In Time -finished- - Version- Final: Deadlocked

The man who had been waiting for eleven years picked up the key. It was warm. He walked to the front door—the same door her suitcase had touched—and for the first time since 11:17, he turned the lock from the inside.

Not died. Left. There is a difference, though the silence that follows both is indistinguishable. On that morning, she had set her suitcase by the door, kissed the sleeping child on the forehead—a kiss that landed on air, because the child had already learned to turn away—and pulled the door shut without a click. The grandfather clock in the hall had just finished chiming the quarter-hour. 11:15. Two minutes later, her car turned the corner. 11:17. Deadlocked in Time -Finished- - Version- Final

Behind him, the clock fell from the wall. The glass shattered. The gears spun free. The man who had been waiting for eleven

He stepped outside. The sun was low. The air smelled of rain and distant smoke. A car that was not hers drove past. He did not know what time it was. He did not look back at the window. Not died

It was 11:18.