The Watchmaker Who Forgot the Future
He could fix any clock — except his own heartbeat.

Lukas Wendt was the most precise watchmaker in Zurich. He claimed he could “feel” time as sound — every second like a breath. But one night, his apprentice found him dismantling hundreds of clocks, whispering, “It’s wrong. It’s all wrong.”
Lukas had discovered something impossible: all his clocks were speeding up, just slightly. Seconds ticking faster than human time. The world, he said, was “rushing somewhere it wasn’t supposed to go.”
So he built a device — a clock that could reverse time for a single person. The night he finished it, thunder rolled through the Alps.
When the apprentice returned, the workshop was empty — except for one ticking pocket watch on the table. Engraved inside:
“If I remember you, does that mean you still exist?”
Every few years, the watch reappears at auction, perfectly new despite centuries passing. But buyers report the same side effect — dreams of standing in Lukas’s workshop, clocks ticking backward, and someone whispering, “You’re next.”


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