My son was missing, and I thought the world had ended. Then a stranger walked out of nowhere, cradling him like a miracle, and pressed a delicate hairpin into my hand with a warning I didn’t understand.
Weeks later, the impossible began. Objects moved. Light bent. My son started humming that tune agai… Continues…
I started tracking the moments the hairpin seemed to wake. It pulsed faintly during arguments with my husband, as if absorbing the sharp words we didn’t say. It glowed once when a car screeched too close to us in a crosswalk,
the driver’s eyes going oddly distant, his foot easing the brake just in time. Each incident could have been coincidence, but together they formed a pattern I could no longer dismiss. My son never seemed surprised. He spoke of the “nice lady” like she was still nearby, watching from just beyond the edges of our days.
One evening, during a storm that rattled the windows, I dared to ask him what else she had told him. He looked at the box by my bed and answered with a seriousness far beyond his years: “She said you’d be scared of it first.
But you’d love what it saves.” I still don’t know what’s coming. I only know I sleep easier with that impossible sliver of metal between us and the dark, humming softly like a promise I haven’t had to cash in yet.