Title: The Man Who Borrowed Time
No one really noticed the quiet man who entered the city library every Thursday. He wore a long brown coat, carried an old leather satchel, and moved like someone always slightly out of sync with the world—too fast sometimes, too slow at others. His name was Thomas Gray, but that wasn’t the name he was born with. He’d had many names, across many years.
Thomas was a time traveler. Not the kind with blinking lights and steel machines, but the kind who understood time like a musician understands rhythm. He could feel the pulse of moments, the shifts in history, and if he concentrated hard enough, he could slip between them.
But Thomas wasn’t visiting the library to read books. He was looking for her.
Every Thursday, 3:15 p.m., she arrived. Her name was Lily. She came to read in the same corner every week, always with a cup of tea and the same old poetry book. She didn’t know him—yet. But he knew her. He had met her once, in 2082, when the world was different and she was already gone. That’s when he found her diary, and read about a man in a coat who saved her life one rainy Thursday afternoon.
This was that Thursday.
He had rehearsed the moment over and over. He would introduce himself. Warn her about the accident outside. Pull her away just in time. A delivery van would run the red light. Without him, she would die. It was fate. Or maybe it had been fate, until he broke it.
At 3:12, he waited by the door. Heart racing. At 3:14, she walked in. And at 3:15, she looked at him.
Their eyes met.
Something flickered in her expression. A spark of memory? A ripple from a future that hadn’t happened yet?
“You okay?” she asked, smiling kindly. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
Thomas smiled back. “Just trying to make sure time goes the way it should.”
Before she could ask what he meant, he gently reached for her hand. “Come with me. Just for a minute.”
“Why?”
“Because if you don’t, we’ll both regret it.”
Outside, they stood under the old awning as the rain began. Seconds later, a van screeched through the intersection and crashed into a light pole—right where Lily would’ve been.
She gasped. “Oh my God…”
Thomas exhaled.
“You saved me.”
“No,” he said softly. “I was just… putting time back where it belonged.”
She looked at him. “Do I know you?”
“Not yet,” he said. “But one day, maybe.”
And before she could say another word, he let go of her hand and disappeared—fading into the mist like someone the world had already forgotten.
Inside her poetry book, a slip of paper fell out. She opened it:
“Sometimes, we borrow time from the future to fix the past.”
— T.G.
And for the rest of her life, she would wonder: Who was the man who saved her—and why did it feel like she had known him forever?
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