Chapter
The Clock That Wouldn’t Stop
Here is a subtitle
The first thing Alex noticed was the silence. Not the kind that falls over a library or a snowy field, but the unsettling absence of everything—the hum of streetlights, the distant bark of a dog, even the faint pulse of his own blood in his ears. He tightened his grip on the brass pocket watch in his hand, its hands spinning wildly as if caught in a storm.
Moments earlier, he had been standing in his grandfather’s study, staring at the strange inscription etched into the watch’s casing: Tempus est fluidum. Time is fluid. One careless twist of the crown, and the world had blurred like wet paint.
Now, when his vision cleared, he was no longer in the study. He stood in the middle of the same street he had lived on his whole life, but everything was wrong. The houses were there, but smaller, painted in faded greens and yellows. A horse clopped past, pulling a rattling wooden cart. The driver tipped his flat cap at Alex, who could only gape in return.
“1893,” Alex muttered, reading the date on a crumpled newspaper that had blown against his leg. His throat went dry. The watch had actually worked.
The thrill of discovery burned bright for only a moment before fear crept in. What if he couldn’t get back? What if turning the crown again only sent him deeper into history, to some era where he wouldn’t survive a day?
He pressed the watch to his ear. Beneath the ticking, he swore he heard something else—a whisper, faint and slippery, like words half-remembered from a dream. He turned slowly, scanning the cobbled street. That was when he saw her: a girl about his age, watching from across the road. She had the same brass watch dangling from her hand.
Their eyes locked, and she gave the slightest nod, as if she had been waiting for him.
Alex’s pulse hammered. “You too?” he whispered.
The girl smiled, but it wasn’t reassuring. It was the kind of smile that said: You have no idea what you’ve stepped into.
Before he could move toward her, the watch in his palm grew hot, the crown turning by itself. The air trembled, the world bent, and the silence returned.
He was falling through centuries again.
The storm had swallowed the town by the time Clara reached the cellar steps. Thunder rolled in long, ragged growls, rattling the windows above. She clutched the lantern tighter, the flame wavering in the draft that seemed to seep up from the floorboards.
The letter she’d found tucked inside her grandmother’s Bible still burned in her pocket: “When the house trembles, follow the ticking. The way will open.”
She descended slowly, each step complaining beneath her weight. The cellar smelled of dust and iron, as though the air itself had been sealed for decades. Her lantern’s glow caught on rows of canning jars and old trunks, but it was the sound that guided her—soft at first, then undeniable.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
Not the steady rhythm of an ordinary clock, but a pulsing beat, slightly too fast, as though echoing her racing heart. She found the source in the far corner: a brass contraption half-buried under a tarpaulin. Its gears were larger than her hand, interlocking with delicate precision, and at its center a circular dial spun without numbers, glowing faintly blue.
Clara touched the rim. The machine shuddered awake, lantern glass trembling in sympathy. Sparks traced across the gears like veins of lightning. The air thickened, humming.
Before she could step back, the cellar walls rippled as if she were underwater. The jars melted into streaks of color, the shelves twisted, and then—
Silence.
She stood in the same spot, lantern raised, but the cellar was gone. Above her stretched an open sky bruised with purple clouds, and around her rose wooden scaffolds that smelled of fresh-cut oak. Voices echoed from beyond the ridge: men shouting orders in a language older than her own.
Clara spun, dizzy with the truth dawning on her. The house hadn’t always stood here—it had been built here. She was standing inside its skeleton, decades before she was born.
She reached into her pocket, fingers brushing the letter. The ink shimmered, words rearranging themselves as though they had been waiting for her to arrive:
“Every storm is a doorway. But remember, Clara—each step backward casts a shadow forward.”
The machine ticked again behind her, patient, as if daring her to choose whether to stay in this unfinished world or push deeper into the river of time.
The storm had swallowed the town by the time Clara reached the cellar steps. Thunder rolled in long, ragged growls, rattling the windows above. She clutched the lantern tighter, the flame wavering in the draft that seemed to seep up from the floorboards.
The letter she’d found tucked inside her grandmother’s Bible still burned in her pocket: “When the house trembles, follow the ticking. The way will open.”
She descended slowly, each step complaining beneath her weight. The cellar smelled of dust and iron, as though the air itself had been sealed for decades. Her lantern’s glow caught on rows of canning jars and old trunks, but it was the sound that guided her—soft at first, then undeniable.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
Not the steady rhythm of an ordinary clock, but a pulsing beat, slightly too fast, as though echoing her racing heart. She found the source in the far corner: a brass contraption half-buried under a tarpaulin. Its gears were larger than her hand, interlocking with delicate precision, and at its center a circular dial spun without numbers, glowing faintly blue.
Clara touched the rim. The machine shuddered awake, lantern glass trembling in sympathy. Sparks traced across the gears like veins of lightning. The air thickened, humming.
