A Changing Marriage
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Synopsis
In this poignant and insightful new novel, the acclaimed author of The Good Life delves beneath the shimmering surface of one couple's evolving marriage. . .
Karen Spears and Bob Parsons meet in college and embark upon the kind of enviable, picture-perfect relationship featured in romantic movies. Bob is ambitious and adoring; Karen is bright and beautiful. And nothing seems more natural to them than getting married right after Karen's graduation.
Newlywed life meets all of Karen's expectations. Bob's career is soaring and Karen has a fulfilling job of her own—one that's put on hold when she becomes pregnant. But their caring partnership begins to slip away as Bob's single-minded pursuit of the next promotion blinds him to how overwhelmed Karen feels as a stay-at-home mom. When resentment and disenchantment build on both sides, Karen finds herself at a crossroads. What happens when reality erodes your ideal relationship? How do you know when to stay and when to go? And how much can any marriage endure before it becomes just another statistic?
Profoundly honest and revealing, A Changing Marriage is a vivid portrait of relationships at their most intricate—and most familiar.
Praise for Susan Kietzman's The Good Life
"Kietzman's well crafted characterizations give the narrative its depth. . ..Readers will find themselves drawn into the tragedies and triumphs of this fictional family—distinct and yet utterly relatable." --Hartford Books Examiner
Release date: February 25, 2014
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 336
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A Changing Marriage
Susan Kietzman
He had never seen her before, even though he walked that same route from his dorm through the student center to class three times a week. She was sitting in the reception area next to the café, in an upholstered armchair. Lit from behind by the morning sunlight blasting through a wall-sized window, she looked more vision than human. Bob stopped walking. She read a book she held in her lap, as if she were alone in her dorm room or sequestered in the library, with nothing but silence for company. Bob took a step closer, and, as if on cue, she looked up at him. A second later, he was jostled by a passing student’s overloaded backpack, momentarily dislodging his focus. Bumped a second time, Bob looked around, again aware of the moving people, of the noise, of the sense of urgency. He looked at the large analog clock on the wall behind him and discovered he had just five minutes to make it to his marketing class. As he cut through the lane of scurrying students, he glanced back, but the girl was gone.
Bob took his assigned seat in Mark Gladwin’s class just as the professor entered the room. Gladwin, a short, trim man with wiry black hair and matching bifocals, glanced up at the auditorium rows of students on the way to his desk. He set his briefcase down and ushered his worn cardboard folder of notes to the podium. Bob opened his notebook and took a pen from his back pocket. Less than a minute later, it was as if both of them had been there for hours, Gladwin talking and Bob taking notes. He was a long-distance runner, Gladwin, and carried that unusual combination of drive and patience into the classroom. And he lived up to his reputation as a storyteller, offering a relevant case for just about every question that had arisen in class. He was different, certainly, from most of the professors at the mid-Michigan community college Bob attended for two years before transferring into the state university system. But, unlike those other professors, Gladwin appeared to have no concept of transition: He didn’t say good morning; he didn’t take roll; he never wasted time. He talked quickly, so that even the serious students had to strain forward in their seats to keep up. Bob knew all this; he had been Gladwin’s student for more than two months now. But he still allowed his thoughts to wander. Who was that girl?
He had seen her for only a moment, but a picture of her encompassed his entire brain like an image projected onto a movie theater screen. He looked back at the professor and tried to reengage with him, but Gladwin had become like a word Bob couldn’t remember, available but inaccessible. Instead, Bob’s mind had become her prisoner, entangled by her auburn hair. The stillness of her pose juxtaposed with the atmospheric chaos of the student center was noteworthy. How could anyone read quietly and utterly without movement in the midst of madness? And the light from the window behind her had been white, unfiltered. Its intensity creating an aura, he mused, an aura of goodness, of serenity, of something intangible and uncommon in busy twentieth-century life.
