NOTICE
This is very much a work in progress. Revisions to come in the future, especially in pacing. Any literary critique is more than welcome. I have big plans, so this will probably be several dozen chapters, probably around 50.
This is a slower moving steampunk fantasy novel. This isn't a story for a quick wank, erotic content won't be present for a few chapters. It also probably won't follow most standard romance or erotica trends or standards, but everything happens for a reason, within the context of the themes of the story.
Enjoy!
- Chapter 1
Being a watchmaker's assistant was not a thrilling job to many.
But as Tito watched the delicate hands of the old master clocksmith gently lower a nearly microscopic gear into place, her aging yet perfectly precise hands holding a pair of worn gear tweezers, he was fascinated. The shiny brass gear was slowly nested in with the rest of the complex mechanism, its axis falling into its socket with a near imperceptible click. The woman exhaled and wiped sweat from her forehead. "You'd think placing scraps of metal in an old brass case would get easier over the years. I feel like it just gets harder, with these fancier and fancier watch designs."
Tito grinned. "Nah, you're just old. Losing motor functions and brain capacity."
The elder swiftly kicked a leg of Tito's chair in. The young man yelped as the support was removed from beneath him and collapsed backwards. "I'll make sure you lose brain capacity if you keep harassing me, child."
"Oi, I just fixed that chair, you git." He stood up, dusting off his baggy work pants. "Gonna have to replace the whole leg this time."
"You'll be replacing your own leg next time you mess up my clocksmithing."
Tito grinned. He loved the old geezer. He leaned against the table, rubbing his bruised elbow. "It's getting dark. I'm headed home, I think. You should too, Huli. Heard a few shops got broken into down the street."
"Yeah, yeah. Maybe tomorrow. Backed up on orders."
"Huli!"
She cracked a smile at Tito. "I'll lock the shop up in ten. Go to hell, boy."
He smiled back. "Love you too." He pulled off his old goggles, with dusty retractable lenses of different magnifications, and hung them on the rack next to the door in the corner of the chamber. He waved farewell to Huli before exiting the workroom.
Behind the door was a much larger yet more cramped room, of wooden floors and dim lighting. Where Huli's workroom had been lined with shelves of gear bits and old watch and clock husks, adorned only by a simple yet bright electric lighting fixture and a large sturdy work table, this shoproom was filled with tables and ornate glass shelvings, upon all of which were dozens if not hundreds of beautiful timekeepers. Glistening watches of dozens of makes sat in rows, of both the wristwatch and the pocketwatch varieties, timekeepers for the working man and the business man, respectively. A few rich wooden grandfather clocks stood along one wall, though most clocks were smaller, either wall mounted with hanging weights or smaller clocks with feet to rest on a desk or shelf. The sight used to take Tito's breath away, but he'd seen it so often, the awe rarely tugged on him like it used to.
Tito whistled as he opened a cabinet, where a few of his personal items hung on hooks or lay on the bottom shelf. He picked his worn leather jacket from its hanger and threw it on, before grabbing his own timepiece - a simple brass pocketwatch - and his pistol. The chunky hand cannon was hardly a masterpiece, in beauty nor in functionality, but he'd built it with his mother long ago. Huli would never let him bring it into the workroom, but he still brought it with him, in part because of its use as a defensive weapon, and in part because he couldn't allow himself to get rid of it. It's all I got left of her.