Mara tested the bounds. She found she could stop at will, freeze her own finger in mid-gesture while the rest of her moved. She learned to tease the frozen tableau: to unbutton a suspended coat a fraction, let an unmoving child’s eyes flicker an inch, then retreat. It thrilled her like a secret prank and made her stomach ache with a nameless regret. People began to call them “stop-and-teasers”—movers who wandered like thieves through the unmoving city.
Elias showed her how to trace the micro-vibrations in a frozen hand—the twitch in a knuckle that betrayed a habit, the tension at the eyebrows that told of a repeated grief. He taught her to build a slow ritual: to set a pebble on someone’s chest and watch whether its shadow moved when the rest did not. If it did, the pebble was marked with a tiny notch and kept as a token. These tokens became a map of where emotion had pooled most densely in the town. Time Freeze -- Stop-and-Tease Adventure
Years, perhaps days—time lost all pretence of measurement. In communities that chose partial care, life limped forward like a creature with two mismatched legs: rarely graceful, sometimes joyous. People adapted. Those who remained permanently frozen—through disease, circumstance, or choice—were memorialized in a language of small dedications. Gardens grew around statues, not out of morbid romanticism but because tending living things soothed the living who could not always be restored. Mara tested the bounds
Mara visited once, drawn by rumor. The device’s technicians handed her a glove: silicone and copper stitched like a second skin. When she placed it on her hand in front of the oro-gear’s face, the machine beeped and showed her a readout. “Estimated restoration: 98%,” the screen promised. It felt like a handshake with a bright, corporate god. It thrilled her like a secret prank and
Faced with the option of universal restoration—activation of the Orrery—or preserving the freeze with its collage of truth and cruelty, the town held a kind of referendum not cast in ballots but in gestures. Mara walked the streets like a courier of possibility, waking one person here, one person there, showing them the tiny souvenirs she’d collected: a folded note, a single hair tied to a pebble, a silver key with its teeth carefully filed. “If everyone is restarted all at once,” she told them, “we will lose the small corrections that the pause enforced. But if we keep this—if we keep teasing—many will be trapped in half-truths forever.”
Time does what time does: it returns, it moves, it erodes. The freeze did not end with a grand event so much as a soft exhaustion. The Orrery, the petitions, the protests—they all frayed. The world outside Larksbridge had continued under its own rules—the markets, the wars, the marriages made and unmade on other clocks—until external pressures forced a compromise. Someone, somewhere, flipped a switch—a bureaucratic, graceless act—and the town’s clocktower lurched forward.
I. Prologue