Report no.29389-T
12/04/2027
Northern New England Internal Science Team, Protection and Preservation Dept.
A few months ago, a member of our investigations and recovery department filled out a request to search and seize for a small, untouched school in a lower county in Massachusetts which was approved by the head of the department.
Upon the search, said investigator recovered a journal filled with more than just journal entries. When our scientists ran a thorough examination of the contents of the journal, their findings were rather… disturbing. Therefore, according to protocol, it is a requirement to run a recorded interrogation.
For the sake of confidentiality, we will be referring to the department member who found this journal on the search and seize ‘thirteen’ (in further context of this code name, this is the thirteenth person associated with the NNEISC who has been through the confidential interrogation protocol this year), along with the very scientist who ran the interrogation to be referred to simply as ‘interrogator’.
The text below is an audio transcript of the recorded interrogation from our files. The interrogation began on 11/03/2027 and was broken into 7 segments which were performed throughout that same week. Please note before reading: Permission to share this transcript anywhere else is prohibited. There will be consequences.
Thirteen, session 1
Interrogator: The head of the Search and Seize Department stated that you sent in a request form to search through a no longer operating high school by the shore in Massachusetts, which was accepted. What was the reason or interest for searching this school, if there was a specific reason?
Thirteen: I was in town when the school officially closed, it was.. destroyed in a fire. My twin niece and nephew both went to that school, I-not like that really has anything to do with this, plus they already graduated a week before the school set on fire in May, but I grew skeptical about the cause of the fire of that school.
Interrogator: So, considering the school’s official closure this June, and your niece and nephew were out of there before the closing, that means the class of 2027 was the last class to ever finish all four years at that school, obviously unless they transferred from a different school before, but like you said, that isn’t important to this. Do you know why your skepticism grew?
Thirteen: The reason for the fire was unclear. I figured we’re a classified science team studying unusual things, so I got to work and starting looking at hundreds of articles and there was either a different story or the same story but altered a bit.
Interrogator: Were you trying to figure out the true cause of the fire, and who and what could’ve been behind all of it?
Thirteen: I guess so. I think that whatever happened there was bad, especially if the media is trying to hide it by altering the story. What I found was confirmation to that theory.
Interrogator: Right.
Thirteen: Now that I think of it, my niece and nephew did have something to do with this. I don’t know, guess I just couldn’t remember at first because I’m nervous.
Interrogator: That’s alright, you aren’t the first one who’s done that. Nerves get to everyone, especially in a dark, confined room like this.
Thirteen: Hah… yeah. They were written about in the journal, as well as their own writing. The journal belonged to another person, a girl who claims that the twins were her best friends along with one other kid.
Interrogator: Sweet. And any others?
Interrogator: …thirteen?
Thirteen: I’m sure the scientists are panicking at the sight of what else was in there. I was a bit shocked at first too.
Interrogator: How come?
Thirteen: Do you remember the Zozia family?
Interrogator: You mean the family who’s involvement in our team almost screwed us all over?
Thirtheen: Yea.
Thirteen: …there was a lot in there about them.
Interrogator: Like what?
Thirteen: That’s the thing, there was so much that can’t even think of every possible individual thing in there.
Interrogator: Can you at least try?
Thirteen: . . .
Interrogator: For us, please? The camera isn’t judging, we’re simply just trying to get your personal recollection of what you found in there to help out the scientists that are examining it. Y’know, give them further background information on what they’re looking into.
Thirteen: Uhm.. I think there were some.. audio logs, drawings..? Uhm.. maybe even photographs- no… wait, yes, photographs, very few though, and a few files and stolen book pages. I’m sure there’s more but I just can’t remember all of it right now. I’m sorry.
Interrogator: You did great, I appreciate your honesty. Say, how ‘bout we end today’s session here? I think we got a good introduction as to what we’re stepping into.
Thirteen: If the higher ops in charge of our talk don’t mind, then uh, yes please.
Interrogator: Very well. We will end session here, and you are free to go.
End session 1