questions for you,” she snapped. +“About my education?” Jake was now sincerely confused. +“No, of course not,” she said, waving her clipboard. “Why would I care about that when nobody else does? About the community behind your house. The little people, as the locals call them.” +“May I get you something to drink? Ice water, or tea?” +“No, no,” she said. “This isn’t a social call. It’s academic research.” +Although the report said she was forty-eight years old, Jake would have guessed she was much older. His grandmother had acted more youthful at ninety. +He steered her to the dining room table and held a chair for her until she sat. Sitting across from her, he said, “I’m afraid I’m not going to be much help to you.” +“Why not?,” she wasped. “People say you’re the one who knows. Somebody said you make your money off this community. You and” — she looked at her clipboard — “a Miller family. They’ve been prolific.” +He imagined the matriarch of that family listening at the kitchen door. At least he hoped she was, because he’d want to discuss the visit with her. +“If you’ve been asking questions,” he said while trying to look pleasant, “I imagine you’ve learned that folks around here like their privacy. Myself included. It’s one of the privileges of living in a rural community.” +“Humph,” she said. Without asking permission, she stood and crossed into his parlor, to a back window. “You’ve got a big playground out here. I see people in and out all the time. What’s the deal with that? Some kind of public park?” +He stood and walked to stand beside her. “It’s not technically public, but it’s open to anyone from around here to use. My family has a lot of land” — +“Over a thousand acres!” she said. “That’s unheard of in this part of Pennsylvania. Farms are seventy acres, eighty at most.” +He paused until he was sure she was done, and then continued as if she hadn’t spoken. “And we share these facilities with the community. It was a priority for my grandmother and my mother.” +She peered. “Tennis court, swimming pool — what all is out there?” +He smiled. She found a way to make the most reasonable question into a rude demand. Pointing, he said, “The swimming people is by arrangement only, for safety. We provide a lifeguard for groups. There’s a trap shooting range up behind that barn for which we also require arrangements in advance. The rest of it is open all the time. The court you’re seeing used to be tennis, now it’s pickleball. There’s a children’s playground, and badminton. Horseshoes and corn hole over there. Inside that barn there’s a ten meter range for air guns, no firearms. And over there” — he pointed — “are two trail heads. One is gentle, about a mile without serious hills. It’s very pretty, with flowering shrubs and streams. Some beavers have been flirting with it, and we’re hopeful. The other is five miles and somewhat demanding. Then there are several acres for general use. Picnics, things like that.” +He stepped away, back toward the dining room, but she wasn’t finished. “You pay to maintain all this just because you’re a” — even hampered by the clipboard she made air quotes — “‘nice guy’?” + + Cover + + Dealing with herself + Places @@ -357,6 +448,7 @@ Her chest inflated, a tirade building. But then she slowly released the breath. With a twiddle of her fingers she was out the door. + Leave me alone Leave me alone @@ -508,6 +600,9 @@ Notes: Sample Output + + Dealing with herself + Nancy Miller Character Name @@ -1104,7 +1199,7 @@ sagi is condimentum. - Jake + Jake Deaver Character Name Age • Location Role in Story: @@ -1141,6 +1236,22 @@ The wolf’s eyes flew open. “Duh! Big surprise, you wait two months after I “Sorry about that, but the whole point is that they want to stay off the radar. Everybody’s radar.” “So why tell me at all?” She carried the milk and cookies to the table and sat down. “No, I guess I get that: Because sooner or later something tangentially related is likely to come before my court.” He