Em370, you're conflating reference frames, relative motion, and numerous other concepts.If a clock large enough for you to read from a great distance flew past you at 99% of the speed of light, on a path that took it across the face of the moon from your perspective, here is what you would observe.
Compared to your own clocks, the hands on the moving clock would be at a virtual standstill, but if you calculated how long it took to transit the moon (which would of course take a pretty impressive camera/timing system) you could work out that it was traveling at nearly the speed of light relative to you.
Additionally, the clock would appear distorted as it passed you, due to a phenomenon known as Terrel Rotation.
http://newport.eecs.uci.edu/~dblack/backlightsoftware.htm
From the perspective of an observer riding the clock, YOUR clock would appear to be at a standstill as the Earth and Moon flew past at nearly the speed of light, undergoing Terrel Rotation (as well as the distortion of their color/brightness due to the searchlight and doppler effects).
If the clock started on Earth beside you, flew out into space, and whipped past the moon before returning to your side, it would show that from the perspective of the clock the journey took a fraction of the duration you observer.
Note that this isn't just a mechanical effect, if you think of a clock as being similar to an odometer for time, it crossed a shorter "distance" through time during the highly accelerated journey than your clock did in your less accelerated frame on Earth.