Leo looked at the trunk of the tree he was leaning against. High up, where the main branches split, was a knot that looked suspiciously like a keyhole.
He looked up, half-expecting the psychedelic cat from the cover to be watching him from a branch. The park was quiet, save for the distant sound of a lawnmower. He looked at the key, then back at the magazine. On the very last page, in the "Letters to the Editor" section, a small, bolded line at the bottom read: “The lock is in the hollow of the old oak at the center of the world.” Piff Magazine No 46 1973
He handed over his crumpled quarters and raced to the park, collapsing under the shade of a massive oak tree. As he flipped through the pages, the scent of cheap ink and nostalgia filled his senses. Issue No. 46 was a legendary one; it contained the first-ever appearance of "Barnaby the Bumbling Barbarian" and a controversial fold-out map of a fictional city made entirely of musical instruments. Leo looked at the trunk of the tree he was leaning against
The humid air of July 1973 hung heavy over the newsstand, but for ten-year-old Leo, the only thing that mattered was the glossy, slightly bent cover of . The park was quiet, save for the distant
Halfway through the magazine, Leo found something that wasn't listed in the table of contents. Tucked between a satirical ad for "X-Ray Specs" and a DIY guide for building a birdhouse out of popsicle sticks was a handwritten note on a yellowed scrap of paper.
That summer, didn't just give Leo a story to read—it gave him one to live.
Leo’s heart hammered. He flipped back to page 14—a slapstick comic about a detective named Inspector Piff. He looked closely. Behind the final panel, where the Inspector was slipping on a banana peel, there was a faint, raised outline. Using his fingernail, Leo carefully peeled back the edge of the paper. Hidden in the binding was a tiny, silver key.
Leo looked at the trunk of the tree he was leaning against. High up, where the main branches split, was a knot that looked suspiciously like a keyhole.
He looked up, half-expecting the psychedelic cat from the cover to be watching him from a branch. The park was quiet, save for the distant sound of a lawnmower. He looked at the key, then back at the magazine. On the very last page, in the "Letters to the Editor" section, a small, bolded line at the bottom read: “The lock is in the hollow of the old oak at the center of the world.”
He handed over his crumpled quarters and raced to the park, collapsing under the shade of a massive oak tree. As he flipped through the pages, the scent of cheap ink and nostalgia filled his senses. Issue No. 46 was a legendary one; it contained the first-ever appearance of "Barnaby the Bumbling Barbarian" and a controversial fold-out map of a fictional city made entirely of musical instruments.
The humid air of July 1973 hung heavy over the newsstand, but for ten-year-old Leo, the only thing that mattered was the glossy, slightly bent cover of .
Halfway through the magazine, Leo found something that wasn't listed in the table of contents. Tucked between a satirical ad for "X-Ray Specs" and a DIY guide for building a birdhouse out of popsicle sticks was a handwritten note on a yellowed scrap of paper.
That summer, didn't just give Leo a story to read—it gave him one to live.
Leo’s heart hammered. He flipped back to page 14—a slapstick comic about a detective named Inspector Piff. He looked closely. Behind the final panel, where the Inspector was slipping on a banana peel, there was a faint, raised outline. Using his fingernail, Leo carefully peeled back the edge of the paper. Hidden in the binding was a tiny, silver key.