Pins and needles by Nick Green
Upon the moonlit doorstep sat a small girl selling pins.
‘A penny,
you say?’
‘Please
m’m. Penny a packet.’
The Lady
dropped a shilling in the little girl’s lap. She took the wrap of paper in her
glove and hurried home, where she tossed the pins into a drawer. Soon to bed,
she lay awake a long while, troubled by a tingling in her fingers. Though she
tried rubbing them, then warming her hand under the pillow, the tingling grew
ever more fierce, till it was like pins and needles jabbing through her palm.
After many fretful hours, the Lady slept.
Next
evening the Lady passed that way again. The dark doorway seemed to be empty.
Then a familiar voice piped up behind her.
‘Buy some
pins, m’m?’
She saw the
upturned face, no more than a spoonful of moonlight.
‘I have
plenty of pins, thank you,’ she said. The girl only held out her hands,
offering the paper packets. Brushing off her uneasiness, the Lady opened her
purse. A crown was the smallest coin she could find.
‘Two
packets, then.’ She paid the girl and made for home, dropping her worthless
purchase into the drawer.
That night
the Lady slept not a wink. The stabbing pains in her hand were twice as bad as
before, pricking bone-deep, creeping up her arm. They spread into her body,
groping towards her heart. The Lady lay in agony, struggling to breathe. Only
when morning’s rays cut the curtains did the torment finally subside.
For some
days she would not leave the house, fearful lest she meet the pin girl again.
But when the pains did not reappear, she chided herself for such foolishness
and once more took up her social duties. Returning from a late visit to a friend,
she happened to take the same forlorn alley. The voice whined in the shadows.
The girl
looked paler, bones and rags shivering on the step.
‘Not
tonight,’ snapped the Lady.
‘Please
m’m.’ The girl held out three packets. ‘I can’t go ’ome till I’ve sold ’em
all.’
‘I said
no!’ The Lady wrapped her coat tight and fairly ran till she was at her own
door. That night passed in a blissful sleep, with not the slightest twinge in
her hand.
Days went
by and her fears faded into memory. But now the fate of the pin girl began to
prey on her mind. So tiny she was! So hungry and cold. Soon the Lady could not
sleep for worrying. Eventually, she could stand it no longer. In the depths of
another restless night, she rose from her bed and set out for the alley with a
lantern and a purse full of coins.
She was sure she had found the
right doorstep, but no girl was sleeping here. In her place lay a far bigger
heap of rags, a man with knotted hair and beard. Before the Lady could hurry
away, the tramp opened his eyes.
‘Excuse
me,’ said the Lady. ‘There was a little girl who used to sit here. Do you know
where she lives?’
The man stirred in his stinking bed. Between coughs and
wheezes he seemed not to hear the question. Dragging himself upright, he reached out both his hands towards the Lady. She could
see that there was something in them. In a croaking voice he beseeched her,
‘Buy some nails, madam?’
© Nick Green
Comments
(You're getting better all the time.)
Another sleepless night. Thanks! ;-)