Looking at Aiwass, Sherlock showed an extremely surprised look: "You're actually... really deducing."
He was already used to Aiwass directly arriving at a mysterious yet correct conclusion. But now, Aiwass was seriously thinking and reasoning—although he hid part of the knowledge to reach the correct conclusion faster than Sherlock, at least this time there was a reasoning process that others could understand.
"Can't help it either."
Aiwass spread his hands: "If I follow the procedure to solve it, I'm afraid my thinking will be rewritten again."
The most terrifying form of the Box of Emptiness is when others don't know of its existence.
In this situation, it can almost be called "fate" itself.
But as long as someone realizes its existence—even further clarifying its operating principle, it is actually quite easy to crack.
In this situation, the simplest, most straightforward, and most correct idea is to solve according to the procedure.