Time Witnesses - By Mia Balventy

All Rights Reserved ©

Summary

In the glowing heart of Shanghai, three strangers received a letter sealed with the golden BW mark. No name, No sender, Only a message. A watch collector who listen to time, a chemist torn between healing and harm, and a designer shaping invention. Beneath the city's electric sky, they uncover the truth, progress without conscience is ruin. The letter isn't a warning - It's a summons to restore what others has forgotten. This short tale explores a world where invention meets morality and the timeless rhythm of human purpose. Short Tale - Ebook 10 Pages Available at www.miabalventy.com Perfect for readers who love: Fiction Thought-provoking fiction set against the glow of modern cities Short, symbolic stories with timeless lessons Elegant storytelling that carries a moral heartbeat

Status
Complete
Chapters
7
Rating
n/a
Age Rating
16+

Chapter 1

It began with a letter.

Each envelope carried no name—only a single golden symbol: BW.

No return address. No sender. Only the quiet weight of destiny sealed.

Those who received it would never see the world the same again.


It was Shangha a city dressed in glass and light, where every street hums with invention. For three souls, it became the meeting point between science, time, and conscience.

Wei, 32, a watch collector unlike any other. His collection wasn’t for wealth or vanity. Each watch contained a fragment of Existence a moment saved from destruction, a heartbeat preserved in gears.

He believed time itself was a living archive, whispering secrets to those patient enough to listen.

Nina, 25, a brilliant mind in a pharmaceutical chemistry lab. Her hands created what others only imagine, antidotes that could heal, formulas that could destroy. She worked under the division known as The Unparalleled, a name both ambitious and foreboding.

Joly, 30, an industrial designer at a silicon-plastic company. Her job was to package the world’s creations—medicine, machines, miracles. She never thought much of it, until the letter came.