sat across from her. “Yeah. Although they haven’t for the last decade or so. It used to happen more often. Better you know up front.” + + + Dr. Hilda and Ms Laurel Kessler + Character Name +Age • Location +Role in Story: +Goal: +Physical Description: +Personality: +Occupation: +Habits/Mannerisms: +Background: +Internal Conflicts: +External Conflicts: +Notes: + Nancy @@ -1251,6 +1362,22 @@ You can create your own templates by setting up a skeletal project with the file Paperback + + Solutions to the professor + Jake and Mrs. Miller stood silent for a minute, and then she asked, “So what are you going to do about this professor?” +“I’m open to suggestions,” he said. “I guess I have to talk to her, but I have no idea what to say. Under other circumstances I’d ask them” — he nodded toward the window — “for a script, but they’d say I created this problem by being too scrupulous about taxes, and now they’d clean up my mess. And the worst part is they’d be right.” +“Maybe you could seduce her,” she said. “You know, wine and dine her. That’s what James Bond would do.” +He burst out laughing. “I’m a forty year old confirmed bachelor who rarely leaves his house, hasn’t done more than drink tea with a woman in” — he squinted for a second, calculating — “twenty-two years, and your first thought is of my romantic appeal?” +“You’re not so bad,” she said. “You’re rich.” +“And I have a wonderful housekeeper,” he added. “Until she decides to stay home and put her feet up.” +“Why would I do that? You know my husband. What are we going to do, look at each other all day? Neither of us is interested in travel, and we don’t have any grand — ” She cut herself off, glancing sidelong at him. “Anyway, I enjoy coming here. It occurs to me that seducing the professor is unappealing, but her little sister is quite pretty and seemed much more demur.” +“You said she was eighteen!” +“I’m probably wrong about that,” she said. “Everybody looks young to me these days.” +“Well, maybe we’re fretting about nothing. Debi and the others have blocked her, so she might give up. Meanwhile, I’m going to hire that private detective in Dubois to do a deep dive on her. Maybe she can be bribed.” He shook his head. “Financially incentivized to do something else. Offer her a million dollars to write the history of Punxsutawney Phil, or research the financial inequity of the Johnstown flood.” +“I’d start lower,” she said. “People get suspicious when you throw big money at them.” +“Good point,” he said. “Meanwhile, let’s hope they” — he nodded toward the window — “don’t get worked up about this.” +“Poof,” said Mrs. Miller. Then she shrugged. “It’s a solution.” + Intro diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Files/writing.history b/The Folk.scriv/Files/writing.history index d1d6cea..a70c7a4 100644 --- a/The Folk.scriv/Files/writing.history +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Files/writing.history @@ -7,4 +7,7 @@ 2026-04-11 2026-04-12 2026-04-13 + 2026-04-14 + 2026-04-15 + 2026-04-16 diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Settings/recents.txt b/The Folk.scriv/Settings/recents.txt index 0b9e78f..8c08d53 100644 --- a/The Folk.scriv/Settings/recents.txt +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Settings/recents.txt @@ -1,16 +1,25 @@ -052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD -07FD89DE-D4A6-411A-8801-E4FEAC27A03B -06C0455C-36DD-4F38-BB7B-F7DD2453A8A5 -41432E81-7630-4F64-9DB5-44908412CF60 -4447E235-4236-4F33-A6CE-E6E0EB5CE5FA -2DBC63C8-31D9-42DF-BDBB-3ADE52E9F42A -55546254-66BC-4A33-A4CF-F06EDCF130E8 +6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046 +AD69467C-4A63-4D69-805E-C4812C3E4FF3 +9BCE3357-5B38-4DFA-B8D8-614B86339261 4A1D6B18-0952-42EB-A487-D17915DD3BA1 FD75AC3C-F304-4EA6-ADCC-2C32D6589969 +68177DC7-9E5E-487D-97FC-2A6215674CA1 +7901D076-7F2D-41A3-BBD8-E20FC951BCCC +FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957 +2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C +41432E81-7630-4F64-9DB5-44908412CF60 +052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD +BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90 +06C0455C-36DD-4F38-BB7B-F7DD2453A8A5 +55546254-66BC-4A33-A4CF-F06EDCF130E8 +24F8457D-EC72-41BF-92CD-0254660D0ACB +0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD +07FD89DE-D4A6-411A-8801-E4FEAC27A03B +4447E235-4236-4F33-A6CE-E6E0EB5CE5FA +2DBC63C8-31D9-42DF-BDBB-3ADE52E9F42A CC277AD5-BC67-4680-B8D0-90F66BFCE738 9405BA10-9024-4F7C-8D24-41BC62688E20 4914DD06-8203-4BBB-97BB-2756EC3C4D06 -24F8457D-EC72-41BF-92CD-0254660D0ACB 0A7EDD9F-9DE0-4CC9-9AC1-EE0E3769B6A8 0B63F962-CA8D-4877-9B6C-E8E268627EA5 F8F9FDEF-FD9F-4A8C-B33D-3434A1220ADC @@ -20,16 +29,7 @@ B4DF4523-4873-4165-862F-94931395730E 0871C25F-7EAA-498A-9508-7C5B21B5F705 9E66CA11-F79E-4C38-AB85-70BED01C1137 6C0F3C28-EB31-4057-A8E8-891CA463BF16 -AD69467C-4A63-4D69-805E-C4812C3E4FF3 84FC50EC-D392-469C-8A60-56D926655BD3 AA7F21EF-A4C4-485A-8044-6A7856D23E5B F2DF7FDE-46C4-4962-97F3-128A46433573 -D340E31B-3F95-4A43-8394-66F8E20D354E -8011470C-3DAB-46BE-A166-FCF536FE86F6 -B2962313-5583-4917-BCDC-BBFE30072B7F -4908D479-188E-4232-AA7D-38FD12692DC5 -B23591A4-8EC3-4E1F-B242-ECCA0207561C -17AA5803-9EA9-49C2-A454-2E8386E18F0A -5F40F985-59BA-43CC-8650-9EDD1E6A62B5 -9FDC7D70-BD4A-472E-B140-EDA8E105FAD6 -323E42B8-881A-4A72-938C-1D683D78D8DF \ No newline at end of file +D340E31B-3F95-4A43-8394-66F8E20D354E \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/Settings/ui-common.xml b/The Folk.scriv/Settings/ui-common.xml index cd1480f..ab92c4c 100644 --- a/The Folk.scriv/Settings/ui-common.xml +++ b/The Folk.scriv/Settings/ui-common.xml @@ -10,6 +10,7 @@ 0A7EDD9F-9DE0-4CC9-9AC1-EE0E3769B6A8 4914DD06-8203-4BBB-97BB-2756EC3C4D06 41432E81-7630-4F64-9DB5-44908412CF60 + 9BCE3357-5B38-4DFA-B8D8-614B86339261 06C0455C-36DD-4F38-BB7B-F7DD2453A8A5 57ECC98D-8199-4935-B5F1-D1F7A2D60646 669D7B65-8096-4EFD-A0E2-6BDE8C1E3585 @@ -17,7 +18,7 @@ F2DF7FDE-46C4-4962-97F3-128A46433573 - 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046 None @@ -71,9 +72,9 @@ Single Current - 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046 - + F8F9FDEF-FD9F-4A8C-B33D-3434A1220ADC FD75AC3C-F304-4EA6-ADCC-2C32D6589969 0A7EDD9F-9DE0-4CC9-9AC1-EE0E3769B6A8 @@ -140,6 +141,41 @@ 06C0455C-36DD-4F38-BB7B-F7DD2453A8A5 07FD89DE-D4A6-411A-8801-E4FEAC27A03B 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 06C0455C-36DD-4F38-BB7B-F7DD2453A8A5 + 0198A7A6-46DE-4FFC-BA72-17EBD2713BBD + 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 24F8457D-EC72-41BF-92CD-0254660D0ACB + 55546254-66BC-4A33-A4CF-F06EDCF130E8 + 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 06C0455C-36DD-4F38-BB7B-F7DD2453A8A5 + BBCBF540-48C7-4D7A-976B-07EBBDCC4D90 + 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 41432E81-7630-4F64-9DB5-44908412CF60 + 2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C + 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C + 4A1D6B18-0952-42EB-A487-D17915DD3BA1 + 2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C + 41432E81-7630-4F64-9DB5-44908412CF60 + 052230BA-7D09-4CF8-9D03-8475FF61A4CD + 2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C + 41432E81-7630-4F64-9DB5-44908412CF60 + FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957 + 2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C + FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957 + 2F84DC1C-B403-4BD1-9B4A-C1D8C8F21F3C + FD60A9F9-45A4-445E-8D23-031D327CA957 + 4A1D6B18-0952-42EB-A487-D17915DD3BA1 + 68177DC7-9E5E-487D-97FC-2A6215674CA1 + 7901D076-7F2D-41A3-BBD8-E20FC951BCCC + 68177DC7-9E5E-487D-97FC-2A6215674CA1 + 4A1D6B18-0952-42EB-A487-D17915DD3BA1 + FD75AC3C-F304-4EA6-ADCC-2C32D6589969 + 4A1D6B18-0952-42EB-A487-D17915DD3BA1 + 9BCE3357-5B38-4DFA-B8D8-614B86339261 + 6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046 + AD69467C-4A63-4D69-805E-C4812C3E4FF3 + 6246154F-D814-422F-8E7C-4842E7B55046 @@ -147,7 +183,7 @@ No No No - 140,0 + 5479,0 diff --git