>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>When you say "the woman" was killed, it sounds like you are referring to the first woman.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>Was the maid the one who was killed?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>Actually, I didn't say, she was killed. I said: she was found dead. No, maid was alive, but the master (what is the correct term here?) was found dead.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Are you saying the woman wasn't killed?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>No, she was not. Ske killed herself.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>What was she doing in the maid's room? Changing the sheets? *grin*
>>>>>>
>>>>>>She was not in the maid room either... :)
>>>>>
>>>>>Who found her?
>>>>
>>>> The owner of the hotel + the maid.
>>>>
>>>>And why were they looking in her room, if the scream came from another?
>>>>
>>>> They probably looked in both rooms, it doesn't really matter.
>>>>
>>>>>Why am I playing this game? *vbg*
>>>>
>>>> ??? :)
>>>
>>>
>>>Did the maid find the woman's clothes in her (the maid's) room (and thus the scream)?
>>
>> No. Maid was not in her "master's" room, when she screamed. Here is an important hint: all rooms in this hotel were identical.
>>
>>>
>>>Did the woman throw the clothes out her window before killing herself?
>>>
>>
>> No.
>>
>>>Do I know enough information to solve the mystery?
>>
>> I told this story the way I was told and could remember. Basically, the information provided, should be enough.
>>
>>>Is there an interesting twist at the end of the story?
>>
>> The whole story is a little bit unreal. I think, it might happen in the end of 18th century...
>
>Was the woman a man?
>
No, but your train of thoughts is close...
>Did the maid die from fright?
>
Maid didn't die at all, but she screamed from fright of realizing something...
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.
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