The Pocket Watch
The pocket watch was heavy in his hand, its brass casing warm from decades of touch. It had the feel of something meant to last, the glass face faintly scratched, each line a mark of passing years. The minute hand moved in a steady circle, a heartbeat of metal and spring, its ticking a whisper against his palm. The back was engraved in worn script. It read like the echo of a promise, a pledge from one life to another.
It had crossed muddy trenches, clasped in the trembling hands of a soldier, ticking through the smoke and fear. It had sailed open seas, a ship’s captain pulling it from his pocket to mark time against the endless horizon. It had sat beside a doctor’s stethoscope, counting heartbeats in quiet rooms, and waited in the nervous grip of a young groom, his polished shoes tapping against the chapel floor.
Now it rested in the palm of the man on his porch, the autumn wind rustling the pages of a favorite book of poems on the table next to his chair. He felt the weight of it, the slow, ticking beat of his years. He closed his eyes, the metal warm against his skin, and let the wind brush past his face, carrying the whispers of lives lived, moments shared, and the slow, steady pulse of time.
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