a/The 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secondEditorHistory="@ByteArray(\xff\x2\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\xc8\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\x1\xf8\xf9\xfd\xef\xfd\x9fJ\x8c\xb3=44\xa1\"\n\xdc\0\0\0\0\xff\xff\xff\xff)" showScriveningsTitles=false showInvisibles=false @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ mainWindowState=@ByteArray(\0\0\0\xff\0\0\0\0\xfd\0\0\0\0\0\0\x5\t\0\0\x2\xda\0\ visibilityFlags=67170670 extraVisibilityFlags=4 editorSplitterState=@ByteArray(\0\0\0\xff\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\x2\0\0\x1\x43\0\0\x1\x44\x1\0\0\0\x1\x1\0\0\0\x1\0) -binderSplitterState=@ByteArray(\0\0\0\xff\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\x2\0\0\0\xd7\0\0\x3\x82\0\0\0\0\x1\x1\0\0\0\x1\0) +binderSplitterState=@ByteArray(\0\0\0\xff\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\x2\0\0\0\xf3\0\0\x4\x15\0\0\0\0\x1\x1\0\0\0\x1\0) inspectorSplitterState=@ByteArray(\0\0\0\xff\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\x2\0\0\x2\xad\0\0\0\xdf\0\0\0\0\x1\x1\0\0\0\x1\0) inspectorMode=0 inspectorModeUserSelected=0 @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ secondEditorOutlinerOpenInTarget=255 compileGeometry=@ByteArray(\x1\xd9\xd0\xcb\0\x3\0\0\0\0\x1\xe0\0\0\x1[\0\0\x5Y\0\0\x3\x97\0\0\x1\xe1\0\0\x1z\0\0\x5X\0\0\x3\x96\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\a\0\0\0\x1\xe1\0\0\x1z\0\0\x5X\0\0\x3\x96) compileSplitterState="@ByteArray(\0\0\0\xff\0\0\0\x1\0\0\0\x3\0\0\0\xe3\0\0\x1O\0\0\x1,\0\0\0\0\x1\x1\0\0\0\x1\0)" ForcePropertyChangeForSave=true -EditorAreaWidthPx=1073 +EditorAreaWidthPx=1045 binderOpenNonGroupItemsInOtherEditor=false DefaultEditorSplitType=Vertical showScriveningsTitlesFoldersOnly=false @@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ second=false [Binder] Hoisted=false HoistedBinderProjectNodeId= -BinderAreaWidthPx=215 +BinderAreaWidthPx=243 [Appearance] showBinderSubdocumentCounts=false @@ -107,7 +107,21 @@ TintOutlinerItems=false TintScriveningsTitles=false [Layout] -UiCommonXml="@ByteArray(\n\n \n No\n 0\n No\n \n 4A1D6B18-0952-42EB-A487-D17915DD3BA1\n FD75AC3C-F304-4EA6-ADCC-2C32D6589969\n 0A7EDD9F-9DE0-4CC9-9AC1-EE0E3769B6A8\n 4914DD06-8203-4BBB-97BB-2756EC3C4D06\n 41432E81-7630-4F64-9DB5-44908412CF60\n 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title\n label\n status\n sectionType\n \n No\n No\n Yes\n No\n No\n \n \n -1\n 5\n No\n 0.6666\n Wrap\n No\n \n \n \n \n No\n No\n No\n No\n \n \n \n \n\n)" [Corkboard] cardsAcross=0 + +[Statistics] +compiledCountCurrentGroupOnly=false +compiledCountFootnotes=true +included=true +excluded=true +commentsAndAnnotations=true +footnotes=true +subDocuments=true +pageCountType=0 +pageCountTarget=350 + +[ProjectStatistics] +Mode=estimate diff --git a/The Folk.scriv/The Folk.scrivx b/The Folk.scriv/The Folk.scrivx index 4eeaed4..cc64e6e 100644 --- a/The Folk.scriv/The Folk.scrivx +++ b/The Folk.scriv/The Folk.scrivx @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ - + Novel Format @@ -92,13 +92,51 @@ 4731,0 - + Professor interest Yes - 140,0 + 3806,0 + + + + How much trouble? + + Yes + + + 3801,0 + + + + Solutions to the professor + + Yes + + + 1539,0 + + + + + + Dealing with herself + + Yes + + + 0,0 + + + + The professor calls + + Yes + + + 5479,0 @@ -116,8 +154,8 @@ 28AFDB37-2FF4-4BD4-A273-1AEFF4E9EAE4 - - Jake + + Jake Deaver Yes Characters (Character Sheet) @@ -138,8 +176,8 @@ 0,14 - - Mrs. Miller + + Mrs. Grace Miller Yes Characters (Character Sheet) @@ -193,6 +231,28 @@ 0,14 + + Sam Eugene, PA state rep + + Yes + Characters (Character Sheet) + Yes + + + 0,14 + + + + Dr. Hilda and Ms Laurel Kessler + + Yes + Characters (Character Sheet) + Yes + + + 0,14 + + @@ -445,6 +505,23 @@ 0,0 + + + Yes + + + 0,0 + + + + Dealing with herself + + Yes + + + 0,0 + + @@ -518,13 +595,13 @@ 0 0 - + 5C03DE09-C285-48ED-827F-78E62B7D0F72 69822417-D015-4BDD-90BD-18AAA6198D15 - - 76 - 456 + + 587 + 3360 0 0