He led her to the back room, where a shelf held a single, unassuming timepiece. Its face was engraved with a hobbit-hole door, round and green. The hands were made of two tiny, hairy feet.
Piper took the watch, crossed the pass in ten minutes, and spent the remaining two eating a stolen scone on the troll’s snoring belly. She returned the watch the next day, slightly singed, slightly smug. hobbit runtime
The old clockmaker, Bilbo Baggins by name (though no relation to the famous one, he’d insist), had a dusty shop at the end of a crooked lane. His specialty was not ordinary time. He built runtimes —tiny, humming devices that could compress a long journey into a single pocket-watch’s tick, or stretch a moment of courage into a small, quiet eternity. He led her to the back room, where
Bilbo wound it back to zero. Inside, a tiny voice—maybe his own, maybe a memory—whispered: “The road goes ever on… but the runtime? That’s the bit you actually live.” Piper took the watch, crossed the pass in