Rickysroom 24 09 28 Connie Perignon Ivy Lebelle... -
Ivy nodded, pulling a small, brass cylinder from her pocket. “This is the key you carry. It’s not just any key—it’s a chronal stabilizer . My grandfather forged it from a fragment of a meteor that fell over the city in 1973. It can lock or unlock a specific moment in time, but only if the clock’s mechanism is complete.”
“Ricky’sRoom,” she whispered to the empty studio above, “you’re not just a room. You’re a reminder that every second counts, and every promise matters.”
She swallowed, voice trembling. “—and Ricky himself.” Ivy spread a weathered sketch on the workbench. It was a diagram of the clock’s inner workings, with a central gear labeled “Axiom” and a series of smaller gears named after mythic concepts: Hope , Memory , Oblivion . The diagram was annotated in both English and an undecipherable script that glowed faintly under Ivy’s lamp.
At a workbench, hunched over a stack of blueprints, was Ivy Lebelle. Ivy’s hair was tied back with a strip of leather, and her eyes, sharp as a hawk’s, flicked up as soon as she heard the door close. RickysRoom 24 09 28 Connie Perignon Ivy Lebelle...
Beyond the door lay a cavernous chamber, the size of a cathedral, lined with brass conduits and a massive, dormant engine that hummed faintly—like a sleeping beast. In the center of the chamber rested a pedestal, and atop it lay a single, perfectly round gear, its teeth made of a material that seemed to shimmer between solid metal and pure light.
“The Axiom gear is missing,” Ivy said. “Rick said it was forged from starlight —a metaphor, I thought, until I discovered his hidden lab beneath the city’s old clock tower. He left a note: ‘Only those who understand the weight of a promise can replace the Axiom.’”
“This must be the Axiom,” Ivy breathed. “But it’s…” Ivy nodded, pulling a small, brass cylinder from her pocket
Connie felt the weight of the key in her pocket, as if it were suddenly heavier. “And the clock?”
“Ricky!” Ivy gasped, tears spilling over her cheeks.
Connie stared at the note, remembering a promise she’d made to her grandfather on his deathbed: “Never let a clock stop ticking.” It had seemed a poetic admonition then, but now it rang like a command. My grandfather forged it from a fragment of
The end… for now.
“I’ll help you find it,” Connie said, determination hardening her voice. The two women descended a narrow staircase that led to an old maintenance shaft. The air grew cooler, and the sound of distant water dripping echoed off stone walls. Ivy produced a small, handheld lantern that flickered with a soft blue light, revealing a hidden door etched with the same half‑finished map that hung in RickysRoom.
The room was a strange blend of past and future. Shelves of brass gears, copper coils, and cracked leather journals lined the walls. In the center stood a massive, ornate clock—its face a mosaic of stained glass, its hands made of silver filaments that glowed faintly in the dim light. Above the clock hung a massive, half‑finished map of the city, dotted with symbols that looked like constellations.