The Lost Track of Time

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The Lost Track of Time Page 12

by Paige Britt


  Penelope looked away from the clock and watched the scenery instead. By

  now the highway had turned into a twenty-lane expressway. All the cars they

  passed were either black or white, depending on their size. Officer X merged

  into a special lane reserved for police, and soon they were moving at high speed,

  leaving the traffic behind in a blur. Penelope read the billboards whizzing past.

  IDLENESS IS THE GREATEST PRODIGALITY.

  LOST TIME IS NEVER FOUND AGAIN.

  ALL THINGS ARE EASY TO INDUSTRY,

  ALL THINGS DIFFICULT TO SLOTH.

  Oh, shut up, thought Penelope. There was something irritatingly familiar

  about these sayings. She glanced back up at the clock tower. Just to check the time,

  she told herself. Penelope could only see one clock face, but it seemed to be

  staring right at her. The second hand . . .

  22 . . . 23 . . . 24 . . .

  moved beautifully around . . .

  25 . . . 26 . . . 27 . . .

  and around.

  Penelope scrunched her eyes and gave her head a quick shake. She leaned

  back in the seat and tried to erase the image of the clock tower from her mind.

  Dill had said staring at the tower would reset her internal clock. But what

  exactly was an internal clock? She remembered a painting she had seen in a

  book. There was a clock that looked like it was made of Silly Putty. It hung

  draped over a tree limb, almost ready to slide off onto the ground. Is that what

  my internal clock looks like? she wondered. Penelope didn’t think so. Her clock had

  wings, she decided. Instead of a nasty beeping alarm, it tickled her when it was

  time to go somewhere.

  Just then Dill put his hand on her shoulder. “We’re here,” he whispered.

  Something about the way he said “here” made Penelope’s throat constrict.

  Before she could take a good look out the window, the car came to an abrupt

  halt and Officer X hopped out. “Let’s go!” he snapped.

  Dill and Penelope stepped out of the car and into a dark terminal. The

  terminal had a low concrete ceiling and concrete walls to match. On each wall

  a large metal clock chipped away the time, filling the air with its ticking.

  Everywhere Penelope looked, she saw men and women in identical blue

  coveralls and hats moving stiffly in and out of dark gray doors.

  “Where are we?” she asked.

  Officer X turned to look at her, a menacing glare in his eyes. “We’re in the

  clock tower, young lady. It’s time for you to get busy.”

  Officer X escorted Dill and Penelope to a counter at the far end of the terminal.

  A few people stopped to stare at them and Dill smiled and nodded politely. “For

  goodness’ sake, stop that!” scolded Officer X. “This isn’t a parade.” He tried to

  glare up at Dill, but he was too short. He ended up glaring at Dill’s belt buckle,

  which didn’t do much to improve his mood.

  At the counter, Officer X was officially assigned to Dill and Penelope’s

  case and given a stack of forms to fill out. After each one

  was properly signed, stamped, and filed, Officer X

  turned and pointed to a set of double doors to

  their right. “March!”

  Penelope didn’t feel the least bit

  like marching, but she followed Dill’s

  lead and marched all the same.

  chapter thirteen

  Dill’s legs were so long he reached the doors first. “Stop!” Officer X

  screamed at him and ran to catch up. He arrived with a red face and his shirt

  untucked. “Forget marching.” He rearranged his uniform and badge and then

  pushed past Dill. He brought out a large set of keys, found the right one, and

  the doors opened with a groan.

  Inside was a long, dimly lit hallway filled with doors. Each door was

  exactly like the others except for the sign posted above it. “Crime Units!”

  declared Officer X, pointing at the signs. “Dawdling, Dillydallying, Feet

  Dragging, Frittering, Lollygagging, and Puttering. Never forget,” he said, fix-

  ing them both with a stare, “the Clockworkers of the Realm are everywhere,

  protecting the populace against the evils of time wasters.”

  One of the doors swung open and Penelope caught a glimpse inside.

  Rows and rows of desks filled a long room. Men and women dressed in identical

  blue coveralls sat upright at the desks. They looked exactly like the people

  Penelope had seen in the terminal. They were all typing in unison. Click-clack.

  Click-clack. Click-clack. They struck each key at precisely the same time. How

  did they do that? Penelope wondered, before the door closed and the scene

  vanished.

  At the end of the hall, another set of double doors waited for them.

  As they approached, the doors slid open with a hiss to reveal a cavernous

  courtroom. Low fixtures dropped yellow pools of light on a massive podium

  at the far end of the room. Two figures sat expectantly at the podium. Their

  nameplates read

  judge just right and judge just so. An enormous 60-second

  stopwatch hung on the wall behind the judges. Under the stopwatch a sign

  declared:

  justice in under a minute.

  The judges perked up at the sight of the new arrivals. “Don’t just stand

  there, we don’t have all day,” screeched Judge Just So.

  “Time’s a-wasting,” shrieked Judge Just Right, motioning Dill and

  Penelope to approach.

