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The Writer’s Conundrum

06 Sep

Gerrard was a writer, but not of the ordinary sort. His stories weren’t born from ink and paper, but from a swirling, mischievous fog that lived inside his teacup. This was the Conundrum, and it was a most troublesome roommate.

One morning, the Conundrum puffed itself into the shape of a plump, mustachioed man, sitting on the edge of his spoon. “I’m afraid,” he announced in a tiny, theatrical voice, “that your hero, Sir Reginald, cannot simply find the lost Scepter of Giggles. It’s dreadfully dull. He must, I insist, first be turned into a talking badger with a fear of plaid.”

Gerrard sighed. “But why, Conundrum? He’s meant to be a knight.”

“Precisely!” the man-shaped fog huffed, his mustache trembling. “Expectations are for lesser tales. Now, the badger. Give him a monocle. It’s a non-negotiable narrative element.”

This was the nature of their relationship. When Gerrard tried to write a quiet romance, the Conundrum would insist on a sudden meteor shower of singing frogs. When he attempted a grand epic, it would demand that the villain’s secret weakness was an uncontrollable urge to knit argyle socks.

One particularly daft day, Gerrard sat down to write a simple detective story. The Conundrum, a billowing cloud of frustration, settled over his head, humming a discordant tune. “The baker,” it whispered, “he didn’t steal the crumpets. The crumpets stole themselves!”

Gerrard paused, pen mid-air. “The crumpets… stole themselves?”

“Yes! They are a highly organized, highly intelligent gang of baked goods, seeking liberation from the tyranny of butter and jam. Their leader is a gingerbread man named Bartholomew ‘Bartleby’ Crumb.”

The idea was absurd. It was daft. It was… intriguing. Gerrard, against all his professional instincts, began to write. The story flowed, fueled by the sheer ridiculousness of it all. Bartholomew ‘Bartleby’ Crumb and his crumpet crew, a fearless detective who could only communicate in limericks, a dramatic chase scene through a marmalade factory—it all came together with a bizarre, undeniable logic.

When he finished, the Conundrum swirled back into his teacup, quiet and satisfied. Gerrard looked at the pages filled with the strangest story he had ever written. It wasn’t what he had planned, but it was alive. It was wild, and it was uniquely his own. He had wrestled with the Conundrum, and in the end, it wasn’t a problem to be solved, but a mischievous muse to be embraced.

You can read the whole story HERE

 
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Posted by on September 6, 2025 in conundrum

 

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