Time Builder

The time builders are an unnamed humanoid species who live in the timestream, and literally construct each minute of time.

Biology
The time builders are humanoid beings. Their bodies are featureless and entirely blue, leaving them with no visible features. While they are faceless, they appear to have a nose-like protrusion. The lack of a mouth implies that they do not need sustenance, or have an alternate form of acquiring energy. The time builders are mute, but are capable of comprehending English. Their most striking ability is their ability to enter various points in time. While not showing any other supernatural abilities, they have been seen utilizing enhanced strength and durability, enough to overpower an adult human male wielding a baseball bat with only one arm, while showing no visible pain or injuries from catching the bat mid-swing. Their builds appear masculine, and no females of this species has been sighted. It is possible that their bodies would be destroyed by being caught in actual time, but this is unconfirmed. Despite their emotionless method of working, they appear capable of following orders, and have been seen hesitating when ordered to abandon a chase, presumably assessing the risks of remaining in the minute while actual time was approaching. It is unknown if the time builder foreman is a member of the same species, as he resembled a regular human with facial hair rather than a featureless blue-skinned humanoid. If he is a member of the same species, it is possible that the time builders have a biological caste system, with those higher in a higher caste being human-like. The foreman was fully sapient and capable of speech and emotions, and his position as the leader could be tied into a biological impulse for the blue-skinned builders to be subservient to him. He also appeared to be the most adept among the time builders at time travel, easily stepping into different minutes, seemingly by creating temporal doorways and tunnels between two points in time. Any limit to how far the time builders can move in time is unknown, and they have been seen moving several months ahead of the present.

Culture and society
The purpose of the time builders is to construct time for the inhabitants of the present. Time is like an infinitely stretching train, with every boxcar representing one minute, each minute functioning like its own world, although each world is nothing more than a white void. The time builders, directed by an unknown force, possibly a ruling caste or another entity, literally build time from raw materials. Masses of workers work under time builders designated as foremen, who direct them where and when to build, working well in advance. The workers are clad in all-blue uniforms, resembling construction workers, while the foremen are dressed in an orange-yellow version of the same uniform. On rare occasions, they make minor mistakes, such as leaving items in the wrong place or forgetting to place them, although these mistakes are often rectified the next minute. Workers are known to be emotionless and work tirelessly. Whenever any Humans get caught in the so-called "backstage" of time, the time builders are known to hold the Humans in the timestream, not allowing them to return to regular time to preserve the secrets of time. They are known to wrap up work and vacate the area before actual time approaches. Any areas of the world that would not be used or even seen during a given minute are often not built, leaving a white void in their place. If attacked while working, they will briefly stop to defend themselves, then go back to work as if nothing had happened, only deviating from their work if ordered to by a foreman.

Technology
The time builders are known to utilize equipment not unlike those seen on Earth in the late 20th-century, although painted entirely blue. The foreman was seen using computers and a technologically advanced watch, displaying the current minute and actual time. Due to the nature of their work, they appear to posses no weapons.

History
The time builders have been building time itself, since presumably the beginning of existence. One day, two Humans, Michael and Maureen Wright, somehow cross outside of time, arriving at 11:37 a.m. of the day, although actual time was still at 9:33 a.m. Time builder workers were all over the house, reconstructing it around the Wrights. When Michael attempted to talk to one of the workers, the worker only gave him a look before turning away to keep working. Michael then tried to attack the worker with a baseball bat, only for the worker to catch the bat and take it. The Wrights attempt to flee the house, seeing more workers building the entire neighborhood, and attempt to take refuge in a house whose occupants were out on vacation. However, an attempt to enter a room only reveals a white void in its place. Frightened, they flee to downtown, only seeing more workers. They attempt to enter an alleyway as the foreman comes out of a building and calls out to them, but they ignore him as they run into the alleyway, which is actually a white void. The foreman pulls them out and takes them to an office, where he utilizes a computer to explain to them the true nature of time, even taking them to a minute in the early morning of next Christmas, where work was only just beginning. After returning them to their house, the Wrights want to return to their time, and tell a friend of theirs about the workings of time, but the foreman refuses, saying that they must remain. The Wrights flee, prompting the foreman and some workers to chase them. The Wrights hide in the ticket booth of a theatre, waiting for actual time to approach, as Michael's watch still functioned and still read actual time. Eventually, actual time was getting closer, and the workers finished their job, packing up and leaving. The Wrights exit the booth, only to be confronted by the foreman, but actual time was almost upon them. The foreman ordered the two workers with him to escape, as actual time grew closer and closer, creating a deafening train-like sound. The foreman withdrew to another point in time, letting actual time arrive, phasing the Wrights back into it. When the Wrights see that they remain in actual time after another minute passes, they rejoice and go to head home, but not before Michael notices an all-blue wrench accidentally left behind by the workers, taking it as proof of their experience.

Appearances

 * "Yesterday was Monday", by Theodore Sturgeon (1941)
 * The Twilight Zone, s01e15c, "A Matter of Minutes" (1986)