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The Clock That Ate Time

The Clock That Ate Time

By Article Master Published 4 months ago 2 min read

The Clock That Ate Time

The little town of Everford was an ordinary place. People went to work, children played in the streets, and the church bells rang every Sunday morning. Yet, at the very center of the town square stood an object no one could quite explain: a clock without hands.

It had been there longer than anyone could remember. Old photographs showed it standing tall even a century ago, exactly the same—black, towering, and with an empty circle where the hour and minute hands should have been.

Most people ignored it. But there were always whispers: “The clock eats time,” the townsfolk would say, half-joking, half-fearful.

The First Incident

One autumn afternoon, a boy named Caleb leaned against the clock while waiting for his father. When his father finally arrived, everyone noticed something strange. Caleb looked different—his hair had grown longer, and there were tiny wrinkles around his eyes, as if he had aged ten years in just a few minutes.

Doctors couldn’t explain it. Caleb himself swore he had only been waiting for ten minutes.

The townspeople grew uneasy, but life continued. People walked past the clock carefully, but they still lived with it, like one lives with a dangerous neighbor—acknowledged but avoided.

The Collector

Years later, a stranger came to Everford. He wore a long gray coat and carried a suitcase filled with old watches. He called himself Mr. Veyra, a “collector of lost time.”

Mr. Veyra spent hours staring at the clock. When people asked what he was doing, he smiled thinly and said,
“Every town has its secrets. Yours happens to be delicious.”

That night, three townsfolk disappeared. Their families searched desperately, but all that remained were their shoes, neatly placed at the base of the clock.

The Experiment

Terrified, the mayor ordered the clock destroyed. Workers brought hammers and drills, but no matter how hard they struck, the clock made no sound. It didn’t chip, dent, or crack. Instead, the workers themselves grew older. Their hair turned white, their backs bent, and within hours they were ancient. By morning, they had crumbled into dust.

The town understood then: the clock was alive.

The Choice

Mr. Veyra returned, grinning.
“You cannot kill it,” he said. “But you can feed it. Give it a life now and then, and it will spare the rest of you. Ignore it, and it will take what it wants.”

The townspeople argued for days. Some wanted to flee, but others feared the clock would follow. In the end, desperation made them choose. Once a month, one unlucky soul was tied to the base of the clock. By dawn, only their shoes remained.

And the town was safe—for a while.

The Twist

Years later, when a curious traveler passed through Everford, he noticed something odd. The people there all looked the same age. Children, parents, grandparents—every face appeared trapped at thirty years old. Their voices were cheerful, but their eyes were hollow, as though they had seen centuries pass.

The traveler asked an old shopkeeper why. The shopkeeper only pointed to the center of town, where the handless clock still stood, dark and waiting.

“Time must be eaten,” the shopkeeper whispered. “Otherwise, it eats us.”

The traveler left before nightfall.

No one ever stayed in Everford for long.

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About the Creator

Article Master

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