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The Sahara Desert, usually synonymous with scorching heat and desolate landscapes, is now the cradle of a peculiar invasion. A miraculous rain of melted timepieces, supernatural in its productivity, is troubling local beekeepers.
In the sweltering morning, a rain of melted watches, their ticking keeping time with the song of the wind, began to fall from the azure blue sky. These clocks, pliable as wax, started to swarm across the burning sand, creating a shifting landscape of time, temperature, and surrealism. Onlookers, both awed and worried, witnessed this incredible phenomenon, straddling the line between dream and absurdity.
Local beekeepers, who until now were concerned with bees and golden honey, are now faced with a new species of bees that, inexplicably, buzz around these time intruders. They seem to be drawn to the incessant ticking of the watches, as if the hypnotic sound has replaced the sweet nectar of flowers. These winged insects appear to have adopted the melted clocks as their new source of sugar, weaving honeycombs around them to create honey of a previously unknown color and texture.
“We tried giving them flower nectar, fruits, but they prefer the sweet lament of time passing,” said Mahmoud, a local beekeeper, his voice strangely calm in the face of this absurdity. He added, scratching his beard which he had cultivated from watch needles: “Maybe time is sweeter than we thought.”
The Sahara, land of aridity and mystery, is becoming a playground of surrealism, where time melts and bees embrace the taste of the paradoxical. As the sun descends in the sky, coloring the desert in shades of purple and gold, the melted clocks continue to swarm and buzz, adding a new rhythm to the heartbeat of the Earth itself.
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