Friday, March 27, 2026

The Clockmaker's Last Cipher - Chapter 1


  Chapter 1

The Clocks That Forgot to Die

Beacon Hill, Boston – October 17, 1898

The workshop smelled of cedar oil, old brass, and something sharper underneath—like blood left too long on metal.

Eleanor Hargrove stood just inside the doorway, her gloved hand still resting on the brass knob, and felt the silence press against her eardrums. Dozens of clocks—tall case clocks, mantel clocks, delicate carriage clocks, even a massive grandfather clock in the corner—had all stopped at precisely the same moment: 11:47.

Not a single pendulum swung. Not one gear whispered. The air itself seemed suspended, as though time had taken one last breath and simply refused to exhale.

“Mechanical impossibility,” Eleanor murmured, more to herself than to her companion.

Clara Whitcomb, smaller and more softly rounded, moved past her without hesitation. Her dark wool skirts brushed the floorboards as she crossed to the workbench where the body lay. Thaddeus Finch, master clockmaker, was slumped forward in his chair, one thin hand still curled around a silver pocket watch. His eyes were half-open, staring at nothing.

Clara touched two fingers lightly to the side of the dead man’s neck, then drew them back.

“Cold,” she said quietly. “Several hours at least. But look at this.” She lifted the pocket watch from Finch’s stiff fingers and held it out. The metal case was warm—almost hot—against her palm. The second hand still ticked steadily.

Eleanor’s sharp hazel eyes narrowed. She crossed the room in three strides and took the watch. “Warm. While the man who held it is stone cold. Interesting.”

Behind them, the young woman who had let them in—Lydia Finch, the clockmaker’s only daughter—stood with her arms wrapped tightly around her middle. She was pale, her fair hair pinned back severely, and her eyes kept darting toward the door as if she expected someone to burst through it at any moment.

“The police said heart failure,” Lydia said, her voice barely above a whisper. “They didn’t even look at the clocks. They just… wrote it down and left. But Papa would never have let them all run down. He wound every single one himself, every evening, like a ritual. And now they’re all stopped at the same minute. All of them.”

Eleanor glanced at the nearest mantel clock. Its hands were frozen at 11:47. She moved to another, then another. Every face told the same story.

Clara watched her friend’s face, reading the familiar flicker of calculation behind Eleanor’s eyes. “You’re thinking someone set them all to stop together.”

“I’m thinking it’s impossible for them to have stopped naturally at the exact same second unless they were deliberately synchronized and then… interfered with.” Eleanor crouched beside the workbench and peered under a half-disassembled carriage clock. Her fingers, long and precise, brushed aside a thin layer of brass filings. “There’s a note here. Tucked under the gear plate.”

She pulled it free with tweezers she produced from her reticule. The paper was small, folded once, and covered in handwriting that looked… wrong. The letters slanted backward, as though written by a left hand trying to mimic a right, or perhaps written while looking in a mirror.

Lydia took a half-step closer, then stopped. “Is it for me?”

“We’ll know soon enough,” Eleanor said. She didn’t unfold it yet. Instead, she glanced at the ledger lying open on the corner of the bench. Recent entries showed regular payments and repairs, but one set of initials appeared again and again over the past three months: R.M.

Clara had moved to the window. Morning light slanted through the dusty panes, catching on the brass gears scattered across the bench like scattered coins. “Miss Finch,” she said gently, “you didn’t call us here just because the clocks stopped. You’re frightened. Not grieving—frightened. Why?”

Lydia’s shoulders tightened. For a long moment she said nothing. Then, very quietly: “Because I think my father left me a message. And I think someone killed him to stop him from delivering it.”

She looked from Eleanor to Clara, her voice dropping even lower.

“Will you help me? Quietly? Before whoever did this decides I know too much as well?”

Eleanor straightened, the mirrored note still pinched carefully between her gloved fingers. A faint, metallic scent clung to the paper.

Clara met her friend’s gaze across the silent workshop. The pocket watch in Eleanor’s other hand continued its soft, steady ticking—the only sound left in a room full of clocks that had forgotten how to live.

Eleanor gave a single, decisive nod.

“Miss Finch,” she said, “we accept the case.”


Sunday, March 8, 2026

Seven Journal Prompts

 


Sometimes, we need a little something to kick start the writing spark. So I put together seven journal prompts anyone can use if they would like to do so. Happy writing! 

