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*The statue sinks down, revealing another corridor*
Success.
*Holds my hand up toward you*
Thanks!
*Heads inward*
So we still have drain, fall, reverse, destroy, grow, and forgive, I think.
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*The statue sinks down, revealing another corridor*
Success.
*Holds my hand up toward you*
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*Knocks on the last statue*
This is probably a ton. Better to use one of the scripts.
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*Laughs*
Do you want to help me try to lift this thing?
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If it doesn't work, then we can try the other.
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*Tilts my head back and forth as I look at the figure*
As an archeologist, I don't know if I can bring myself to destroy a piece of history. Wouldn't "remove" have the same effect?
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Because then it would match the rest of the pattern.
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What I mean is, what if we get rid of the second statue at the end? Then it would be a clean set of fifteen, reducing by one each age.
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Maybe... maybe it's not supposed to be out of place like that.
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I'm wondering if the statues represent some kind of age in their history. Five figures, followed by sorrow. Then four, then three, then two. But I can't figure out why there would be another age represented with two sculptures.
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We can always come back to it. In fact, I expect us to be seeing a lot of this place in the near future.