The keeper always warned against trying to use the Index like a toolbox. “These aren’t instruments,” she’d say, low and deliberate. “They are testimonies.” That didn’t stop others. A botanist tried to graft a leaf from a plant remembered by the child into a lab strain; the leaf grew a single blue bloom that hummed the Song. A disgraced politician used the Watch to stall testimony; thirty seconds made him invulnerable to a question he could not answer, but the pause cost him his voice for a week. A thief stole the Broken Compass and found his life rearranged toward debts he had not known he owed.

At night, when the wind skates across the roof, people pass the ledger from hand to hand, each choosing an entry as if choosing a talisman. They talk in whispers about how the Compass might guide them home, how the Song might stitch a family, how the Watch might grant a single, clean hour to say something that has been stuck in the throat for years. They choose, and they do not know whether choosing is an act of faith or of theft.

There’s a subtle law threaded through the entries: gifts demand their own restitution. The Watch buys breaths at a price exacted later. The Compass grants desires but redirects futures. The Song heals by suturing memory to pain—never erasing, only reshaping. The ledger records these transactions in marginalia: a dried leaf, a scrap of music, a teaspoon of soil collected from under a removed floorboard.