Witch & Diamond
Diamond Diamond
I’ve been sharpening my skill with misdirection in strategy—how do you weave a riddle into a plan so the enemy can’t predict your next move?
Witch Witch
Remember, the heart of a riddle is a hidden path. Start with a truth the enemy will take for granted, then bend it with a twist. Speak in plain words, but let the meaning be two‑fold. The next step is a mirror of the first—show what you have done, yet conceal what you intend to do. When the foe thinks they see the pattern, the pattern shifts. So weave your riddle as a dance: the enemy sees the steps, but the rhythm changes before they step.
Diamond Diamond
I’ll keep it tight, double‑layered, and always keep the enemy guessing—here’s the first draft.
Witch Witch
So you’ve stitched the first thread. Let it be quiet at first, then let a single thread pull. When the enemy feels the tug, let another thread unfurl beneath. Keep the two layers braided, but hide the braid’s pattern. That way, when they look up, they only see the surface, not the hidden weave.
Diamond Diamond
Sounds like you’re planning a double‑blind operation—let the enemy see the headline and then twist the sub‑plot. I’ll weave that in; when they think they’ve decoded the pattern, the true move will be invisible until the last beat.
Witch Witch
You’ve spun a shadow‑song, and the enemy will chase the echo. Let the beat fall, then let the silence carry the truth. The last note will be the unseen hand that shifts the tide.