tourbillons + polaroids // e&c
Apr 16, 2024 21:46:30 GMT -5
Post by arx!! on Apr 16, 2024 21:46:30 GMT -5
Ellington Spence
i'd keep you safe, i'd keep you drydon’t be afraid, CedricI'm working on a very tricky chronograph. It's a vintage timepiece, beyond beauty and intricacy—a tourbillon, an escapement, a linkage of gears and pendulums and springs in sizes thinner than a strand of hair, over 50 individual parts, and they were all trapped in a cage.
And apparently, the Capitol hadn't felt the need to jab a gun into the spine of a horologist closer to home. The shipping alone must be a fee only the richest could afford, only the most powerful had access to.("Regular. Sir Geneva. Says he needs it in two weeks.")
("Yes, of course.")
There was no way I could get this done in anything less than a month. At least. And that was if my chamfers didn't turn to bevels as I squinted through my loupe by lamp light.
Or lose a hairspring while trying to perfectly replicate the Breguet overcoil; I haven't lost a spring as expensive as this in over 10 years now. I was a younger then. Son of an uxoricide, raised by my grandparents, primary caregiver to my them soon after. A dad suddenly surprise, in love and married all within a whirlwind of a pair—a couple—of years, a divorcée not long after, a rebel only if I'm being generous.
What sticks out most?
"He's perfect."
This will forever be my happiest memory.
I'm always and forever a- dad.. His dad.
So it makes sense that the spring disappears within the cracks of false drawers and—"Oh, shiiii-oot."—financial records best left hidden. So they won't cause papercuts.
I could probably start cursing again. Old habits.
"Shit."
But-
But this was something I'd forgotten through time—a piece of time, a timepiece—into my soul. And I had completely abandoned it, forgotten all about it. Lost it.
Maybe.
But-
I have to smile all the same, run a thumb over faded, scratched leather. I think about how much shoe polish the deep ruts across the surface will need to disappear, how the little cuts gave it character, but most clients coming to me weren't looking for that. They were looking for a delicate touch and a timid voice. All gears in their places, all ticks and tocks spaced perfectly.
"Hey," I call once softly, then knock and call again. "Hey, Cedric?" I knock with more force behind it, ask after him again. "Ced?" I hold the journal behind my back, repeat. "Cedric? Can I come in?" And I wait for him to give me permission.
He's taller than me now, though he isn't standing. I should've written down that memory in the journal I have tucked behind my back, too, while it was still fresh. I'm thankful the achievement is inked in fake wood trim by an overeager ballpoint pen. Even if it did mean a week of torment about just how short I am.
He lifts a headphone from his ear, legs crossed in his bed. His room keeps growing fuller and more distinct each time I see it. Which has been less often these days. I remember reading him bedtime stories, cramming into a bed far too small for three people, laughing until our lungs hurt, falling asleep with Poppy pressed against the wall and me clinging to them to make sure I didn't fall off the bed. Which I had done. Multiple times.
But he is grown up now. Or, at least, it sure feels that way.
I can hear it in his voice when he looks up at me, see it in his eyes that I've frightened him. This feels like an odd occurrence, proof I don't knock enough anymore. Maybe I don't talk enough anymore either.
"Hey, sorry, nothing is wrong, but-" I move further into his room, admire the way I can see how his art has grown over the years. "What, uh-" I cradle the leatherbound book of scrawled sweet nothings long forgotten in my lap as I sit at the edge of his bed. "What are you listening to?" That was dumb. Very lame. "Wait, never mind, I will just get to the point. I, uh, wanted to give you this."
"It's this sort of journal I tried to keep. For you. Though admittedly, I uh, didn't fill it all the way." I hand it to him with a small smile, one I could never grow tired of wearing while I was looking at him, a lucky witness to all he was becoming.i'm the satelliteand you're the sky