Labyrinth and a Heiroglyph
By donquicksought
- 483 reads
?anandbose Labyrinth and a Heiroglyph
In the library, the librarian was searching for a single word called
the labyrinth. Library of Fictions, 23rd Excerpt.
A novelist started writing the book called the Labyrinth of clues. In
the process of writing, he developed the art of inspiration, which he
believed is emanating from a strange alphabet called the fork, now
simplified to an Anglican version as (Y).
He dreamt about a druid who spoke the Drunic language, who wrote about
the Fork as a strange tongue that emanated during the days of
conception, called desire and its elevation, to the possessed fruit.
Later on during Celtic times, a perversion of connoting the fork as an
imagery of inversions translated itself as an oracle called the
superstition of negative thinking. The bard who developed this school
of thought, strange to say, was found with one embedded in his throat.
After this event of perfidy, at the convocation ceremony called the
Grail-Hedge, it was decided to transmute the idiosyncratic symbol of an
inverted fork into an alphabet of respectability. On many Grecian urns
this symbol commonly called Lambda aroused the interest of etymologists
as instrument of some unknown ritual.
Waking from the dream, the author began writing about the murder of a
strange librarian called Minotaur. In the ensuing pages the detective
Daedlus was assigned the task of investigation. At the place of murder,
their lay a host of clues like strands of hair, broken nails, the odd
cipher, an unknown prayer book called the crux.
For every clue, the author decided to create a motive that will enable
the readers to search other libraries and also access the secret life
of the fraternity called Minotauri.
By this time, the thread of the passage for the rest of the story burst
on to the author. Writing, the author began casting many concentric
circles leading to a single sign, the circle. Lambent on it was the
candle, and besides it was written in Latin: "truth is stranger than
fiction."
At the end of the novel, the readers are petrified to learn that the
author has forgotten to mislead them. In a detour of situations, the
detective Daedlus gets murdered while the librarian Minotaur has
escaped the labyrinth.
On the day of 13th, the fourth month of February 2002, the
New-York times report about the murder of the author Gresham Graham who
writes under the Nome-de-plume Daedlus. The killer happens to be a
stranger, who became so obsessed with Daedlus. He, by a careful
insertion through the main artery, bled Daedlus to death . At the scene
of murder, Sergeant Wood Smith discovered a card with Gothic writing
-"Minotaur escapes the labyrinth".
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