The Temporal Kaleidoscope
Marcus Wycliffe loses his wife in a senseless act of public violence, and the world becomes unbearable to him-not because death has happened, but because it has happened badly. Randomly. Stupidly. As the product of a hundred small failures no one will ever answer for.
Marcus is not a man built to accept accident.
Brilliant, wealthy, wounded beyond ordinary grief, he turns his mind toward the one problem no human being was meant to solve: time itself. If one fatal moment can be understood, measured, and entered, perhaps it can be corrected. If the past is not sacred but structural, perhaps it can be rebuilt.
At first, the changes seem merciful. A life saved. A tragedy undone. A better world drawn out of the wreckage of the old one.
But each correction bends history in ways Marcus cannot fully predict. Every improvement leaves a shadow. Every rescue demands payment somewhere else. As his machine opens one altered world after another, Marcus discovers that perfection may be only another form of violence-and that love, when armed with genius, can become more dangerous than grief.
His friend Willis sees the danger before Marcus will admit it. Elizabeth, the woman he is trying to save, may understand the cost better than either of them. And Marcus must finally face the terrible question at the heart of his work:
If he can change the past, what right does he have to stop?
Dark, elegant, and emotionally charged, The Temporal Kaleidoscope is a literary science-fiction novel about grief, obsession, consequence, and the unbearable temptation to repair what life has broke