Rickysroom 24 09 28 Connie Perignon Ivy Lebelle... Apr 2026

“Connie,” she said, voice low and urgent. “You came.”

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.”

“Your letter… you said the clock was broken?” Connie asked, glancing at the massive timepiece. Its pendulum was still, a single droplet of oil hanging from its tip like a tear.

A portal opened above the clock, a swirling whirl of light and shadow. From within, a silhouette stepped forward: a man with wild silver hair, eyes like polished copper, and a coat stained with oil. It was Rick Morrow, alive and bewildered. RickysRoom 24 09 28 Connie Perignon Ivy Lebelle...

She slipped the key into her pocket, tucked the letter into her coat, and stepped out into the amber‑glow of the early autumn evening. The building’s wrought‑iron gate squeaked open, and the narrow hallway smelled faintly of oil, rust, and old paper. The door to RickysRoom was painted a deep teal, its brass knob polished to a mirror sheen. Connie hesitated just a heartbeat before turning the knob and stepping inside.

The gear resonated with the key in Connie’s pocket, vibrating as if recognizing an old friend. Back in RickysRoom, Ivy carefully placed the Axiom gear into the clock’s central cavity. The clock’s glass face flickered, and the silver filaments of the hands began to tremble.

Connie visited the exhibit every month, often staying after the crowds left. She’d sit on the bench beside the clock, run her fingers over the cold brass of the key—now a relic of a night when time itself bent to a promise—and smile. “Connie,” she said, voice low and urgent

“It’s not metal,” Connie observed, reaching out cautiously. When her fingers brushed it, a pulse of warmth surged through her, and a vision flashed in her mind: a night sky filled with meteors, a young Rick holding a tiny, glowing fragment and whispering, “For the moments we cannot hold, we will make a new clock.”

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.

Rick looked around, his gaze falling on Connie. “You found the key,” he said, his voice hoarse with gratitude. “You’ve saved more than me—you've saved every moment we thought was lost.” The vortex pulsed, and Rick gestured toward the portal. “There’s one more thing,” he said, pointing to a faint silhouette on the other side—a young woman in a lab coat, her face partially obscured. “Ivy, the research you left behind—your work on temporal resonance—it’s still inside the Confluence. If we leave it, it will be lost forever.” It’s not just any key—it’s a chronal stabilizer

“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.

Rick nodded. “If we pull it through, the portal will destabilize. It will close, and the clock will stop forever. But the world will retain the knowledge we’ve gathered.”