The Paperclip
They were never meant to be important. A bent loop of wire, cool to the touch, waiting in a shallow dish beside the desk. He would reach for one without looking, guided by habit more than thought, and feel the small certainty of it between his fingers. It held things together: receipts, letters, a note he meant to return to. Nothing permanent, nothing binding, just enough pressure to keep a few loose pages from becoming lost to the floor or forgotten in a drawer. There was something honest in that. It did its work quietly and let go just as easily. In the late light of afternoon, when the room settled and the day’s noise thinned, he noticed how many had gathered there over time. Some were straightened and used again, others twisted into shapes that no longer remembered their purpose. One had been bent into a crude heart years ago, another into a hook that once fished a key from a stubborn place. They had become tools, yes, but also witnesses. They had listened to letters being written ...