Daniel Mercer is always late.
Late to meetings.
Late to commitments.
Late to the moments that matter most.
So when he begins arriving five minutes early, he knows something is wrong.
At first, it feels like chance. Then intuition. Then obligation. Each time Daniel arrives early, a life is saved-a stranger pulled back from traffic, a fire interrupted, a child rescued just before it's too late. The pattern is precise. Unforgiving. And it will not let him choose when to stop.
As the interval narrows around him, Daniel is forced to confront what those five minutes really mean: whether foresight is a gift or a debt, whether redemption can be claimed through sacrifice, and whether time offers mercy-or only reveals who we are when excuses run out.
The Five-Minute Interval is a morally charged work of speculative fiction about grief, responsibility, and the cost of being just in time. Quiet, tense, and deeply human, it asks a single question with increasing urgency:
What are you willing to do when you know what comes next?
Time is not interesting until it becomes ethical.
Calder Ash writes speculative fiction that examines identity, memory, and moral choice under pressure. His stories explore the quiet horror of systems that promise certainty, and the human cost of arriving too late, or too early, to the truth.