The Attic was a cathedral of dust. Cobwebs draped like funeral veils. And at its center, on a pedestal of fossilized clock hands, sat the chrono-core: a golden egg the size of her head, covered in tiny, silent dials.
“Tina, my dear,” he had said, his voice a dry rustle of old parchment. “When the final chime comes, don’t mourn. Just close the front door and let the flowers grow over the gates.”
“Master?” she called, her voice a soft chime in the vast, empty hall. “Lord Alistair?”
She opened the inspection panel. Inside, the great brass gears were not rusted. They were petrified . A crystalline fungus had grown between the teeth, locking everything in place. Tina touched it with a gloved fingertip. It was cold. And it was spreading.
“Then why did you do it?” he asked. “Why give yourself another day of goodbye?”
Tina looked out at the Estate—her home, her purpose, her whole existence. The gears were already slowing. The light was thinning. In an hour, maybe two, the crystal fungus would bloom again, and the silence would return forever.
“I know,” she said again, softer.
“I know, my Lord.”
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