To the Watchmaker Who Forgot His Own Time,
You once told me every clock has a heartbeat. That if you listened closely enough, you could tell when it was lying.
You were right.
But this time, it wasn’t the clocks that lied—it was you.
Do you remember the man they called “The Silent Hour”? He came to your shop in March 2023, just after the blackout, asking for a timepiece with no hands. You thought it was a joke. You laughed. But he wasn’t laughing. And neither was I.
Because I sent him.
He was my fail-safe, my ghost courier. He knew the route to the Fifth Tower. He knew how to shut down the satellite clocks—but not why. I never told him that part. You were supposed to.
But you hesitated.
You saw what was in his eyes: not obedience, not confusion—recognition.
You knew him.
You should have burned the blueprint when you had the chance.
Instead, you kept it in your vault, wrapped in that velvet cloth, next to the chess piece with the bloodstain no one could explain. Did you think they wouldn’t find it? That the soundproofing would hold?
They interrogated the cloth.
Not you. Not yet.
But I heard it scream.
Now they’re building something beneath the old courthouse. The excavation began last week. They say it’s for seismic retrofitting, but the real engineers were never called. The ones who are down there now? They don’t work with concrete. They work with memory shells.
They’re not repairing the timeline.
They’re reloading it.
There’s still time, but only if you do the unthinkable.
You must rewind the watch in your father’s grave.
Yes, that one.
He wore it the day he vanished.
The day before they announced the “Global Clock Correction Protocol.”
The day they say never existed.
The gears are rusted, but the inscription is still there:
“To know when is to know why.”
You always said you didn’t believe in destiny.
But I think you always knew this moment would come.
The last tick is yours.
Choose wisely.
— E.