Chapter One
The tower had always stood, erect and luminous. No one living in the town could really remember its construction. The obvious physical degradation
kept most people away. The broken clock face placed at the top of the tower only added to the dark image. Yet the tower saw all. It saw the birth and
death of countless people, the construction and destruction of countless buildings. The town changed as much as the seasons. Yet the tower remained
constant, and for reasons unknown. It was not that the people of the town were afraid to tear down the decrepit building, but more that they were
afraid to lose a part of their heritage. The tower had become somewhat of a symbol to the people, a symbol of an everlasting bond between man and
time, and how one cannot exist without the other.
It was an unusually cool summer morning and Malikye was on a walk. He always went for a walk as dawn began to creep over the horizon. He felt at peace
within that time frame. He walked his usual path, which took him through the commercial district of town, past the town hall and into the surrounding
forest. It took him about twenty minutes to reach the old well west of the main path. He often stopped here to toss small stones into the well. It was
a simple pastime, and one that he enjoyed. With each stone thrown into the well, he would envision a negative thought or feeling going with that
stone. It was a good release for him. But today, he continued past the well in a hurry, almost anticipating a surprise at the end of his journey.
Slowing his pace substantially, he arrived at his destination, the clock tower. Not a brick had moved since he had last visited his old friend. The
ever-growing vines continued to creep and seep through the cracks in the walls and faceplate of the clock. The inside of the tower was dark and damp
despite the holes in the roof. Graffiti, and carvings riddled the tower’s many levels, as years of abuse and neglect piled up.
“It is nothing special,” Malikye thought, “just an object.” But he could not help but fall in love with it. His continual visits drew him
closer and closer to the heart of the tower, and farther away from his outside life. He asked himself constantly if his other life outside the tower
had any actual direction, and if it was worth his attention. He was not good looking or anything special by his standards. He always tried hard to be
as far away from any form of social grouping as possible. And it worked. People paid no attention to him and he enjoyed it. His black hair and hazel
eyes were not out of the ordinary. He was not well built, but instead tall and rather thin. He dressed all in black with the occasional shade of blue
or blood red. His complexion was pale, despite the considerable time he spent outside. The only really unique thing about him was his ability to stand
alone in a crowd. A talent he had developed over time.
He approached the entrance at the front. The door, slightly off its hinges, made a very loud creaking sound when he pushed against it. It took quite a
bit of strength out of him just to open the door. “Boy, they sure don’t make them like they used to,” he whispered to himself after he had
caught his breath. The sunlight from the outside world was pouring through various cracks in the walls and through the open doorway in which he stood.
His shadow was cast upon the floor and up the opposing wall, mimicking every movement he made. The floors were barren, and constructed of hard wood.
Nails poked up from many of the floorboards and some did not even have nails to hold them in place. All were in some state of decay, but not to the
extent that anyone walking on them was in any immediate danger. The walls were littered with people’s ideas of fun - graffiti and a number of holes
punched into the walls were visible to anyone entering the tower. To his right, was the entrance to a small kitchenette, created for the persons who
would tend the tower, though it was no longer in service, and staircase leading to the next floor of the tower. Searching for where his next adventure
would come from, Malikye knew where to go.
He walked over to the staircase and began to climb them one at a time. The creaking of the stairs was almost melodic to his ears. It was a sound that
he recognized as friendly, almost as if the tower was saying a loud “Hello Malikye, welcome back.” That thought was comforting to him. Malikye
knew that the tower would hold no grudges against him and would not judge his thoughts, beliefs, or actions. The tower was his friend from morning to
night, day after day, no matter what.
He stopped at the second floor, looking around to see if anything had changed. Nothing, not one thing was out of place. Everything was in the same
place, just as he had left it the previous night. He could even see his own footprints in the heavy layer of dust that rested on the floor. The
decaying table in the center of the room was surrounded by three chairs, which suggested that this room acted as a dining area. The only light source
left in this room was a cabal of candlesticks on the table and the light that was flooding the staircase from the room below. Malikye knew he had a
number of floors to go before he reached the top. Just the mere thought of going to the top floor seemed to fill Malikye with thoughts of creativity
and excitement. He pulled his flashlight out in anticipation of the darkness that awaited him on the upcoming floors and made a dash for the staircase
just behind him. Stair by stair, floor by floor, Malikye did not stop to look around or take in any of the sights the tower had to offer.
When he reached the seventh floor he stopped running. Slightly out of breath, he walked across the empty rectangular room and over to the west side,
where the one window the tower actually possessed lay imbedded in the wall. It was circular in shape and divided into four even parts. Three of the
windowpanes had been broken, probably by a group of kids with rocks and a lot of time. The border of the window was intricately carved into a rose
pattern, but years of decay and neglect had left the pattern looking faded and distorted. Malikye often sat here and traced the pattern with his
fingers, over and over, as the sun set in the distance. A sense of euphoria always washed over him when he watched the sun set from this window. He
felt that this window, which was surrounded by so much darkness, was the heart of the tower. It felt as if all the creative energies that had once
been apart of this tower had either dissipated or fled into this windowsill.
His watch began to beep at him rapidly. It was now seven o’clock, and he had to be home by eight-thirty. It was only a forty-minute walk, so he knew
he had enough time to explore what the dawn’s light had brought. He left the window and walked over to the staircase at the opposite side of the
room and began to climb once more. He counted the steps, as if expecting a change from the last time, but no such change had occurred. There were
still seventeen steps, just like all the other staircases in the tower. Reaching the landing at the top of the stairs, he smiled as relief washed over
him. He had finally returned to his true home. The only place he felt free to create and destroy.
Malikye took great care of this floor. It was the only one he actually cleaned, top to bottom. The room was spotless, minus some melted candle wax
that had dripped onto the table from the previous night. Before, this room had been a utility area, and the room to the left was the gear room for the
clock face. But now, Malikye had placed a bed just barely big enough for two people in the far right corner of the room and a nightstand beside it. He
had placed a cozy table in the middle of the room for eating whatever food he felt like bringing with him, and a writing desk in the far left corner
of the room. The roof was absent in many places, making sleeping and living in here a bit of a chore on cold or rainy days, but Malikye did not mind.
Besides, the roof over his bed was solid, and he had yet to experience a problem with rain blowing across the room and hitting him. But the most
noticeable aspect of this room was the sizable chunks of separating wall missing from beside and around Malikye’s writing desk. The wall that
separated this room from the gear room for the clock had a lot of structural damage. In fact it almost looked purposely damaged. Holes in the wall
allowed shadows of the old clock hands to play against the walls at night. This intrigued Malikye and he would often envision the hands going back in
time, and the room reconstructing itself to pristine condition. He would imagine the way the room must have looked when it was first constructed and
he could almost feel the original staff within it. Time was always relative here. He would lose himself in thought here, and often felt himself
drifting away into a world in which he had control. “Control.” He spoke aloud. “Something I’ve always been lacking. But here…” His watch
beeped, interrupting his thoughts. With a long sigh he looked at the time; it was eight o’clock. He knew he had to get moving, but so much
resistance had already made its presence within him. He just couldn’t leave his spot. “Five more minutes,” he thought, “just five more minutes
and I’ll leave.”
His watch beeped violently yet again. It was his third alarm; he paused for a second, slowly coming back to reality, then looked down at his wrist. A
spurt of terror rushed through him. It was eight-fifteen, and that meant he was running late, very late. Malikye turned towards the stairs and said
goodbye to the tower, changing his slow walk into a mad dash. Each stair brought the shocking realization that he had to go home, back to reality.



