By Antiquity Times Reporter Mike
While I had to spend more efforts to research on, what the core of this ‘Relay for Life’ issue was, I once again went back to the place at Bath opposite to the bank and with William the Fisherman to the side, to have a look at the signs we can study there.
Turning to one of the big signs on the wall, I already knew, that I would have to use my grandmothers crystal ball once again.
She was so kind at that time she gave it to me and said, just as we expect a grandmother to be “When you ever get in serious doubt or trouble, use this ball to give you peace in mind again. It will to my best knowledge help you to solve nearly ununderstandable riddles and make you safe as who your are in your life and attempts, provide you with the power to figure out things, both in the past, the present time and in the future.”
I remember, how much I thanked her as the little boy I was, without knowing the value of what she really gave me at that time.
A single word on this first sign caught my special attention and apart from holding the crystal ball up I said it loud: “Bond”.
It took the ball a couple of seconds – to me it felt as an eternity – , but then very little flashed over the ball. It showed:
“Too many results – only this can be mentioned: No time to die – but he died anyway”
My confusion could not have been bigger, but I focussed on the ‘he’. Could it be that black silhouette, which left Antiquity in the strange vehicle, that was the ‘he’? And therefore also the one, who brought the message to our community, as it was ‘No time to die’ and we could add ‘so soon’.
I had to leave the case where it was for now and returned to my writing desk with all this material I collected from the Antiquity Times’ library. For example the H.G. Wells novella “The Time Machine” from 1895.
To be continued