Saturday | 5 October 2024 | Reg No- 06
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Saturday | 5 October 2024 | Epaper

Little Pound Shop

Flash Fiction

Published : Saturday, 30 December, 2023 at 12:00 AM  Count : 945
If one more numpty asks me how much the enchanted hand mirrors cost, Im going to scream. A pound. Everything in the shops a pound. The clues above our door. Pound Kingdom. Thats a hint. Take it. Just because a silver bat flew through our doors last Wednesday sprinkling magic dust over everything doesn mean our prices have gone up. Shampoo that turns your hair to spun gold - a pound. Key ring that follows you everywhere - a pound. Never ending bag of Malteasers - a pound. Id wear my

Everythings a pound t-shirt, but Im in danger of murdering the next bloke who attempts to woo me with does that include you, sweetheart? And how have my staff solved this problem? With a naming competition. And what else would you name a fantastical creature that transforms your world but Bert.

You see what I have to put up with? Just because they call me Mrs T, don go thinking they e an A Team.
And Bert won budge from the ceiling.

He turned the ultrasonic pest repellent to a song so beautiful it made Clare snivel. When Matt flashed the lights to scare him, the bulbs grew wings and flew out the doors. Course I felt guilty phoning pest control, but I was out of options.

And, yes, when he flits about, it brings back when the nights were blue over the oaks: Me and Jessie sharing a blanket and watching the pipistrelles till Mum nagged us to go to bed. Jessie wouldve loved this. Bet shed have coaxed him down. But shes not here, is she?

The pest control guy is pulling up in his van, is getting out … is so hot hes possibly been conjured by an enchanted Coca Cola can. (Who drank that?) Trust Clare to scurry over to him, twirling her hair. She points in my direction. Hes coming over.

"Are you Mrs T?"
"Tessa." Im not telling him Mrs Ts a reference to Maggie Thatcher. Just cos these wimps can handle an iron lady.
"Jake." He points to his badge. A hot guy who can read - my favourite. "Im here for the bat."
"Well, you e in the wrong aisle. This is snacks, not bats." Oh god, Im trying to joke with him.
"That bats probably doing you a favour. They can eat 1,200 mozzies an hour. Like me with Maltesers."

"You e in luck." I pass him a bag of them. My fingers brush his, and I feel my face beetrooting. "Never ending choc." He raises an eyebrow. "Youll see." I spin round. I feel his gaze on me as he follows.

And there Bert is - tucked into the corner. Silver and shining.

"I didn come here for you to take the mickey."

"Its real." I snatch a plastic broom, scurry onto a step ladder, and launch the broom in Berts direction. Whoops. Im wrenched upwards, clinging on for dear life. The broom is sweeping the ceiling. Fast.
Down the aisle.

Faster and faster.

"Let go. Ill catch you." My hands are slipping. Im falling into Jakes arms. Crikey these are good arms. Ill just stay here thanks. No more ground for me. But he puts me down.

"We e sort of enchanted. Ever since Bert arrived things have been bat-sh…" Oh god, Im punning. Somebody stop me.
"Well, I always thought bats were magic. I was the only kid who read Batman for the bats."

"My sister was Batgirl every Halloween for the same reason." And even though it stings me, I can stop myself grinning.
"She must be loving this."

"Shes looking down on us and laughing her head off."

"Im sorry." His hand is on my arm and his eyes are… Jessie, did you send him my way? Because good job. Seriously, thumbs up forever.

"Berts on the move," Matt shouts. I turn round. Bert is silver and dazzle, flitting about the aisles. Everyones gawping.
Jakes hand is touching mine, sending shivers through me. Bert lands on a packet of crayons. And then Jake is moving towards him with some kind of catching thing on the end of a pole.

"Easy does it," Clare says. Like shes helping. A purple crayon leaps from the packet and starts colouring in her face. She swats it.

Jakes so close. He lowers the catcher, opens its jaws. I hold my breath. Almost. Almost. But it doesn scoop up Bert. It starts singing.

Maybe I didn treat you quite as good as I should

Maybe I didn love you quite as often as I could

What do the numpties standing around do? They join in. Like we e in a naff musical. Jake laughs, raises his eyebrows at me. I shake my head. I don do sing-a-longs.

"You were always on my mind," he belts. His eyes lock mine. My face is beetrooting. Clare wolf whistles. Then Berts off again. He lands on a colouring book of prehistoric beasts. Jake props the still crooning catcher against the wall and snatches some tupperware. He inches towards Bert. But the book shrugs and a half coloured-in woolly mammoth stomps from its cover. Only knee height. Cute until it grows and grows. Jake jumps backwards. The mammoth stomps through the aisles, tramples the tills and knocks through the doors and windows. It trumpets triumph. Then rams a Toyota in the car park. What a git. Im glad they e extinct.

And Berts off. Off through where the door once was. We run after him. He flits across the car park. Into the back of Jakes van. We slam the doors.

"Fancy a drink?" Jake says.

"Looks like weve closed early so…" I climb into the passenger seat. Theres fairy dust all over the van. A shimmer. Jake turns the key. We drive. Through a wood of silver trees and golden winds. Blossom fills the air. Like confetti. Jessie, you might be overdoing it.

Courtesy: Flash Fiction Online




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