The same story from another source has the maze owner saying that usually, people who are lost walk through the corn stalks toward the sounds of the busy nearby highway. That would seem to be common sense.
OK, the Kraken, being so intelligent, had already studied ancient fossilized bones from millions of years before their time. Sadly, they realized that they had no such bones themselves, and would be lost to the fossil record eventually. So they hatched a plan to leave bones behind anyway, appropriated from another species, rearranged in their own image, as a time capsule for future intelligent beings to discover in another few million years. Not only were they aware of their own mortality, but they were concerned with their legacy. Yet they went extinct. What lesson can we humans draw from this?
Oh my, I think I just wrote a science fiction premise.
Now, you might get into trouble with the definition of "two pieces of bread." You're using that to exclude tacos and wraps, but I taught my kids to make a half-sandwich, where you fold one piece of bread around peanut butter or baloney or something because they were too little to eat a whole one. But if we CUT that bread into two pieces, would that make it a sandwich?
It's from Hercules -I checked, because it seems so Fantasia. But you know how Disney recycles artwork. Turn the guy on the right blue and put curls in his beard, and he would BE the Fantasia Zeus.
Oh my, I think I just wrote a science fiction premise.