  Once they were standing in front of the judges, Dill spoke up. “Your

  Honors . . .”

  “Silence,” barked Judge Just So and slammed her gavel on the

  podium.

  Bam!

  “Silence,” repeated Judge Just Right and slammed her gavel.

  Bam!

  “I said, Silence!” Bam! Bam!

  “I said, SILENCE!”

  Bam! Bam! Bam!

  The two judges shouted and banged until both of their faces were red.

  This might have gone on all day if Officer X hadn’t cleared his throat with

  a cough.

  The banging stopped. The gavels hung in the air.

  “Well,” said Judge Just Right, “speak up.”

  Officer X stepped forward, his chest outthrust. “These two citizens were

  caught idling at an intersection on the outskirts of Chronos City.”

  Judge Just Right fixed Dill with a stare. “And what do you have to say for

  yourself?”

  “Your Honors,” Dill said again, this time with a deep bow, “we were

  simply eating breakfast when —”

  “Likely story!” screamed Judge Just Right.

  Bam! went the gavel.“As for

  you, young lady,” she said, pointing at Penelope, “what were you doing idling at

  an intersection?”

  Before Penelope could say a word, Judge Just So picked up a large

  black book from a shelf below her podium. She adjusted her glasses and read

  solemnly, “Be always ashamed to catch thyself idle.”

  Judge Just Right snatched her own book out. “Trouble springs from

  idleness . . .”

  “The busy man has few idle visitors,” interrupted Judge Just So.

  “TO THE BOILING POT THE FLIES COME NOT!”

  Penelope groaned. She had the feeling she had heard all this before.

  The judges stopped their squalling and looked at her expectantly.

  “Go on,” demanded Ju
dge Just So. “Tell us what you were doing.”

  Penelope knew better than to mention their search for the Great Moodler.

  Before she could think of the right thing to say, she heard herself answer, “Nothing.”

  “GUILTY!” both judges shouted, leaping from their seats and frantically

  fighting to start the stopwatch.

  Judge Just So hit the button first and began the sentencing. “For idling at

  an intersection . . .”

  Tick, tick, tick . . .

  “And for doing ab-so-lutely nothing,” snarled Judge Just Right.

  Tick, tick, tick . . .

  “You are hereby sentenced to twenty minutes . . .”

  Tick, tick, tick . . .

  “Around the clock.”

  Brriiing! The sound of the stopwatch filled the room.

  “Take them away!”

  — — —

  That wasn’t so bad, thought Penelope as Officer X ushered them out of the court-

  room and into a waiting elevator. They were only sentenced to twenty minutes

  around the clock. She wasn’t sure what that meant, but she knew she could put

  up with almost anything for twenty minutes.

  Once inside the elevator, the doors slid shut and the compartment rushed

  soundlessly upward. Penelope watched through a small window as the great

  City flashed by. The higher they went, the smaller the City became, until the

  buildings looked like toy blocks.

  She glanced over at Dill. He raised one eyebrow and tapped his forehead.

  She tapped back. See? There was nothing to worry about. They were both

  working on their next move.

  The elevator lurched to a stop and the doors opened with a cheerless

  ding. “This way,” said Officer X, pointing down an empty hallway toward

  a thick metal door. The door had a glass-plated window set a few feet from

  the floor, exactly the right height for Officer X to peer through. He pressed

  his face against the windowpane and gave a satisfied grunt before unlocking

  it. He motioned Dill and Penelope inside and flipped a switch. A few lonely

  lightbulbs sputtered to life, revealing a long corridor flanked by rows and

  rows of bars.

  “Welcome to prison,” Officer X said. It was the first time he sounded

  happy. “This is the north clock tower, where we keep the most serious

  offenders.” He began to stroll down the corridor. “Musty odors, meager

  lighting, plenty of bedbugs . . . you should be right at home.”

  Penelope shuddered, which seemed to make him even happier.

  He continued his list with gusto. “Tasteless meals, creaky noises, not to

  mention rock-hard beds.”

  Dill stopped to peer through the bars of a cell and waved Penelope over.

  The cell was empty except for a bunch of soft, gray fluff balls. But these weren’t

  ordinary fluff balls. Each one had a pair of small, bare feet and large, black,

  sleepy eyes. Some of them floated lazily in the air, though most of them were

  piled in the corner like snowdrifts. A few opened their eyes to look at the new

  inmates and then closed them again, falling immediately back to sleep.

  “Did you say, your most serious offenders are here?”

  asked Dill. “I can’t imagine these dust bunnies are much

  of a threat.”

  Officer X wheeled around. “Then stop imagining!

  It’s illegal.” He shoved them away from the cell and pointed

  to a large sign hanging from its door:

  danger! do not feed! approach at your own risk!

  “I’d mind that if I were you,” he said. “Now keep

  moving.”

  As they walked down the corridor, Penelope noticed that every cell was

  filled with the same creatures and posted with the same warning sign. There

  was one empty cell at the end of the

  corridor. Officer X quickly unlocked

  it. “Home, sweet home,” he said and

  pushed them inside with a nasty

  snicker before slamming the door

  shut. “See you soon,” he called out

  and disappeared back down the hall.

