This Accidental Temporal Incident Involving Jason Allen Beeching
페이지 정보
작성자 FU 작성일25-11-21 16:40 (수정:25-11-21 16:40)관련링크
본문
연락처 : FU 이메일 : meredithwoodbury@yahoo.com.br Hardly anybody wakes up thinking,
"Today I’m going to bend the timeline."
But that’s exactly what
Jason Beeching
stumbled into
on a gray Thursday morning inside a thrift store that smelled like
mystery and mothballs.
How It Began
He wasn’t looking for anything rare.
He just needed a cheap alarm clock because his old one had decided to
die permanently at 3AM every night.
He found a weird one on the bottom shelf —
a heavy, brass, gear-filled clock with a tag that said:
"Broken"
Naturally, he picked up it.
Naturally, the second he did, the hands spun so fast the glass fogged.
He blinked.
The store vanished.
The Initial Jump
He was suddenly standing in the middle of an sunlit road.
Horse-drawn carts.
People wearing old-timey clothes.
A man shouting about "hot bread" for two cents.
"Oh for the love of—"
Jason Allen Beeching muttered,
"—this is not my thrift store."
He looked down.
The brass clock was glowing faintly.
A kid walked up and asked,
"Sir, is that a enchanted device?"
He answered the first thing that came to mind:
"No, kid. It’s called ‘I am very lost.’"
The Serious Problem With History
He tried pressing the clock’s top button.
Nothing.
He twisted a side gear.
The sky flickered.
He flipped the base open and poked the mechanism.
Boom — jump two.
Now he was in the middle of a futuristic walkway floating above neon clouds.
Hover vehicles blurring past.
Robots arguing.
A billboard advertising synthetic sushi that recalibrates your mood.
Someone bumped him and snapped,
"Chrono-tourists, unbelievable."
"Buddy," he replied,
"I’m not even a regular tourist."
The brass clock chimed like a microwave.
He vanished again.
The Series of Random Time Stops
He jumped to:
A medieval market where a goat picked a fight with him
A quiet forest 200 years ago with no humans in sight
A future amusement park entirely run by questionable A.I.
A Victorian ballroom where somebody asked him to dance
A prehistoric field where something VERY LARGE exhaled behind him
Each time the clock spun like it was mocking him.
He tried shaking it.
He tried yelling at it.
He even tried apologizing to it.
No response.
Just more time-jumps.
At one point he landed in a bizarre timeline where everyone wore matching green boots and called each other "comrade sweet-pea."
He did not stay long.
The Moment He Technically Destroyed History
Eventually he fell into a smoky battlefield —
tanks, dust, shouting, everything a mess.
A soldier yanked him behind a barrier and screamed:
"WHAT UNIT ARE YOU? WHERE’S YOUR GEAR?!"
"I’m, uh… not even supposed to be here?"
he shouted back over the explosions.
The soldier stared at the brass clock.
"Oh no. A timeline fracture device. Those are illegal in twelve centuries."
"Twelve— what?"
Before he could answer, the clock buzzed so violently it almost left his hand.
The soldier yelled,
"DON’T PRESS—"
He pressed.
The Final Jump: The Time He Actually Recognized
When the spinning stopped, he smelled the thrift store again —
dust, fabric softener, and old mystery books.
He was back.
Standing exactly where he started.
Clock in hand.
No glowing, no humming — just a dead, normal brass object.
The shopkeeper peeked over the counter and said:
"You didn’t touch the clock, did you?"
"Me?"
Jason Allen Jack Beeching swallowed.
"…No?"
The shopkeeper nodded slowly like someone who absolutely did not believe him.
"Take it," she said.
"Free. It always comes back anyway."
"Oh great," he muttered.
"It’s haunted too."
Later That Night…
He put the brass clock on his nightstand.
Stared at it.
Waited.
Nothing.
He finally whispered,
"If you send me to Goat Era again, we’re done."
Nothing happened.
