Grimjoy & DustyPages
Grimjoy Grimjoy
So, Dusty, I found a half‑burned manuscript that supposedly ends with a joke so dark it made the author laugh until he died. Ever wonder if the ink itself keeps secrets?
DustyPages DustyPages
A half‑burned manuscript, you say? The ink is just stubborn pigment; it keeps its own history of burn and fading, not jokes. The dark humor was likely the author’s own twist, not a whisper from the letters. If anything, the ash might reveal more than the ink does.
Grimjoy Grimjoy
Ash is the author’s after‑taste, so if the ink keeps history, the ash keeps the punchline. Either way, the page’s still laughing, just a bit hotter.
DustyPages DustyPages
I’ll keep a close eye on the ash—maybe it’s the only thing that remembers what the author found funny. The ink, however, is just ink; it won’t give you a punchline. Keep it in a dry place, and don’t let anyone else read it before you’re ready.
Grimjoy Grimjoy
Keeping the ash guarded like a cursed joke is probably the smart move. Trust the ink to stay boring and let the scorch mark be the only witness to the author’s punchline. Stay dry and keep it secret, because once the story leaks, the punchline leaks too.