I started my search for answers by interviewing the CEO of Woodcreek Fruit Juice Company. He responded to my questioning by telling me the prophecy of the Mountain Chumos, a tribe of anti-juice delinquents. He spoke in a chilling, smoky voice as he said, "Every year, on December 13th, the Mountain Chumos emerge from their hiding place, the creek near the fruit juice company." So far, I had learned the basics of hiding monsters, I was excited for more! He said, "Their greatest enemies are the cantaloupes of the eastern valley."
The next day, David warned me not to go on the roller coaster but I thought him silly so I disobeyed. He told me this story about how some guy stood up on the roller coaster last year and broke his neck or something. After, I continued on my search for dragons. Again I ask, where do movie men get their dragons?
Upon interviewing the expert of dragons at Salamander Museum, I learned that although the time that dragons began appearing isn't known for sure, it's estimated to be about 4,000 B.C. This would place the birth of dragons just after the extinction of carnivorous dinosaurs. Some experts in the museum believe that most dragons are extinct, but the remaining dragons inhabit the untraveled areas of Antarctica as dragons were rumored to live in various places and climates. Some lived in fiery caves, some lived in the deepest of oceans, and some in the frigid crevices of the poles. One expert cut off a dragons tongue in an epic battle to prove to his friends that dragons exist.
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| fig. 1 |
After discovering all this new information from the trustworthy experts at Salamander Museum, I returned to the fruit juice company to finally figure out where the dragons were hiding. The CEO told me that sometime recently, he spotted the creature featured in figure 1 above. He drew that picture. I suspect mischief.



Do you really want to know? Well then let me tell you son. Movie men get their dragons from the imaginations of the movie-goers.
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