The Clockmaker’s Debt
The Clockmaker’s Debt
In the fog-drenched corner of a forgotten alley sat Elias Thorne’s workshop. Elias was a man who didn't just fix watches; he bargained with time.
One evening, a woman in a velvet cloak entered. She didn't carry a broken heirloom, but a heavy iron box. "I need an extra hour," she whispered. "Just one. My daughter is leaving at dawn, and I have words left unsaid."
Elias sighed, the sound like gears grinding. "Time isn't created, Madam. It is moved. To give you an hour, I must take it from somewhere else."
"Take it from my sleep," she pleaded. "Take it from my future."
Elias agreed. He opened her iron box—which contained nothing but a single, glowing candle—and began his work. He spent the night soldering shadows to light, using a rhythm only he understood. By 4:00 AM, he handed her a small, silver pocket watch. "When you click this, the world will freeze for sixty minutes. But remember, the debt must be paid by the next full moon."
The woman thanked him and vanished into the mist.
Three weeks later, on the night of the full moon, Elias sat alone. He wasn't waiting for the woman; he was waiting for the recoil. Suddenly, his own heart skipped. Then it stopped. For exactly one hour, Elias Thorne sat perfectly still—not dead, but paused. He was the collateral.
When his heart finally kicked back to life, he saw a note slipped under his door.
“The hour was beautiful. But I saw you through the frozen air, Elias. You looked so peaceful while you were ‘paying.’ I’ve decided I want to buy your silence next.”
Attached to the note was a key to his own workshop door—which was now locked from the outside
Author: Samuel Avisey
Sponsored by: Essential Life Impact Foundation

what an intriguing story! I loved it..I may need abit more closure though.
ReplyDeleteGlad you do 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
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