The Giant Clock Everyone Wanted Removed Became the Place Their Neighborhood Finally Met

Chapter 1: The Clock That Stopped Traffic on Briarwood Lane

The first car slowed before Jason Carter had even tightened the last bolt.

It was a silver SUV with a school sticker on the back window, rolling past his front yard at the same cautious speed people used when they saw a loose dog or a police cruiser. The driver’s face turned toward the lawn, then toward Jason, then back toward the thing standing twelve feet from his porch.

The clock looked even larger in daylight.

It had arrived before sunrise on a flatbed truck, wrapped in canvas and strapped down like a museum piece. Now it stood on a square stone base near the sidewalk, dark wood polished to a soft brown, brass rim catching the morning sun. It was shaped like an old street clock and a grandfather clock had made an argument and refused to compromise. Its white face was nearly as wide as Jason’s kitchen table. The black hands pointed to 6:15.

Jason heard another car slow.

Then another.

By 7:10, Briarwood Lane had become a line of quiet rolling witnesses.

He kept his socket wrench in his right hand and did not look directly at anyone. That was the trick he had learned in the months after Anna died: if you did not meet people’s eyes, they had less room to offer pity.

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