Theo had been staring at the same sentence so long the letters bled together. Lineage in Postmodern Black Poetics. He mouthed the words once more, flat and sour on his tongue. His coffee from the bodega on 121st sat cold beside him, the surface gone slick and oily, but he drank anyway.
The radiator groaned in protest, the pipes rattling like brass warming up before a set.
Theo pressed a palm against the open book, willing the words to stay still. For a moment they held. Then the page trembled beneath his hand.
He told himself it was fatigue.
The air sharpened with coal smoke. Somewhere beyond the walls, a horn broke loose in the night.
The lights went dark.
And when he opened his eyes again, Harlem was different.
The words swam, and the sidewalk cracked into cobblestones.
Horse hooves clopped. Trumpets rang from a window above. A boy in suspenders sprinted past with a sack of newspapers.
Theo looked down. His phone was gone.
He closed his eyes again, slowly, and he was back in Harlem 2025. The coffee had spilled all over his notes.
He told himself it was a stress-induced hallucination.
Two weeks later, when he touched the yellowed cover of Torchlight Verse, it happened again.
This time, the streetlamps and car horns didn’t dissolve into fluorescent light and radiator hiss.
***
Theo Marshall had never planned to write about his great-granduncle. Elias Marshall was barely a footnote in most Harlem Renaissance anthologies. His one slim volume of poems, printed in 1925. Then nothing else. It had taken Theo three semesters and an irritable dissertation advisor to even find the book.
But here he was, dozing over its fragile binding in Columbia’s archive reading room, the heater rattling like a dying trombone, when the world folded neatly into itself.
The cold vanished.
Ink and coal hung heavy in the room, a bitter perfume. From outside drifted Harlem’s chorus: boots striking pavement in syncopation, a horn laughing wild from a tenement window, a dice game punctuated by cheers, and far off, the steel tempo of the train threading it all together.
Theo stood. The desk under him was now a dark walnut, carved with initials.
Outside the tall window, dusk spread over Harlem, streetlamps flickering on as voices rose from the sidewalks.
His hand dug into his sternum, waiting for the sharp bite of something fatal. The pulse was strong, stubbornly alive.
But if he was right, and Theo Marshall put more faith in science than faith, he had time-traveled by accident. Again.
Footsteps pounded the stairs, each one strong enough to rattle the doorframe.
The door flew open hard, slamming against the wall.
In the doorway stood Elias Marshall.
***
Elias’s suit sagged at the shoulders, the fabric gone shiny with wear. Ink clung to the creases of his fingers, and one sock had slouched low inside a scuffed shoe. The socks didn’t match. His steps struck the floor with a restless energy that filled the room.
“Jervis lied,” Elias muttered, slamming a folder onto the desk. “He said he’d get it to Locke. Said he’d help. All they want is another Langston, another Claude. I ain’t the right color for them.”
Theo blinked.
Elias spun on him. “Who the hell are you?”
“Me?”
“Yeah, boy. I don’t see no one else here.”
“I… uhm.. friend of Jervis.”
“Make sense. You got that damn Jervis look.” He poured himself a half-glass of amber liquid. “You here to laugh too? Read my poems, say they ain’t finished, ain’t worth a damn?”
"No. I…” Theo stared. “You’re Elias Marshall.”
The man narrowed his eyes. “Boy, how do you know my name?”
Theo’s throat tightened. ‘You… wrote Torchlight Verse. Published next year.’”
“Next year?” Elias squinted. “You drunk already?”
Theo let out a single bark of laughter that cracked the silence. “Maybe.”
Elias stared a beat longer, then dropped into a chair. “Well, mystery man, since you’ve materialized into my misery, might as well read them. Maybe you’ll say something new.”
Theo picked up the folder. Inside: ink-scrawled lines, thick with metaphor, grief knotted into cadence. They weren’t finished, but they carried a heat that felt alive.
He cleared his throat. “This one here, Stove Smoke. It’s got the bones of something incredible. But here.” He pointed. “Don’t finish this metaphor. Let it hang. Let it ache.”
Elias frowned. “The line about Mama’s laugh?”
“Yes. Let her live in the smoke. Don’t tie a bow on it.”
Elias leaned forward. “What did you say your name was again, boy?”
Theo paused. “Doesn’t matter.”
“You some kind of spirit or figment of my ‘magination.”
“Maybe.”
They traded short, uneven chuckled bursts, the kind that tested the air, before the sound grew freer, tumbling between them.
