• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

JBowtie -- please stand up! NOW with mystery riddles to solve!

RuleMaster said:
Does no one step up to the challenge?

2. Step on it!

If Ms. Smith didn't had such a racy driving style, then she would be dead by now. What happened?

Here is a question - are 'Ms. Smith' and 'she' the same person?

If not, the answer is that Ms. Smith is an ambulance driver driving a patient (another women - the 'she' in the second part of the sentence, who could also be named Ms. Smith or not; the inferral is that 'she' is also called Ms. Smith but that may not be the case).

Am I close?

Edit: I just realized that Ms. Smith may not even need to be an ambulance driver. She could just be driving someone to the doctors or the hospital.
 

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Witz said:
Here is a question - are 'Ms. Smith' and 'she' the same person?

If not, the answer is that Ms. Smith is an ambulance driver driving a patient (another women - the 'she' in the second part of the sentence, who could also be named Ms. Smith or not; the inferral is that 'she' is also called Ms. Smith but that may not be the case).

Am I close?

Edit: I just realized that Ms. Smith may not even need to be an ambulance driver. She could just be driving someone to the doctors or the hospital.

Until now, "she" and "Ms. Smith" have been used synonymously. Now I have to admit, that there is a second person involved - more would be spoilerish. I like the direction, you are trying. Keep it up!
 

Into the Woods

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