Bunk Bed Incident Lucy Lotus Install -
She took a breath. The hex key was three centimeters long. The gap behind the bed appeared to be, at most, five centimeters wide. She opted to tilt the bed frame forward an inch to create more room. It was a delicate maneuver—tilt enough to slide the phone’s torch along, but not so much that the entire structure collapsed.
The bunk bed incident became a piece of household folklore, repeated over cups of coffee and pints on the narrow balcony overlooking Maple Street. People recalled the image differently—some swore the hex key was swallowed whole by the bed; others said Lucy had climbed the frame like a pirate. Each telling polished the memory like a coin, until the truth—equal parts stubbornness and serendipity—shone through.
“Of course,” she muttered. Her options marched across her mind: disassemble the top half (no), climb down and fish under the bed (dangerous), or adopt the improvisational ingenuity she'd used to fix a boiled kettle with a shoelace once. She selected ingenuity.
Lucy Lotus had always been clumsy in charming ways. The sort of person who could sit on a bench and somehow poke a hole in her jeans with a stray nail, or carry three grocery bags and still manage to drop the milk at the very last step. She also loved projects—flat-pack furniture, tiny succulent arrangements, anything that turned a pile of parts into something useful. When she moved into the narrow, sunlit apartment above the bakery on Maple Street, she grinned at the prospect of making the place hers.
The hex key fell through the thin gap between slats and vanished.
Lucy set the pieces on the floor and spread the instruction booklet like a map. The diagrams were minimalistic—little stick figures and arrows that suggested competence. She began cheerfully, sorting screws into small cereal bowls, humming under her breath. The steel slats glinted. The tools in her drawer—a cheerful yellow-handled screwdriver, a crescent wrench that once belonged to her dad—felt like companions.
They sat there in the warm apartment, fairy lights pooling their glow across the duvet. Outside, the bakery below them hummed with late-night bakers and the occasional customer searching for a midnight pastry. Inside, the bunk bed stood steady and slightly imperfect, and Lucy felt a private kind of victory that had nothing to do with instruction manuals.
Lucy climbed the ladder to test the sturdiness. “Solid,” she told herself. The mattress for the top bunk was impossibly light, like a folded cloud. She wrestled it up—half triumphant, half panting—and arranged the fitted sheet. She squinted at the top rails, spacing, bolt alignment. In the fluorescent wash of the bedside lamp, the instruction booklet’s final step looked simple: secure the top guardrails.
Lucy sipped her tea, shoulders loosening. “It’s an heirloom in progress.”
She climbed down, braced one knee on the lower bed’s rung, and wrapped her hands around the top frame. With a grunt and a gentle pull, Lucy eased the top bunk forward. Metal sang. Something dislodged with a soft clink. The bed leaned more than she intended, and a sudden small avalanche of dust—motes of last winter’s dreams—drifted into her face. Her heart pounded, but the sight was rewarding: there, in the newly revealed nape of the top frame, lay the hex key, laughing in the flashlight like a tiny metallic moon.
From the drawer she produced a pair of chopsticks salvaged from a sushi night, sticky-taped them together, and fashioned a makeshift grabbing tool. It was ridiculous but it held the kind of hope that thrives in ridiculous things. Lucy threaded the chopsticks through the slat gap and nudged. The hex key shivered but did not budge. She adjusted, angled, prodded—after a long, careful minute the taped-end hooked the key and it rolled, skittered, and fell back into the dark.
“It’s not a hole,” Lucy corrected. “It’s a lotus.”
“You put a hole in it,” she said, voice exactly the right mix of mock scandal and affection.
She reached with two fingers and snatched it free. It felt warm from the friction of the scrape, and absurdly triumphant. She straightened the bunk with care, re-fastened the bolts with the recovered key, and gave the ladder a test tug. Satisfied, she climbed up to the top bunk, arranged the pillow, and plugged the fairy lights back in. They blinked awake, a row of small winking faces.