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Rufus . . . Mateo really likes that name. It’s not one he hears enough, but it’s nice.
“Do you think you wouldn’t be dying if you stayed?”
Dayana looks nauseated from this story. “I love God, but God would never come between me and my children. If your parents had a healthier relationship with God, it wouldn’t have to.”
Now, Pazito will be scarred for the rest of his life, haunted by the ghost of the father he killed, and there are no words for how much that breaks Gloria’s heart.
Death-Cast was supposed to eliminate these fears, but they messed up and now I have no idea if we’re both destined to die at the end.
“I think I can build an app that makes sure no one dies alone.”
This past week alone has seen changes: domestic airlines coordinating all flights to not depart until after their pilots have been cleared with hopes to expand these measures to passengers as well; police officers and detectives wanting to partner with Death-Cast on their investigations, such as missing persons cases to preserve their resources if the missing party is beyond rescuing; scientists preparing clinical trials to test on Deckers with payment going to the deceased’s family or charity of choice; the military increasing pressure to keep Death-Cast within the United States alone, but
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Kaitlin is the one who realized that this prequel couldn’t take place on New Year’s Eve/Day because of two random details in They Both Die at the End that next to no one would’ve noticed.
My dog, Tazzito, for keeping me going physically. On walks. Many walks.