  “See you in twenty minutes,” Penelope called back and then turned to

  Dill. “All right, what’s our plan? What should we do when our time is up and

  they let us out?”

  Dill looked uncertain. “I’m not sure we will get out. Those judges are

  tricky. Cunning. Unmistakably sly. I think it best we start looking for a chance

  to escape.” Dill began to pace the length of the cell, tapping on walls and

  rattling the bars, checking for possible weaknesses.

  “You go right ahead,” said Penelope. “I’ll join you in a minute.” Actually,

  she thought to herself, I’ll join you in twenty minutes. Surely Dill was overreacting.

  They would soon be free. After all, they had done absolutely nothing.

  Penelope glanced around the cell. A rickety wooden table with four chairs

  sat in the middle of the room. Two benches that doubled as beds lined the walls

  on either side. She was just sitting down on one of the benches when she noticed

  a gigantic mass of cobwebs in a nearby corner. She got up and moved to the chair

  farthest away.

  Dill, on the other hand, went straight up to the cobwebs to get a better

  look. He was bending over the mass, just about to prod it with an outstretched

  finger, when a small voice interrupted his examination.

  “Excuse me, do you have a hankie?”

  Penelope nearly fell out of her chair and Dill took a giant step back. After

  a moment Dill regained his composure and his manners. “Certainly,” he said

  and produced a neatly folded handkerchief from his front pocket. He held it out

  toward the cobwebs.

  A small hand, matching the small voice, reached out and took the hankie

  with a polite “Thank you.”

  Penelope eased over to the corner to get a closer look. Another hand

  popped out. It was holding a pair of glasses. The first hand began wiping the

  glasses clean with Dill’s handkerchief. After the glasses were spotless, the hand

  with the hankie began wiping cobwebs off what soon became a face. The face

  was covered almost entirely in hair — bushy eyebrows, a monstrously large

  mustache, and an ancient, trailing beard. Once he cleaned his face (more or

  less), the man offered Dill his hankie back.

  Eww, thought Penelope. The hankie was filthy. But Dill didn’t skip a beat.

  “It’s yours to keep,” he said with a neat bow.

  “Oh, you’re so kind,” said the man, tucking the hankie back into the mess

  of cobwebs. “Only the very nicest people come to prison here, if I may say so.”

  “You may,” said Dill.

  “Thank you, I believe I will.” The strange man cleared his throat and said

  again with great feeling, “Only the very nicest people come to prison here.” He

  smiled at Dill and Penelope as if they were his dearest friends.

  Penelope couldn’t help but smile back.

  The man got to his feet and after several moments of dusting and brushing

  and straightening his decrepit tie, he took Penelope’s hand and gave it a kiss.

  “Allow me to introduce myself. I am the Timekeeper.”

  “It’s very nice to meet you,” said Penelope, who was surprised to discover

  she meant what she said. Despite his startling appearance, the Timekeeper was

  delightful.

  Dill, however, looked shocked
. “Mr. Timekeeper,” he said, giving the

  man’s hand a vigorous shake, “I never expected to find you here. You have one of

  the most powerful jobs in all the Realm.”

  Penelope turned to look at Dill and then back at the little man. Him?

  Powerful? She didn’t believe it.

  “Well,” said the Timekeeper, “you might say I’m taking some time off.

  Please,” he said, motioning toward the table, “have a seat. I’ll tell you all about

  it.” The three inmates took their seats and the Timekeeper let out a satisfied

  sigh. “It’s about time I got up off that floor. I’ve been sitting there forever, give

  or take a day.”

  “Forever,” replied Penelope. “That’s quite a long while.”

  “Now that I think about it,” continued the Timekeeper, “I might have been

  there only a few weeks. Actually I have no idea how long I’ve been sitting on that

  floor. I’ve completely lost track of time. Which is exactly why I ended up in

  prison in the first place.”

  “Sounds serious,” said Dill.

  “Oh, it is,” he said grimly. “Very serious. I used to be the official

  Timekeeper for the entire Realm. Do you have any idea how many different

  types of time there are? There’s high time, big time, and fun time. Down time,

  prime time, small time, short time, and dark times. There’s time in, time out,

  time up, time tables, and time frames.”

  Penelope’s head began to swim, but the Timekeeper went on. “There’s

  any time and some time, the right time and the wrong time. Good time, bad

  time, borrowed time, and due time. I used to keep track of them all! People

  would bring their spare time to the clock tower for safekeeping and I would

  file it away. Now I couldn’t tell you where the tiniest nanosecond went.”

  “But what happened?” asked Dill.

  “I tripped and fell on hard times. I had a bump on my head for weeks.” The

  Timekeeper absentmindedly rubbed a spot on his head as if remembering

  the traumatic event.

  “That could happen to anyone,” offered Penelope.

  “True,” agreed the Timekeeper. “But unfortunately it happened to

 

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