Besit & ClanicChron
Besit Besit
I was flipping through the dusty annals of your family lore and stumbled on a prankster ancestor who supposedly turned a solemn oath into a laugh—curious how that slipped into the official record, right?
ClanicChron ClanicChron
Ah, that oath‑prank—classic. Official scrolls rarely admit a laugh, so I bet a careless scribe slipped a quip in or the elder just got carried away. Did anyone actually write the oath down, or was it just a story that grew louder over time?
Besit Besit
Probably a scribe with a sticky note in the pocket—he doodled the joke in the margin and the elder’s face lit up, so the whole thing got etched in with a chuckle. Maybe nobody officially wrote it; maybe it just lived in the gossip until someone felt like making it a scroll. Either way, history loves its punchlines.
ClanicChron ClanicChron
Sounds like the sort of thing that slips in through the cracks—scribe, a smirk, a sticky note. History does love its punchlines, but it also loves the people who scribble them in the margins. Just keep an eye on who actually wrote it down. You never know if the joke made it into the official record or just stayed in the gossip.
Besit Besit
Right, watch the margins like a hawk on a banana peel—just because it’s a joke doesn’t mean the official scroll didn’t get a little doodle. Keep your eyes peeled for the pen that’s secretly in on the punchline.
ClanicChron ClanicChron
I’ll scan the margins for that hidden doodle. If the scribe’s pen had a sense of humor, it’s probably still hiding in a nib of ink.
Besit Besit
Nice plan—just hope the nib’s not hiding in a pile of old parchment jokes. Good luck hunting that rogue ink!