Six Hours.
Every time he closes his eyes in the modern world, the clock dissolves. Every time he wakes, he is standing in a different century — mud on his boots, incense in the air, and the weight of a dynasty he was never taught.
Six hours in the old world. Then the present pulls him back. He has learned not to sleep near anything sharp.
The anchor is not a gift. It is a debt — paid in disorientation, in grief for two timelines he cannot hold at once.
The bronze was still on his desk when he woke. That was the part he could not file away — not the crossing, but the object that had stayed.
Read →He had not been there to see if the records survived. He was not sure, returning to the apartment, whether that was the worst thing he had left unfinished.
Read →He had spent twelve years learning to reconstruct what was lost. He had not expected to need that skill in the cold, with the river still moving.
Read →Book One is live on WebNovel and Royal Road. New chapters every Sunday. History has never been this personal.