Bob shifted his weight in his chair in an effort to change gears, to rid his mind of fantastical thoughts and to return to Gladwin, who had turned from the podium to write on the blackboard that covered the front wall of the classroom. Bob wrote in his notebook what Gladwin wrote on the board, even though it made little sense. Maybe his roommate, Evan, knew her. Maybe, if Bob explained where and when he had seen her and what she looked like, Evan would tell him her name. What was her name? Bob jotted down several possibilities in the margin of his notes: Sarah, Jennifer, Catherine, Christine . . . Annette? Bob liked Annette. It was different enough to warrant her outstanding qualities. He wrote Annette below the list of other names and then wrote Parsons, his last name, after it.
Not by chance, Bob found his roommate in the library that evening. Evan Blackhurst, who referred to himself as a book nerd, always sat on the third floor in the northeast corner carrel, walled in by heavy physics books, shed clothing, and assorted caffeinated beverages he smuggled into the building in his oversized pockets. The third floor was the designated quiet floor with absolutely no talking, nothing but the occasional rumble from the heating and air-conditioning ducts for distraction. The third floor, according to Evan, was for the student who went to the library to study rather than socialize. Yet, didn’t Bob find Evan every time he looked for him? Didn’t they have a quick conversation every time Bob hung over the top of Evan’s carrel? And hadn’t Bob convinced Evan twice already that semester to quit studying and go to the bar?
“How’s it going?” said Bob, popping his head over the top of the carrel. Evan didn’t respond, didn’t even look up. “You about done?”
“No.”
“So, how much time do you need? Thirty minutes?”
Evan looked at his watch. “More like ninety.”
An annoyed “Sssshhhhhhh!” emanated from a nearby carrel.
“That’s too bad,” said Bob, whispering. “There’s a party at the complex.”
Evan laid his twice-read-already copy of A Brief History of Time on the crowded tabletop in front of him. This was Evan’s go-to book when he needed a quick break from studying but still wanted to stimulate his brain. Most walked to the student center for coffee when they sought diversion; Evan turned to Stephen Hawking, his idol. Evan gave Bob his best disinterested look, a challenge for a boy whose thick blond hair, although cut in the traditional men’s style, grew out instead of down. And because he hadn’t made time for a haircut in several weeks, he looked like someone out of the 1970s rather than the late 1980s. “Didn’t we go to a function last night?”
Bob nodded his head. “It was a good function.”
“I’ll grant you that,” said Evan, returning to his book.
Taking Evan’s concurrence as an opening, Bob pulled up a chair paired with a vacant carrel. Evan sighed, putting his head in his hands for dramatic effect. “Let’s go for an hour,” began Bob. “I’ll let you tell me, again, why Mike Dukakis should be our president. Then you can come back here and continue studying.”
“After I’ve had a couple of beers?”
“You don’t have to drink.”
Evan raised his head and looked at Bob. “Then why do I want to go to this party?”
“Go to the party and leave us in peace,” said the voice from the other carrel.
“I want to see if you know someone,” said Bob, lowering his voice that he had inadvertently raised. “I met this girl today; actually I only saw her, in the student center on my way to class. I have to find her.”
Evan removed his glasses, which Bob took as a good sign. “Since when have you needed me to meet girls?”
“This is different. She’s different. She’s absolutely radiant, and I don’t want to mess things up. I thought if you knew her, you could introduce us or something.”
“Tell me you have a crush,” said Evan, the beginnings of a smile around his mouth and eyes for the first time since Bob’s arrival.
“Does anyone out of elementary school use that term?”
“I just did.”
“Then yes, I do.” Evan looked at his watch. “Ev, you’ve been here all day. One hour. It will be good for you.”
“Okay,” said Evan, pushing back in his chair. “I’ll go for one hour. But not because it will be good for me.”
“Thank God,” said the voice.
Harrison Complex was a cluster of dorms connected by glass hallways at the north end of campus. While not the most attractive or desirable place to live—it was a good ten-minute walk from everywhere else—it housed the perfect location for parties. Shay, the northern dining hall, was large enough so that when the tables and chairs were stacked at the perimeter, there was ample room for a couple hundred college students to socialize. It was built in the 1970s, when the energy conservation effort dictated low ceilings, an architectural feature that created an air of intimacy in utilitarian spaces like Shay, which, with support columns, was able to stretch the length of a basketball court. The setup was always the same: admission tables at one end, beer tables in the middle, and whatever the Alternative Club was promoting—chess, Pictionary, card games—at the far end.