Elias poured him a drink. Theo accepted.
***
They worked through the night.
“Your verbs are good,” Theo said. “But you over-explain the emotion.”
Elias bristled. “People don’t read between the lines.”
“They do if the line hits right.”
At one point, Elias demanded, “You sure you’re not Alain Locke in disguise?”
Theo snorted. “Please. Locke doesn’t quote Kendrick.”
Elias blinked. “Who on earth is Kendrick.”
“Never mind.”
Later, as they restructured a poem called Inheritance, Elias leaned back. “When I was eight, I wrote about a dead bird. Mama said, ‘you got heavy hands for a child.’ Been dragging that weight since.”
Theo nodded. “Heavy hands leave marks.”
“You talk like a professor.”
“Guess I do.”
Elias laughed.“ You’ve got the look of a man stuck between places.”
Theo’s eyes dropped to the ink stains on Elias’s hands. His own fingers flat against the desk, unsure what to hold on to. “I… I shouldn’t be here,” he said, then after a breath, “though I’ve never felt more at home.”
He leaned in slightly, his next words quiet, as if asking permission. “Can I give you one line?”
“Only one, huh.”
Theo wrote: You cannot name the stars unless you’ve walked beneath their heat.
His gaze lingered on the words. His lips parted, and released a breath so slow it seemed to carry something out of him.
“Damn. That kind of line could make a man immortal.”
Theo shrugged. “It’s yours.”
“Hell it is,” Elias said. “A line like that don’t belong to one man. But I’ll keep it.”
He turned back to the page.
Theo felt the jolt before it happened.
The room shimmered. Elias’s voice echoed. And the desk beneath his fingers transformed.
***
He woke in the library. A radiator hissed.
The poem lay open on the desk. The final one. The one that had always ended mid-line.
Except now it didn’t.
You cannot name the stars
unless you’ve walked beneath their heat –
so I walk. Still walking.
Theo’s throat caught.
He flipped to the acknowledgements. There, in ink faded by time:
To the man whose name I never caught, who found me in the hour I was ready to quit.
Theo sat back.
He checked the archive database. Elias Marshall: still one book, still no further publications, still nearly forgotten.
But that line, the one about stars, had become part of the canon. Quoted in anthologies. Tattooed on artists. It had survived.
Theo had given it. And history had kept it.
Without him.
***
He didn’t tell anyone.
Not his advisor. Not his friends. Not even his mother.
He redrafted his proposal:
Inherited Voice: Ghosts, Lineage, and the Unwritten Contributors to the Harlem Renaissance.
He quoted Elias liberally.
And when he defended it months later, voice steady, heart full, he wore a pin in his lapel: a star, tiny and unremarkable to anyone else.
***
One rainy afternoon, Theo found himself outside the old brownstone on Lenox, the one he’d first “arrived” in. It was a crumbling walk-up now, paint peeling, windows cracked.
He stood for a moment in the doorway and listened.
He didn’t hear any music, nor keyboard clacking, only the rain working its way through the cracks where sound used to be.
A boy passed on a scooter, blasting trap music.
Theo smiled.
He decided not to go inside.
Instead, he walked down Lenox, coat collar up, heels tapping to the music in his head. He wasn’t chasing after doorways or strange coincidences anymore.
For now, he held on to what he’d found.
He carried a past close enough to touch and a future opening ahead, his shoes striking wet pavement as he walked clear between the two.
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This is beautiful. Somehow your words transport me straight into the story. How did you learn to write like this?
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Thank you. Honestly, I have been inspired by so many others. That and reading A LOT, especially on the art of writing fiction.
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Wow what a great story, the line that particularly stuck with me was the "heater rattling like a dying trombone" in not sure why, but that line really stuck with me. Thanks for writing and I can't wait to see more from you!
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Thank you and I appreciate that. I just hope you enjoy the rest of my writing just as much.
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Man, where can I read the rest of this Author’s stories?!?!?
This resonated so well!! I LOVED IT! I even felt my collar go up at the end. The Vibes’ll get ya if the heartwarming truth of ancestry and deep longing reaching across years, decades and centuries— doesn’t get ya first🤌🏾
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Still in awe that this story has landed so well with so many people. I'll have some more stories coming out soon, as I am looking to expand my writing as an author. Thank you so much for your positive support.
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Congrats on the win! This is beautifully written!
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Thank you. Really appreciated.
