MasukRotation was efficient.
Rotation reduced error.
Repetition stabilized structure.
The circle conserved energy.
The battlefield replayed through countless men across countless fields. Fear resembled fear. Collapse resembled collapse. The cry of a wounded soldier in Virginia matched the cry o
Massachusetts, 1798The war was long finished.Men still spoke of it as if it had ended yesterday, but the fields had grown back over the trenches, and the roads between towns had been widened, and children now played in places where soldiers once bled.History had hardened.Or so it pretended.The farmhouse stood at the edge of a gently sloping field bordered by low stone walls and stubborn grass. The roof sagged slightly on the north side. The paint on the shutters had peeled to reveal older layers beneath—blue beneath gray, gray beneath white.Inside, the air smelled of flour and woodsmoke.Thomas stood at the table, sleeves rolled, hands stea
Rotation was efficient.Rotation reduced error.Repetition stabilized structure.The circle conserved energy.The battlefield replayed through countless men across countless fields. Fear resembled fear. Collapse resembled collapse. The cry of a wounded soldier in Virginia matched the cry of one in York or Saratoga. Patterns overlapped cleanly. Predictability preserved continuity.The system functioned.Until deviation accumulated.The girl refused reenactment.The man refused leverage.The witch redirected friction.The latti
The morning smells like damp wool and iron.It always does before a fight.Men shift beside me in the gray light, boots sinking slightly into churned earth. Powder horns knock against ribs. Breath fogs in the cold air. Somewhere behind us, a captain is speaking in low tones meant to sound steady. Somewhere ahead, a line of red coats stands like a wound across the field.Nothing about this feels new.And that is precisely what feels different.There was a time when I could feel the narrowing before battle. A tightening in my chest not from fear, but from inevitability. As if the ground beneath my boots had already chosen which way I would fall. As if the moment was not arriving but returning.
Time does not attack again.It recoils.Then it recalculates.The tavern is steady for two days.No battlefield.No misfire.No looping.But the air hums with something vast and unsettled.Like a machine that has lost a gear and does not yet understand the consequence.I feel it building.Not at the edges.Beneath.The floorboards do not tremble.They thin.
Time always tries again.It does not escalate wildly.It revisits.Replays.Reapplies.After the kiss, I know what will come.The battlefield.It is the most efficient loop.His fall.My kneeling.The blood.The word here.It is the moment that binds everything.So time returns to it.I feel it gathering before it man
Time is watching.It always is.But tonight it is closer.Not pressing.Waiting.It thinks it understands me now.Axis. Intersection. Geometry beyond edge.It thinks that makes me distant.It is wrong.I find Thomas outside behind the tavern, splitting wood in deliberate strokes, the rhythm steady and contained.He feels the shift when I step into the cold air.He always does.The axe stops mid-swing.
I do not sleep.Sleep requires trust. It requires the belief that when you close your eyes, the world will still be arranged sensibly when you open them again. I no longer possess that belief.
I have always believed in consequences.Not the kind ministers preach about, tidy and delayed, arriving like a moral letter delivered to the correct address. I mean the immediate kind. The kind that follows a misstep in mud or a careless word in a room full of hungry men. War makes you pra
The first time I die, I don’t understand that it’s happening.That feels important to say, because people imagine death as recognition. A moment where the world clarifies itself, where fear sharpens into something almost useful. This is not that. This is confusion, brief and in
The village does not decay all at once.That would be merciful. Fire is honest. Collapse has clarity. This place chooses something worse.It frays.I notice it first in the light.Morning arrives a shade too late, the sun dragging itself up over the trees like it resen