As Bob paid the two-dollar entrance fee and had his hand stamped, he began to scan the room. Twenty-four hours ago, when he and Evan had wandered into the Delta Phi keg party on their way back from the library, Bob’s sole focus had been a beer blitz on his stress level, heightened by recent midterm exams and finals in a month. Tonight, he was focused on her, the adrenaline rush from his chance meeting with her resurfacing and prompting his heart to beat faster. This could be the night he talked to her. This could be the night he put the lingering unpleasantness of an impromptu, two-week romance with a girl in his dorm to rest. God, he hoped she and her pleading looks didn’t show up. He and Evan walked to the beer table and stood in line. Evan looked at his watch. “We’ve been here five minutes,” said Bob.
“Ten.”
“You walked here on your own legs. No second thoughts now.”
“Fine,” said Evan, which is what he always said when it wasn’t.
Bob reasoned that the chances of seeing the girl at the party far outweighed those of another chance sighting somewhere else on campus. Large universities were funny that way. On his way to a class, Bob could see the same person every day for a week and then not at all the following week. An extra minute in the shower or a room scan for a missing glove was all it took to change the faces on his trip across campus. It was so unlike life at Winslow Community College, where Bob saw the same people every Monday through Friday. They parked their cars in the same spots. They walked the same wide cement sidewalks to the classroom buildings. They ate the same reheated food in the cafeteria. They sat under the same trees, smoking and drinking coffee, in the courtyard in good weather. While these were comforting features when Bob was first starting out and knew nothing about college life, they quickly turned stale. So much so that Bob had wanted to transfer to the big school after his first semester. It was his parents, citing financial constraints, who kept him home until he completed his sophomore year.
On the other side of the beer table, Evan’s friend Matthew, a senior, ignored the red underage ink on their hands and handed them each two twelve-ounce plastic cups of draft beer. Cups in hand, Bob and Evan slowly walked the length of the dimly lit room, sipping as they strolled. There were so many people; it was an effort to distinguish one face from another. Strangely nervous and already discouraged, Bob chugged the second half of his first beer. “I didn’t think there would be so many people here,” he shouted over his shoulder and the dance music to Evan, two steps behind him.
“There are always this many people here,” Evan yelled back. “This is the reason you wanted to come!”
“I’ll never find her here!”
“What?” shouted Evan. Bob pointed to a set of doors and walked in their direction. They walked through them and out into the long hallway that ran the length of the dining hall, the party noise fading with a click. “What is your problem?” asked Evan. “We are now on the wrong side of locked doors. If we want to get back into the party, we have to go all the way around and through the line again.”
“I couldn’t hear in there; I couldn’t think. How am I ever going to find this girl?”
“What,” asked Evan, taking the last sip from his first cup, “is so special about this girl?”
Bob ran his hand through his short, dark brown hair, a habit more than a style correction. His older brothers had called him Brillo since junior high, a cruel but apt nickname. “I don’t know. I don’t even know her. It was just something I felt when I saw her today. I haven’t been able to stop thinking about her.”
“What does she look like?”
“She’s got brilliant reddish hair,” said Bob, “that goes past her shoulders. And she’s got a pretty face, although it was hard to see all of it because she glanced at me for just a moment. I think I told you she was reading a book. Oh, and she’s got great posture.”
“Great posture?”
“Yeah. She was sitting in a chair and her back was straight, not curved and sloppy like most people’s backs.”
Evan started walking down the hallway, and Bob followed. “So, I’m looking for a girl with good posture?”
“Yes.”
Evan took a sip from his second beer. “We’re not going to find her.”
“I know.”
“Do you want to go back in?”
“You go in,” said Bob. “I’m out of here.”
Evan watched his roommate walk up the set of stairs at the end of the hallway, then looked at his watch. He decided to go back into the party for another thirty minutes before returning to the library. Maybe he’d meet a girl, a girl with nice eyes, a broad smile, and a lithesome body—good posture optional.
