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Five Seconds Too Soon: When Time Breaks, So Do We

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What if a machine could pull you into the past—
but never where, when, or why you expected?

Megan Toole never meant to uncover a forgotten time-travel experiment. A sealed archive box, a corrupted USB drive, and a trail of fractured research pull her into the aftermath of a project that broke the people who built it. The logs she finds aren’t just records—they’re warnings. Coordinates. Trauma. Regret. And they all point toward one missing Professor Everett Frankwyler.

Determined to understand the device and the tragedies it left behind, Megan follows the scattered clues into a world of abandoned labs, unstable survivors, and a writer whose “fiction” reads more like testimony. The deeper she digs, the more she realizes the jumps weren’t random… and they’re not done.

When the machine reactivates, Megan, Everett, and Oliver are thrown into violent, unpredictable moments in history—events they were never meant to witness. Each jump grows more chaotic. Each return becomes less certain. And every new rule Megan uncovers feels less like a warning and more like a confession from the people who came before her.

Five Seconds Too Soon is a tense, emotional, character-driven time-travel thriller about trauma, obsession, and the cost of trying to understand a machine that reacts to the people who use it. Perfect for fans of Dark, The Butterfly Effect, Recursion, and Primer, this second installment in The Five Seconds Series

If the past keeps calling you back, how long before you answer?

270 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 30, 2025

About the author

Scott Eichinger

9 books5 followers
Scott Eichinger is an indie author known for blending human emotion, science, and suspense into tightly woven stories that explore how small choices ripple through time. He is the creator of The Option Cycle and The Five Seconds Series, two interconnected worlds where cause, consequence, and consciousness collide.

His writing is defined by grounded characters, psychological depth, and cinematic pacing—turning complex ideas about time and reality into stories that feel deeply personal and alive.

When he’s not writing, Scott studies science, history, and the human mind’s fascination with “what if.” He lives and writes in the American Southwest.

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