
Travel in the Secret Room
by I
About This Novel
Mr. Blanc was sitting next to the single bed, unaware that there was a camera on the ceiling facing him and a microphone secretly placed on one wall. Everything in the room had a white note with its name written in capital letters; there was a window on the wall that was sealed with two construction nails; there was a white porcelain handle on the door, but it was unknown whether it was locked; on the mahogany table, there were more than thirty black-and-white photos neatly placed, as well as more than twenty pages of incomplete prison statements. Anna, Sophie, Daniel Quinn, James P. Flood... The characters in the photo take turns to inform Mr. Blanc of the multiple charges he faces. Under the crisis, he began to involuntarily tell the unfinished story on the manuscript... "If you want to tell a good story, it is impossible to have any mercy." But what Mr. Blanc doesn't know is that the dilemma he faces today stems precisely from making up stories in the past. The cruelty of the time; the people who imprisoned him here were the characters he had treated roughly; and these characters, as the creations of another consciousness, will have a longer vitality than the consciousness that created them, because once they are thrown into this world, they will exist forever.
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