Uncle Shom smiled, and for the first time, I saw fear behind his bourbon-colored eyes.
He then told me the first piece of the story—the part that would hook me forever. Uncle Shom Part 1
“In the cave, in ’43, I didn’t just find a door, boy. I found a version of myself who never left. A version who is still standing there, waiting. The watchmen want me to trade places with him. If I do, I become a ghost. He becomes real. And he’s not kind.” Then Uncle Shom did something that still haunts me. He opened the pocket watch, placed it on the floor, and stepped through the red door without another word. The door slammed shut with a sound like a breaking rib. And then… it faded. The wallpaper reformed. The hallway was just a hallway again. Uncle Shom smiled, and for the first time,
“Take care of this,” he whispered. “It’s the only thing keeping the late train on time.” That pocket watch became my obsession. Over the next week, Uncle Shom moved into our spare room—the one with the locked closet my mother never used. He kept strange hours. Awake at 3:00 AM, brewing black tea with a single sprig of rosemary. Asleep by noon, only to rise at sunset. I found a version of myself who never left
The knocker struck the door three times on its own—a slow, deliberate rhythm. Tap. Tap. Tap.
He didn’t turn around. “Time doesn’t have a direction, boy. Only a preference. And right now, time prefers to rewind.”