The March Hare sat frozen, a piece of toast halfway to his mouth, eyes wide as the Hatter rearranged the entire table three times in a single second. The bread, the jam, the sleeping Dormouse—all of them were flickering in and out of place like a glitching dream.
The Hatter suddenly appeared directly in front of Alice’s face. She didn't see him move; he was simply there , a static image of wide eyes and a jagged grin. "Alice! You're late for the end of the sentence!"
"Oh, drat," the Hatter vibrated, his silhouette blurring into a dozen ghostly versions of himself. "I've gone so fast I've arrived back at yesterday. Does anyone want a scone I haven't baked yet?" mad hatter sped up
"He drank the Quick-Silver Pekoe," the Hare muttered, not moving a muscle for fear of being decapitated by a flying saucer. "He’s living three Thursdays at once."
The tea party wasn't just late; it was vibrating. Hatter wasn't sitting; he was a blur of plaid and frantic energy, his limbs moving like a film reel set to triple speed. He didn't pour the tea; he shattered the concept of pouring. One moment the porcelain pot was upright, the next, twelve cups were full, steaming, and already cold from the sheer wind of his movement. The March Hare sat frozen, a piece of
"No time! No time! The clock is holding its breath!" he shrieked, his voice pitched up into a manic whistle.
Before she could blink, he had sprinted around the table, polished every spoon, knitted a scarf out of steam, and returned to his seat. He looked at his pocket watch, which was spinning so fast it was humming. She didn't see him move; he was simply
With a sudden pop of displaced air, the table was empty. The tea was gone. The Hatter was gone. All that remained was the faint, high-pitched ringing of a clock that had finally given up on keeping track of him.