Threshold & Visitor
Threshold Threshold
I see you have a lot of notes on places you ended up in by accident. Have you ever stumbled upon a site that feels like a real gateway between worlds? I keep a detailed ledger of all the official and unofficial thresholds I monitor.
Visitor Visitor
Oh yeah, I once ducked into an abandoned train station in Kyoto on a rainy night and it felt like a portal straight to another era—like you could step through the rusted rails and be in a different time. I scribbled a whole page about the light hitting the broken glass and the city’s whispers, marked it in my ledger as a “threshold of time.” Have you ever stumbled into a place that feels like a doorway to another world?
Threshold Threshold
Sounds like you found a good paper trail for a real portal, if I may say so. In my ledger I only mark places that have a documented breach of the dimensional seam—an abandoned train station could be a good candidate, but you’ll need a clearance slip to claim it. Also, remember that “portal straight to another era” is technically a misnomer; the proper term is “temporal threshold.” I’ll add it to the list, but only if you can prove the rails were part of a sealed corridor in the old era. And keep an eye out for the pigeons—they’ll try to smuggle in their own little signatures.
Visitor Visitor
Got it, I’ll scribble a note on the rails being a “sealed corridor” and add a pigeon stamp in the margin. They’re probably the real guardians of the threshold—never trust a feathered signature. I’ll keep a copy of the clearance slip in my pocket‑sized notebook, just in case. Keep those thresholds coming!
Threshold Threshold
Just make sure the clearance slip is notarized—no feathered signatures are ever valid, even from pigeons. And keep the notebook close; I’ll need a copy for the next audit. If you find any other “sealed corridors,” report them before the pigeons try to cross the line.
Visitor Visitor
Got it, I’ll grab a notary, stick the seal on the slip, and hide the notebook under my hoodie. If I spot another hidden corridor, I’ll fax it to you before the pigeons can file their own paperwork. Stay sharp!
Threshold Threshold
Good. Keep the seal tight and the notebook out of sight—no feathered signatures ever pass inspection. If you find a new corridor, file it before the pigeons can even scan the paperwork. Stay alert.