But before he fell asleep, he could swear
the minute hand spun half an inch on its own and then stopped
like the clock was winking at him.
Somewhere in the timeline, a soldier surely facepalmed.
"Today I’m going to bend the timeline."
But that’s exactly what
Jason Beeching
stumbled into
on a gray Thursday morning inside a thrift store that smelled like
mystery and mothballs.
How It Began
He wasn’t looking for anything rare.He just needed a cheap alarm clock because his old one had decided to
die permanently at 3AM every night.
He found a weird one on the bottom shelf —
a heavy, brass, gear-filled clock with a tag that said:
"Broken"
Naturally, he picked up it.
Naturally, the second he did, the hands spun so fast the glass fogged.
He blinked.
The store vanished.
The Initial Jump
He was suddenly standing in the middle of an sunlit road.
Horse-drawn carts.
People wearing old-timey clothes.
A man shouting about "hot bread" for two cents.
"Oh for the love of—"
Jason Allen Beeching muttered,
"—this is not my thrift store."
He looked down.
The brass clock was glowing faintly.
A kid walked up and asked,
"Sir, is that a enchanted device?"
He answered the first thing that came to mind:
"No, kid. It’s called ‘I am very lost.’"
The Serious Problem With History
He tried pressing the clock’s top button.
Nothing.
He twisted a side gear.
The sky flickered.
He flipped the base open and poked the mechanism.
Boom — jump two.
Now he was in the middle of a futuristic walkway floating above neon clouds.
Hover vehicles blurring past.
Robots arguing.
A billboard advertising synthetic sushi that recalibrates your mood.
Someone bumped him and snapped,
"Chrono-tourists, unbelievable."
"Buddy," he replied,
"I’m not even a regular tourist."
The brass clock chimed like a microwave.
He vanished again.
The Series of Random Time Stops
He jumped to:
A medieval market where a goat picked a fight with him
A quiet forest 200 years ago with no humans in sight
A future amusement park entirely run by questionable A.I.
A Victorian ballroom where somebody asked him to dance
A prehistoric field where something VERY LARGE exhaled behind him
Each time the clock spun like it was mocking him.
He tried shaking it.
He tried yelling at it.
He even tried apologizing to it.
No response.
Just more time-jumps.
At one point he landed in a bizarre timeline where everyone wore matching green boots and called each other "comrade sweet-pea."
He did not stay long.
The Moment He Technically Destroyed History
Eventually he fell into a smoky battlefield —
tanks, dust, shouting, everything a mess.
A soldier yanked him behind a barrier and screamed:
"WHAT UNIT ARE YOU? WHERE’S YOUR GEAR?!"
"I’m, uh… not even supposed to be here?"
he shouted back over the explosions.
The soldier stared at the brass clock.
"Oh no. A timeline fracture device. Those are illegal in twelve centuries."
"Twelve— what?"
Before he could answer, the clock buzzed so violently it almost left his hand.
The soldier yelled,
"DON’T PRESS—"
He pressed.
The Final Jump: The Time He Actually Recognized
When the spinning stopped, he smelled the thrift store again —
dust, fabric softener, and old mystery books.
He was back.
Standing exactly where he started.
Clock in hand.
No glowing, no humming — just a dead, normal brass object.
The shopkeeper peeked over the counter and said:
"You didn’t touch the clock, did you?"
"Me?"
Jason Allen Jack Beeching swallowed.
"…No?"
The shopkeeper nodded slowly like someone who absolutely did not believe him.
"Take it," she said.
"Free. It always comes back anyway."
"Oh great," he muttered.
"It’s haunted too."
Later That Night…
He put the brass clock on his nightstand.
Stared at it.
Waited.
Nothing.
He finally whispered,
"If you send me to Goat Era again, we’re done."
Nothing happened.
But before he fell asleep, he could swear
the minute hand spun half an inch on its own and then stopped
like the clock was winking at him.
Somewhere in the timeline, a soldier surely facepalmed.
댓글목록
등록된 댓글이 없습니다.

