Episode 16 imagines a world in which time travel is discovered during the Industrial Revolution, not in a distant technological future but in the age of steam, iron, and early electricity. What begins as a strange scientific anomaly — clocks falling out of sync and people returning from moments they never lived — soon proves that time itself can be bent. As governments seize control of the discovery, time travel is classified and used cautiously at first. Scientists observe the past, then slowly begin to intervene. Small changes prevent famines and save millions of lives, creating a dangerous belief that history can be improved through careful editing. Progress accelerates unnaturally: technology advances faster, wars are softened or avoided, and society seems to leap ahead. But history becomes fragile. A new ruling class emerges — guardians of the timeline who decide which events, lives, and futures are allowed to exist. With every intervention, unseen consequences ripple outward. People experience déjà vu, memory fractures, and a deep sense of loss for lives and futures that were erased without warning. History is no longer lived — it is curated. The breaking point comes when a massive attempt is made to prevent a global war by altering a single crucial moment. The time machine overloads, and reality fractures. Cities wake in different eras, people age unpredictably, and cause and effect collapse. Humanity briefly experiences a world without stable time — and nearly loses itself. In the aftermath, the machines are destroyed and the knowledge buried. Humanity chooses never to touch time again, not because it is impossible, but because it is too dangerous. The episode ends by returning to our reality, suggesting that time’s cruelty is also its gift. Mistakes give life meaning, and a future that can be endlessly rewritten may not be worth living at all.