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Uncle Shom Part 1 〈2026〉

“Take care of this,” he whispered. “It’s the only thing keeping the late train on time.” That pocket watch became my obsession. Over the next week, Uncle Shom moved into our spare room—the one with the locked closet my mother never used. He kept strange hours. Awake at 3:00 AM, brewing black tea with a single sprig of rosemary. Asleep by noon, only to rise at sunset.

To the outside world, he was a quiet postal worker who lived alone in a creaking Victorian house on the edge of town. But to my cousins and me, Uncle Shom was the embodiment of mystery. This is the first part of his story—the strange arrival, the impossible clock, and the night the red door finally opened. I was ten years old when I first met Uncle Shom. It was a blistering July afternoon. My father, a pragmatic man who believed only in what he could touch, received a cryptic letter. No return address. Just a single line in elegant, sloping cursive: “The boy needs to know his roots. I am coming home.” Uncle Shom Part 1

Uncle Shom stood before it, fully dressed, the silver-handled umbrella in one hand and my pocket watch in the other. He didn’t look surprised. He looked tired . “Take care of this,” he whispered

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