The clock ticks just twice more and then stops. The house floods with unused empty silence.
The house had been deserted some thirteen months, the owners having fled in the
face of the rising waters, yet the clock had continued to tick despite the
abandonment, each tick measuring the water's rise. With no one to read it's face
the clock returned to its natural state, continuous determination. But yet,
despite its valiant effort, it too became just another victim of the rising
waters. It's batteries and workings slowly succumbing to the rising heat and
increasing damp.
Sometime after the clock stopped it's ticking the rusting nail holding it to the wall gave way and the
clock tumbled to the floor landing face down in a foot or so of dirty water. It
floated on the water's surface for now untold time while the water rose incessantly
toward the level of the rotten window frame. Gentle gusts of warm wet wind blew
the clock carcass out through the frame of the window into the decaying world.
Exposed, out in the changed and unstable world the disintegration of the clock
increased apace until time itself became a forgotten memory.

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