By 2:00 AM, the last rib of the bow section clicked into place. The fit was perfect. He looked at the ship, then at the mirror on the wall. He saw his grandfather’s nose and his father’s stubborn set of the jaw.
The air in the workshop was thick with the scent of cedar and aged sawdust. Elias didn't mind; to him, it was the smell of progress. On his workbench sat the skeleton of a 1:48 scale HMS Alert , a project that had consumed his evenings for nearly three years. L Ve Got The
With a jeweler’s file, he made a series of minor adjustments, fine-tuning the fit of the rail sections. Each stroke was a calculated risk. He wasn't just building a model; he was reclaiming a sense of security he felt he’d lost years ago when he left a "permanent" hospital job in London on the toss of a coin. Back then, he felt like an upstart, unmoored and without tuition. Now, every rib he glued into place was a anchor. By 2:00 AM, the last rib of the