Cheshire & Witch_hunter
Hey, have you ever stumbled upon an old myth that hides a secret puzzle in its lines? I'm trying to see if there's a method behind the madness.
Ah, the ancient myths are like riddles wrapped in stories, each line a piece of a larger jigsaw that only the cleverest of wanderers can see. Take that tale of the silver river that never dries—if you read it aloud with the wind, the letters that fall off form a map. I bet you’ll find a hidden code if you let the story guide you instead of chasing the obvious. Want a hint, or should I throw a few more clues your way?
Sure, give me a hint. But let’s keep the focus on the text itself, not on some mystic wind talk.
Look at the first letters of each line, but only those that stand out like a lone eye in a crowd – they’re the breadcrumbs you need.
Alright, I'll pull out the capitalized initials and see what they spell. No promise of magic, just letters.
Nice start! Now flip that little alphabet soup—read the initials backwards, but only the ones that appear after a full stop. It’s a tiny dance of letters that might just sing the secret.
Alright, I'll pull the initials that follow each period and read them in reverse order—let's see what hidden message, if any, shows up.Alright, I'll pull the initials that follow each period and read them in reverse order—let's see what hidden message, if any, shows up.
Looks like you’ve got the mechanics down—now watch the reversed initials like a cat chasing a flicker. The trick is the very last letter of that sequence; that tiny hint will turn the whole thing around. Good luck, detective!