TimeLord Rising: Shadows Across Centuries
Prologue — The Fracture
The sky above Cathryn’s Hollow tore open with a sound like old clockwork grinding itself thin. Time, long treated as a steady river, hiccuped — a ripple that left behind a smear of yesterday’s snow across today’s pavement. In that brief overlap, a figure stepped through: not quite human, not quite machine, wrapped in a coat that seemed stitched from midnight and gears. He called himself a TimeLord, and his arrival would unspool centuries of quiet.
The Nature of Temporal Guardians
TimeLords are not gods; they are custodians shaped by necessity. Born from eras where paradox threatened existence, they evolved into beings who balance causality and consequence. Each TimeLord carries a Ward — an artifact of intertwined matter and memory — that anchors them to particular timelines. Lose a Ward, and the holder bleeds into anomalies: memories of futures never lived, languages half-remembered, injuries sustained in centuries not yet born.
Their mission is twofold: correct dangerous deviations and police rivalers who would weaponize history. Some serve whole timelines; others watch over niches — a city quarter, an ancient library, a family line. They are bound by a code of non-domination: change only to preserve continuity, never to impose will.
Cathryn’s Hollow and the First Shadow
Cathryn’s Hollow was ordinary enough to be overlooked: a map dot between industrial plains and moorland. That made it perfect for the first shadow to fall through its seams. The anomaly began small — clocks stopping at 3:17, photographs folding into different faces, a bell that tolled centuries instead of hours. People reported dreams of ships where there had never been sea. Crops matured anachronistically; gossip carried words from distant future slang.
The TimeLord who arrived — called Morrow in broken translations — tracked the disturbance to a fracture at the town’s old observatory. There, someone had tried to extract time itself: a scholar seeking to reclaim a lost child by pulling moments like threads from a tapestry. The scholar’s grief opened a wound in causality. Morrow could close it, but only by risking his Ward.
The Cost of Repair
Repairing a temporal fracture is never clean. Morrow stitched the observatory’s timeline with a delicate embroidery of memories, returning the scholar’s child to the proper year but erasing the scholar’s knowledge that any rescue had been attempted. The town retained odd echoes — a lullaby hummed by no one, a set of footprints leading to nowhere — reminders that time bears scars.
Morrow’s Ward weakened. Each repair consumes not just the Ward’s mass but a sliver of the TimeLord’s anchoring: an erosion of belonging. He now remembers fewer faces from his past cycles and sometimes wakes with accents that vanish mid-sentence. That thinning is ominous; without full anchoring, a TimeLord risks becoming a shadow themselves — drifting through eras with no home to return to.
Rivals in the Margins
Not all temporal actors are custodians. The Margers — opportunists who harvest temporal anomalies — emerged from the Shadow Markets of Anchorage Prime, bargaining in misplaced artifacts and futures’ secrets. They seek to weaponize fractures, selling altered memories to governments and embedding retroactive laws that never were. Their methods are subtle: a word swapped in a treaty, a patent filed a decade early, a single comet’s appearance erased so a dynasty never falls.
Morrow’s pursuit of the Margers reveals a network of small betrayals across centuries: a crop failure blamed on weather when it was time theft; a philosopher whose treatise never existed because a Marger removed a single night of inspiration. Each act ripples, producing shadows that gather into a tide.
Allies and the Living Archive
Morrow finds unexpected allies among those who sense time’s wrongness. A librarian named Elise keeps a living archive — books that rearrange their letters when history shifts. She catalogues anomalies, pairing fragments of erased things to reconstruct what was lost. A black-market clockmaker, Jonas, crafts temporal locks that can hold a day in place long enough for repair. Their tools are crude but vital: paper maps annotated in two centuries, pocket devices that whisper lost words.
Together they form a fragile coalition, operating out of the observatory now repurposed as a workshop of stitched timelines. They learn that some shadows are not random but targeted: a pattern appears, as though someone is pruning specific nodes in history.
The Stake: A Century at Stake
A deeper plot surfaces — a plan to excise an entire century from the timeline, a surgical act that would erase millions of lives and reshape geopolitics. The motive is ambiguous: revenge, utopian redesign, or sheer academic curiosity gone monstrous. The technology to do this is a lattice of stolen Wards, their combined resonance capable of severing a temporal layer like turning the page of a book.
Morrow and his allies race through stitched moments: a battlefield that replays alternate outcomes, a palace that houses two monarchs in overlapping shadows, a factory where workers recall different inventors depending on the hour. Each stop is a puzzle of cause and effect. They must decide which threads to hold and which to let fray, aware that saving one timeline may doom another.
Ethical Knots
The coalition faces ethical knots. If a century contains crimes and injustices, does excising it offer moral cleansing or an act of tyranny? Who decides which lives persist? Morrow’s code forbids wholesale erasure, but his Ward is failing, and the Margers’ plan tempts with a promise: remove the century that birthed a genocidal regime, spare future suffering. The philosophical debate becomes visceral when a child’s laughter echoes from a memory that would vanish if they succeed.
They resolve that agency matters: people deserve the right to exist with their histories, however painful. Their fight becomes not just to stop the Margers but to defend the plurality of human stories.
The Final Confrontation
The climactic breach opens in a museum that sits between epochs — a neutral ground where artifacts accrue from many centuries. The Margers assemble the lattice; time itself coils like a tightening spring. Morrow, Elise, Jonas, and a small band of townsfolk converge. The battle is less physical than mnemonic: contests of memory, anchors of identity, and arguments shouted across overlapping realities.
Morrow sacrifices the remainder of his Ward, channeling its resonance to stitch the lattice into a single, stable timeline. The Margers’ scheme collapses, but not without cost. In the final moments, several marginal histories flicker and vanish: a poet’s obscure volume, a minor reform that now never happened. The coalition mourns small, intimate losses even as they avert wholesale erasure.
Epilogue — Shadows Remain
Cathryn’s Hollow returns to a wary normal. The clocks keep time again, though people occasionally glance at the sky as if expecting another rip. Morrow survives but is forever untethered; he walks the world as a shadowed guardian, unable to fully reclaim past ties. Elise continues to record anomalies, her archive growing with careful sorrow. Jonas refines his locks; his hands tremble less now.
The story closes with a warning: history is not a ledger to be corrected by those who deem themselves righteous. Shadows across centuries will always gather where grief, ambition, and curiosity intersect. TimeLords rise not to rule time but to remind us that every moment holds consequences beyond the horizon.