Riddler:A terrible display, friend. And now the sweet treats will go uneaten.
Eivor:So the cake was a lie?
Riddler:Not so, sadly you just do not deserve them.
Eivor spoke to Chad again.
Riddler:I do not get many visitors. Your presence sparked my mind. A rare thing out here. I wonder, will we ever tire of such wordplay? Will the riddles of England die with me? My grandfather built this turf maze. I might leave this place one day, and move to Escanceaster with my riddles.
Eivor read a note on the table outside.
Faded Paper
By day, I was borne on wings through the air. By night, I steal wits from the worthiest of scoundrels. I loose men's tongues and sweeten their songs. Until my hammer pounds on skulls.
She read another note on the workstation outside the house.
Literary Aspirations
I have collected riddles for so long, and written some wonderful mind-muddlers, I might put them all down in a book for posterity. Maybe when I retire to Exeter?
Eivor entered Chad's house and read another note on the desk.
Mind Bender
Everyone plunders me, tears off my skin. Rips my head from its roots. But no man I bite, unless he bites me; then he will shed a tear.
Outcome
Eivor correctly answered all three riddles.
Behind the scenes
The memory is designed so that it is only completed once all three riddles have been solved by the player. Any riddle that the player has failed will be repeated upon speaking to the Riddler again until they have given the right solutions to all of them. This gives them unlimited chances to succeed. No lines help to transition the player into the repeated tries, suggesting that they are not part of the canonical dialogue but merely there for the player's convenience to ensure they succeed.
Allusions
Chad the Bewilderer and his side-quest are allusions to the Batman villain known as the Riddler who is also garbed in green and has an obsession with riddles.
Eivor's line of "So the cake was a lie?" is an allusion to a meme that arose from a joke in the video game Portal (2007). Throughout the game, the AI program GLaDOS regularly promises to reward the protagonist, Chell with cake once they finish all of the platforming puzzles. As the player advances through the stages, they discover ominous warnings left behind by scientist Doug Rattmann that "the cake is a lie", foreshadowing GLaDOS's role as the secret villain.
Chad's note about his plan to retire to Exeter and compile an anthology of riddles is a reference to the Exeter Book, a collection of Old English poetry believed to originate in the late 10th century. It is notable for containing over ninety riddles written in alliterative verse on a wide variety of subjects, ranging from religious aspects to everyday life, and often includes double entendres. Fittingly, the note in his house is an excerpt and alternate translation of Exeter Book Riddle 65, the answer to which is an onion, while the faded note is an excerpt of Exeter Book Riddle 59, the answer to which is mead.