My father’s watch, I notice stopped. His movement ceased to turn the cogs, that spin the gears, which move the dials, that give the promise of a while.
The watch now mine, but still it’s stopped. It sits inside a precious box. The frozen hands, my father still, his whispered breath, his secrets kept. Regret, regret.
One day ready to wear that watch, I’ll move the gears, start time again, in good knowing the hour I’m stood will come to be, eventually.