Before she could step back, the cellar walls rippled as if she were underwater. The jars melted into streaks of color, the shelves twisted, and then—
Silence.
She stood in the same spot, lantern raised, but the cellar was gone. Above her stretched an open sky bruised with purple clouds, and around her rose wooden scaffolds that smelled of fresh-cut oak. Voices echoed from beyond the ridge: men shouting orders in a language older than her own.
Clara spun, dizzy with the truth dawning on her. The house hadn’t always stood here—it had been built here. She was standing inside its skeleton, decades before she was born.
She reached into her pocket, fingers brushing the letter. The ink shimmered, words rearranging themselves as though they had been waiting for her to arrive:
“Every storm is a doorway. But remember, Clara—each step backward casts a shadow forward.”
The machine ticked again behind her, patient, as if daring her to choose whether to stay in this unfinished world or push deeper into the river of time.
The storm had swallowed the town by the time Clara reached the cellar steps. Thunder rolled in long, ragged growls, rattling the windows above. She clutched the lantern tighter, the flame wavering in the draft that seemed to seep up from the floorboards.
The letter she’d found tucked inside her grandmother’s Bible still burned in her pocket: “When the house trembles, follow the ticking. The way will open.”
She descended slowly, each step complaining beneath her weight. The cellar smelled of dust and iron, as though the air itself had been sealed for decades. Her lantern’s glow caught on rows of canning jars and old trunks, but it was the sound that guided her—soft at first, then undeniable.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
Not the steady rhythm of an ordinary clock, but a pulsing beat, slightly too fast, as though echoing her racing heart. She found the source in the far corner: a brass contraption half-buried under a tarpaulin. Its gears were larger than her hand, interlocking with delicate precision, and at its center a circular dial spun without numbers, glowing faintly blue.
Clara touched the rim. The machine shuddered awake, lantern glass trembling in sympathy. Sparks traced across the gears like veins of lightning. The air thickened, humming.
Before she could step back, the cellar walls rippled as if she were underwater. The jars melted into streaks of color, the shelves twisted, and then—
Silence.
She stood in the same spot, lantern raised, but the cellar was gone. Above her stretched an open sky bruised with purple clouds, and around her rose wooden scaffolds that smelled of fresh-cut oak. Voices echoed from beyond the ridge: men shouting orders in a language older than her own.
Clara spun, dizzy with the truth dawning on her. The house hadn’t always stood here—it had been built here. She was standing inside its skeleton, decades before she was born.
She reached into her pocket, fingers brushing the letter. The ink shimmered, words rearranging themselves as though they had been waiting for her to arrive:
“Every storm is a doorway. But remember, Clara—each step backward casts a shadow forward.”
The machine ticked again behind her, patient, as if daring her to choose whether to stay in this unfinished world or push deeper into the river of time.
The storm had swallowed the town by the time Clara reached the cellar steps. Thunder rolled in long, ragged growls, rattling the windows above. She clutched the lantern tighter, the flame wavering in the draft that seemed to seep up from the floorboards.
The letter she’d found tucked inside her grandmother’s Bible still burned in her pocket: “When the house trembles, follow the ticking. The way will open.”
She descended slowly, each step complaining beneath her weight. The cellar smelled of dust and iron, as though the air itself had been sealed for decades. Her lantern’s glow caught on rows of canning jars and old trunks, but it was the sound that guided her—soft at first, then undeniable.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
Not the steady rhythm of an ordinary clock, but a pulsing beat, slightly too fast, as though echoing her racing heart. She found the source in the far corner: a brass contraption half-buried under a tarpaulin. Its gears were larger than her hand, interlocking with delicate precision, and at its center a circular dial spun without numbers, glowing faintly blue.
Clara touched the rim. The machine shuddered awake, lantern glass trembling in sympathy. Sparks traced across the gears like veins of lightning. The air thickened, humming.
Before she could step back, the cellar walls rippled as if she were underwater. The jars melted into streaks of color, the shelves twisted, and then—
Silence.
She stood in the same spot, lantern raised, but the cellar was gone. Above her stretched an open sky bruised with purple clouds, and around her rose wooden scaffolds that smelled of fresh-cut oak. Voices echoed from beyond the ridge: men shouting orders in a language older than her own.
Clara spun, dizzy with the truth dawning on her. The house hadn’t always stood here—it had been built here. She was standing inside its skeleton, decades before she was born.
She reached into her pocket, fingers brushing the letter. The ink shimmered, words rearranging themselves as though they had been waiting for her to arrive:
“Every storm is a doorway. But remember, Clara—each step backward casts a shadow forward.”
The machine ticked again behind her, patient, as if daring her to choose whether to stay in this unfinished world or push deeper into the river of time.