Faithful May 2026

For decades, Silas worked without pay or recognition. The townspeople eventually stopped asking why he spent his days in the belfry. They considered him a harmless eccentric, a man stuck in the past. : Cleaning the bird nests from the louvers.

When the sun finally broke through the clouds, the villagers looked up. For the first time in forty years, the clock showed the correct time. They found Silas asleep at the base of the gears, his coat draped over the sensitive escapement wheel to protect it from the draft.

Every morning at 5:00 AM, long before the bakers lit their ovens, Silas climbed the eighty-two winding stone steps. His knees ached with the dampness of the mountain air, and his eyes, clouded by age, required a magnifying glass to see the delicate brass gears. Faithful

This is a story about the quiet weight of a promise kept. The village of Elmsworth had a clock tower that hadn't ticked in forty years. Most residents saw it as a weathered monument to a bygone era, but to Silas, it was a debt yet unpaid.

At exactly midnight, a sound cut through the howling wind—a deep, metallic thrum . Then, the first "Tick." Then, a "Tock." For decades, Silas worked without pay or recognition

Silas was the son of the town’s last horologist. On his father’s deathbed, he had made a simple, whispered promise: "Keep the heart beating, Silas. A town without its time is a town adrift." The Daily Vigil

While others huddled by their hearths, Silas was at the tower. The extreme cold had seized the mainspring. With trembling, frostbitten fingers, he applied a tiny drop of specialized oil to each pivot point. He stayed through the night, rubbing the metal with his own body heat to keep the gears from cracking. The Rhythm Returns : Cleaning the bird nests from the louvers

: Polishing the tarnished silver hands of the four clock faces.