The Far Edge
The Border Helix
NBTC (h=21, m=0)
1260 steps from the Harmonic Base
The name
This name sits at the far edge of the field, 1260 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 *Helix*, which calls up a spiral that climbs as it turns — growth and return woven into one rising line. 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=0) — your exact distance and direction from the Harmonic Base, the reason this particular name, and no other, is yours.
Its geometry — Line
You are a Line — a single reach along the hour axis.
Exactly one of your offsets is zero, so your coordinate is a line: a single, clean reach out from the Harmonic Base along one axis only. Yours runs along the hour axis — the large, structural dimension of the field — whole hours of displacement from the time the system predicted for you. Movement here is bold and coarse-grained: a wide stride rather than a small step. A line has direction and reach but no spread: one focused heading away from the source, with nothing pulling it sideways. Its length is 21.
Yours is a long line: you reach far out from the center along your one axis, carrying your single direction a great distance from the source. Long reaches are rare and emphatic — a pure heading held over real distance. Where a triangle balances two kinds of motion, a line is undivided — a person pointed cleanly in one direction, all of their displacement gathered into a single axis.