Bob walked back to the library, quiet and bright after the party, and up the stairs to the second floor. His books lay undisturbed in the exact position he had left them almost an hour before. Leave stuff anywhere else and it wouldn’t be there an hour later; most unattended things wouldn’t last ten minutes. School libraries, it seemed, were one of the last trustworthy places left. Bob breathed in, hesitated, then sat, picked up his market strategy book, and began rereading the first page of “Chapter Eight: Making Your Product Available to the Global Customer.” Halfway through the second paragraph, Bob set the book down. He stood, packed all of his belongings into his backpack, and quickly descended the stairs to the first floor. What he needed, he decided on his way out the door, was a couple hours of mindless television in his room. With Evan sure to return to the library after the party, Bob could watch whatever he wanted.
Bob took his usual route through the student center on his way back to the dorm. It was a little longer than going directly to his room—and this was a consideration in mid-November, when the first snowfall was already a week old—but it provided the opportunity to enjoy light conversation as well as forced-air heat on the long walk between the library and John Adams Hall, one of six smaller dorms named after early U.S. presidents at the eastern end of campus. He opened the glass door to the café and was welcomed by sounds of relaxation. Bob wove his way around people and tables that had been moved to accommodate them and into a line of more people waiting to buy food. He reached into his back pocket for his wallet, taking out three singles for a root beer and a large bag of chips. He smiled as he paid the cashier, a cute girl with enormous brown eyes. He had seen her somewhere before, his economics lecture maybe. Bob meandered through another crowd of people gathered just outside the reception area where he had seen the girl that morning. Several games of euchre were in process. Bob stopped for a moment and looked at the chair where she had been reading. It was empty now, and he was tempted for a second to place his hand on the cushion to see if it still held the heat from her body.
The far end of the building housed one of the three campus bars. The Intellectual Grape was a mellow wine bar that attracted girls and guys trying to impress girls on dates. It was not, as Bob had learned, a good place to start a conversation with a stranger. People at The Grape walked in with the company they wanted to keep that evening. Was she in there with another guy? Bob resisted the urge to walk in and have a look around, instead heading for the doors at the far end of the hallway. As he was about to walk back out into the cold night air, she appeared on the other side of the glass. Bob froze, unable for a few seconds to even breathe. Was she real, or was she a product of his longings? She smiled at him; Bob thought he smiled in return. He wanted to speak to her, but the glass was in the way. It separated them, a transparent but formidable wall, and Bob had no idea how to reach her. He pushed against it, but it wouldn’t move. Perhaps he could scale it. If only he could find a rope. He checked the ground, but found nothing. When he looked up, she was still there, only now she was reaching for something, and before Bob knew exactly what was happening, the door was opening, as if released by incantation. “How did you do that?” Bob asked, transfixed.
“I pulled on the handle,” said the girl, facing him from less than three feet away. “Your side’s locked.”
“Ah,” said Bob, still submerged in fantasy, but swimming toward the surface.
“Are you okay?”
“Yes, most definitely.”
“Okay then,” she said, turning to leave.
“Wait!” said Bob, breaking through. “Don’t go.” She stopped and looked back at him over her shoulder. “I’m sorry. I was lost in thought.”
She laughed. “Yes, you were.”
He held out his hand. “My name’s Bob. Bob Parsons.”
“And I’m Karen.” She took his hand in hers. Bob noticed that it fit perfectly, as if the two had once been molded together. “Karen Spears.”
Now what, thought Bob, desperately wanting to say something that would make her laugh again, that would keep her near him. “Where are you headed?”
“To get coffee. I have a huge test tomorrow, and I’m sleepy already.”
“I know the feeling.”
“Caffeine is so tricky, though. Not enough and I fall asleep; too much and I’m too wired to study.”
“A medium should do it. A large will keep you up for a couple of days.” She laughed again. “Do you want company?”
“I’m just getting it to go.”
Bob hesitated, his banging heart too big for his chest. “I could walk with you, if you’d like.”
Karen narrowed her eyes. “Are you a nice person, Bob Parsons?”
“I carry character references for just this kind of chance meeting.”
Karen smiled. “Okay. Come on then.”
