Bud Redhead The Time: Chase Crack

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Bud Redhead The Time: Chase Crack

The crack flew. Time stuttered once, then healed.

And Bud Redhead? He walked home, made coffee, and forgot he ever had hair the color of regret. But on his palm, a thin golden line remained—a scar that, if you looked close, seemed to tick like a watch.

So he did. He chased it through a rainstorm that fell upward, past clocks melting into puddles of brass, past a younger version of himself who tipped his hat and said, “Don’t fix it, Bud. It’s prettier broken.” bud redhead the time chase crack

The crack whispered back: Chase me.

Bud Redhead wasn’t a detective, not really. He was a retired horologist with a nervous twitch and a head of hair the color of rusted fire hydrants. But when the crack appeared—right there in the middle of Main Street at 3:17 PM, shimmering like a split in a movie reel—people started screaming about timelines, and Bud was the only one who didn’t run. The crack flew

This string of words feels like a surreal or experimental title—maybe a poem, a flash fiction, or a lyric. I’ll develop it as a with a dreamlike, noir-ish tone. Bud Redhead and the Time Chase Crack

He knelt down and touched it. The crack was warm, pulsing like a vein. Through it, he saw himself at age nine, losing a red balloon at a fair. He saw his first wife laughing before she forgot his name. He saw next Tuesday’s lottery numbers, then watched them dissolve into ash. He walked home, made coffee, and forgot he

But Bud was stubborn. He grabbed the crack with both hands—felt it sting like a paper cut across ten dimensions—and folded it into a paper airplane. He threw it toward the setting sun.

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“Time’s got a fracture,” he whispered.