As Martha unlocked the cuffs, Eleanor felt the blood return to her wrists. She rubbed the faint red marks, but as she headed downstairs, she didn't feel like she had been trapped. For one hour, the handcuffs hadn't held her back—they had held her still.
The iron of the antique handcuffs felt surprisingly cool against Eleanor’s wrists, a sharp contrast to the humid air of the attic. At sixty-five, she hadn’t expected her Tuesday afternoon to involve being "detained" by a piece of her own family history.
Eleanor was a retired archivist, a woman who lived for the smell of old paper and the thrill of unearthing forgotten stories. Her grandfather had been a local sheriff in the 1940s, and his heavy, rusted gear sat in a trunk she hadn't opened in decades.
"Just to see if the mechanism still holds," she had whispered to herself. Click.