The Parenting Pendulum: How Gen X Reversed Course and May Have Broken Independence for Good

Growing up as a Gen Xer felt like being handed the keys to the world with a shrug: "Figure it out." Latchkey kids, free-range until the streetlights came on, navigating divorces, two-working-parent homes, and a culture that prized self-reliance above all. Disagreements happened—loudly, sometimes messily—but we mostly shrugged them off too. You had your opinion, I had mine, and we could still grab a beer (or a soda) afterward. No one got their panties in a twist over differing views because we understood everyone saw the world a little differently. That tolerance wasn't perfect, but it was real.

Then Gen X started having kids. And something flipped.

What our Silent Generation and Boomer parents gave us—independence through benign neglect—Gen X parents largely withheld from Millennials and Gen Z. The pendulum swung hard in the opposite direction: from "go play outside and come back when it's dark" to "here's your GPS-tracked phone, helmet for the playground slide, and a packed schedule of supervised activities." Helicopter parenting (or snowplow, or bulldozer—pick your metaphor) became the norm. We overcorrected for our own childhoods' emotional gaps, risks, and loneliness by shielding our kids from every discomfort, every failure, every unsupervised moment.

Why the reversal? Part of it was trauma response. Many Gen Xers grew up with high divorce rates, single-parent households, absent supervision, and a sense of being the "least-parented" generation. Studies and cultural observers note we overcompensated: vowing our kids would never feel forgotten or unsafe the way we sometimes did. Add in broader societal shifts—24/7 news cycles amplifying rare dangers (stranger abductions, though statistically down), the rise of social media exposing kids to online harms, post-9/11 anxiety, economic instability—and the instinct to protect intensified. Fewer children per family meant more emotional investment in each one. Working parents, juggling careers and guilt, filled every spare hour with structured enrichment rather than free play. The self-esteem movement, which started earlier but peaked in the 90s/2000s, reinforced shielding kids from "harsh realities" to build confidence—ironically producing fragility when those realities inevitably hit.

The result? A generation raised without the rough edges that forged resilience. Kids rarely negotiated playground conflicts alone because an adult stepped in. Disagreements weren't tolerated as normal—they were mediated, smoothed, or punished to preserve "safety." No more "agree to disagree" practice. Instead, discomfort became equated with harm, and authority figures (parents, schools, institutions) were expected to intervene and "fix" it by silencing the offending view or person.

This parenting pivot helped birth today's cultural default: the quick escalation from disagreement to offense to cancellation. When you've grown up expecting adult intervention for every emotional bruise, you carry that into adulthood. Words feel like threats because you've rarely had to build the muscle of brushing them off or debating them out. The "panties in a twist" reaction isn't innate—it's learned from a childhood where independence was traded for protection.

Recovering that old-school independence feels essentially lost. The cycle is self-reinforcing: overprotected kids become anxious adults who demand safe spaces, then parent (or influence) the next wave even more cautiously. Social media algorithms reward outrage over nuance, amplifying the fragility. Institutions—schools, workplaces, churches—now prioritize emotional comfort over open debate, further eroding the skill of tolerating differing views.

Gen X didn't intend this. We wanted better for our kids—more presence, more safety, more love. But in shielding them from the world's messiness, we may have stripped away the very tools needed to navigate it: grit, self-soothing, and the quiet acceptance that not everyone will agree with you—and that's okay.

The pendulum swung too far. Reclaiming balance would require intentional unlearning: letting kids fail unsupervised, encouraging real conflict resolution without adult rescue, and modeling that disagreement isn't hate or danger—it's just life. But in a world wired for constant vigilance and validation, that return to 1985-style independence feels more like a memory than a realistic path forward.

Still, some Gen Xers quietly resist the overprotection trend, raising "glider" kids—firm boundaries, emotional availability, but space to roam. Maybe that's the seed. Not a full reversal, but a reminder that independence isn't neglect—it's trust. And without it, we risk raising generations who can't handle the beautiful, messy reality that people see things differently.


The Clockmaker's Last Cipher - Chapter 1

  Chapter 1 The Clocks That Forgot to Die Beacon Hill, Boston – October 17, 1898 The workshop smelled of cedar oil, old brass, and somethin...