The Far Edge
The Border Comet
NBTC (h=21, m=24)
1284 steps from the Harmonic Base
The name
This name sits at the far edge of the field, 1284 steps from the Harmonic Base — the most distant and intricate territory the system reaches, where complexity is greatest and the center is only a far light. At its heart is the word *Comet*, which calls up a brilliant visitor on a long orbit — rare, luminous, and bound to return. And the word *Border* stations it on the dividing line, belonging fully to neither side. The system placed this name at offset (h=21, m=24) — your exact distance and direction from the Harmonic Base, the reason this particular name, and no other, is yours.
Its geometry — Triangle
You are a Triangle — a figure with shape and angle.
Neither of your offsets is zero, so your hour displacement and your minute displacement form a triangle with the origin. The corner at the center is a right angle (90°); the other two corners measure 48.8° and 41.2°. Where a line is pure direction, a triangle has interior structure — it holds two kinds of motion at once, and its angles describe how they balance.
Yours is a leaning triangle — one leg notably longer than the other. The figure has a clear tilt: it commits more to one kind of displacement than the other, giving it direction and a sense of momentum toward its longer side. It leans toward the hour axis — the large, structural dimension — so your figure is weighted toward bold, coarse-grained displacement. A triangle is the first figure that encloses any space at all — to be one is to hold more than a single direction, to be made of the tension and balance between two ways of moving away from the center.