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Beautifully written! Rich and vivid, poetic and warm. Congratulations on your win!
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I was really striving for that poetic undertone, so glad you appreciated it. Thank you.
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Thanks Ovett loved the vocabulary and how it fitted into each part. Well done.
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I appreciate that. Thank you.
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Beautiful story! I love how the time traveling connection between Theo and Elias brings alive the realities of generational connections and how time is not really linear but cyclical. Bravo.
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Thank you. I really enjoyed writing this one.
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Congrats! A very well deserved win. I notice you master creating emotion by drscribing observable things. Only once did you use the verb “felt" (he felt the jolt"). I have a hard time acheiving this. So evocative! I truly enjoyed your story. Thank you for showing me how to do it.
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Thank you! I appreciate it. That's one of the areas I came into this with intention. I really want to show, not tell. I often have to go back through my writing and revise, but I am happy it has not gone unnoticed.
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Love your writing style! Your scene descriptions pulled me into the story, hook, line and sinker.
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Thank you for that. Hoping to keep getting better.
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Wow, Ovett, this one took my breath away. The line, “Hell it is,” Elias said. “A line like that don’t belong to one man. But I’ll keep it.” really moved me. And I think it straddles the two different generations and the issue of changing the past. I like to think Theo and Elias somehow shared in the creative moment. Congratulations on a well-deserved win!
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Thank you Marilyn. I really enjoyed writing the scene between Elias and Theo. Happy to hear you enjoyed reading it as well.
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It's nice seeing your article Ovette. Have you published a book?
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Thank you! My first book is a nonfiction book and scheduled for publication on December 22: https://www.routledge.com/Special-Education-Superheroes-Rethinking-Conventional-Practices-to-Best-Serve-All-Students/ChapmanJr/p/book/9781032852409?srsltid=AfmBOooUADf3b2nPKG4BGe8y6V8mzUtk0THgjfc284UPwOwWHS5lpxQB
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Oh wow! That's superb Ovett. Thanks for sharing your link. I just checked out your book - Special Education Superheroes on Routledge, and I'd love to share some observations with you, if you don't mind. Can we connect?
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Marvellous story! This was a treat to read for a time-travel buff like me. Thank you for writing it. I love your style and imagery.
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Thank you! Happy to hear that you enjoyed my take on the prompt. I appreciate your kind words and feedback.
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Beautiful piece, what i wouldn't give to travel back in time and talk with my grandparents in their younger life. How I miss them so much.
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I think the ability to travel back in time and visit with a loved one would be something many of us would love to do. Happy you enjoyed the story.
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Loved your story. I was transported in to that wonderful time period.
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Thank you. One of my absolute favorite time periods.
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I'm still wiping my tears. This is a beautiful, haunting story, not just because the writing is very high quality, but because of the wistful desire it expresses to touch the work of an underrecognized poet and provide him some understanding and encouragement. Damn!
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I appreciate you. Looking forward to reading your works!
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The emotional layers to this were so expansive. I really felt like upon a re-read you'd discover even more beneath some of your beautifully chosen words. Congratulations.
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Thank you so much for your very kind feedback. I really appreciate it.
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I've been in a writing funk trying to get started, trying to find my voice. Reading this story kicked me in the rear like a tuba (to use your musical references). Thank you so much for this and your great work - look forward to reading more of your stories.
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I fear I have set the bar too high in my initial story here :) Looking forward to reading your stories soon as well.
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I appreciate your response Ovett. I don't believe you have.. I think it's in your style and I assume that will always come through no matter the topic of your tale. This place seems like a great place for support so hopefully that will keep us both going as great recontours.
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Thus far it really has been such a supportive place. Keep at it!
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This is really well written! I love the way you describe the surroundings I could picture it perfectly. I really enjoyed this sentence "But if he was right, and Theo Marshall put more faith in science than faith, he had time-traveled by accident. Again." I laughed a little at the sentence because in my head Theo was just mildly annoyed by it as if he'd just dropped his pen instead of being astounded by being able to time travel. Really good story congratulations on the win:)
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I almost deleted that line. In one of my revisions I removed it as I was worried it was a little too jokey. Going back I decided to add it back, so happy to hear you appreciated the line. Thank you!
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I'm so glad you kept thank you :)
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I love your voice. One of the best I've read on here in the last 3 years.
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Wow! That is so very kind. Thank you!
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Masterful. I love it. Congrats on the win ☺️
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Truly thank you!
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