They walked back down the hall Bob had just traveled, back past The Grape, past the student lounge, and into the cafeteria. It was all as it had been, and yet it looked new, as if in the last five minutes a different paint color had been rolled on the walls. They walked in tandem, Karen in front, the thick crowd prohibiting a side-by-side stroll. He should have guessed her name; it suited her perfectly. The radiance he had seen that morning still shone from her hair and, just minutes ago, from her face, which was even prettier than he remembered. She wore little makeup, just mascara, from what Bob quickly gathered, and had the natural kind of looks his mother would call lovely. Her lips were closer to pink than red, with a healthy, lip-balmed look. They would be soft when he kissed them; they would pull, slightly, at his lips when they parted. He would not scare her away by trying to kiss her that night. He would follow the standard dating protocol and ask her out for a movie or dinner off campus. If she accepted and they went out together, then he would have the option of kissing her good night.
Bob observed her as she purchased a medium coffee and then added cream and sugar as if he were watching an arcane procedure seldom practiced. Her hands, soft and steady, poured just the right amount. No drips. And only one teaspoon of sugar: moderation. They walked out of the café and stood for a minute, outside the reception area, talking about her art history test the next day and sipping their drinks. Bob was fascinated that she was in the middle of memorizing more than two hundred paintings and the artists who created them. He liked the sound of her voice, which was both confident and melodic. Had she been able to say nothing but her name over and over, Bob would have listened attentively.
They walked back to the far end of the building, where they had met just fifteen minutes before. Bob pushed opened the same door she had opened for him, and they moved into the night, still talking. It wasn’t until they were through the parking lot and into the street that they discovered they had grown up in the same town. They both stopped and looked at each other. “You’re kidding,” said Bob. “Manchester?”
“Manchester.”
“Where do you live?”
“Sealy Street, near the high school.”
“Near Ward High School?”
“The only reputable high school in town.”
“Oh no!” said Bob, in mock horror. “If you went to Ward High School, I shouldn’t even be talking to you!”
Karen laughed. “That can only mean you went to Handley! And if that’s true, I definitely shouldn’t be talking to you!” She walked several steps away from him, stopped, and turned her back to him. Bob approached her, set his drink and chips on the snowy pavement, and put his arm around her shoulders. He bent down and put his mouth next to her ear and whispered, “I won’t tell if you won’t tell.”
She turned to face him, her light green eyes looking into his. “Deal,” she whispered back.
Their ensuing kiss seemed right, expected even, as a means to seal their agreement, a handshake too formal. As they drew apart, Bob felt warm and relaxed, not agitated like he had been with other girls. With other girls, he had wanted to go further, to keep kissing them, to touch them, to take them to a place where they wouldn’t be disturbed. Not this time. He wanted everyone to see him with Karen, lit by the angled glow of the halogen streetlamp but otherwise surrounded by darkness, and he wanted this very moment to last minutes, hours even, instead of seconds. If they had been the stars in a movie, the director would have shot the kiss full circle, with a beginning, middle, and slow but deliberate end; it was a perfect kiss. Afterward, they stood frozen, Karen with her medium foam cup of coffee in her hands, and Bob with his root beer and chips at his feet and his arms casually draped over her shoulders. He opened his mouth to speak.
“Don’t.” Karen put her fingers, warmed by the coffee, lightly over his lips. “Don’t talk.” She picked up his cup and chip bag and handed them to him, then led him out of the street and onto the frozen grass. They crossed the central green in silence, walked around the bookstore, and down a short hill to Karen’s dorm. They stopped at the front door and faced each other.
“Can I talk now?”
“Go right ahead.”
“What are you doing tomorrow?”
“Going to my classes.”
“After that,” said Bob. “What are you doing for dinner?”
“Eating whatever the dining hall has to offer.”
“Let’s go out for dinner. Can I pick you up at six?”
“You may. I live on the third floor of this very building, room three twelve.”
“Great.” Bob leaned in and kissed Karen’s cheek. “I’ll see you then.”
Karen watched him walk back up the hill and then disappear around the corner of the bookstore. She let out a tiny squeal, then pulled open the heavy wood door and ran up two flights of stairs, taking them two at a time. She jogged down the hallway to her room, opened the door, set her half-consumed coffee down on her desk, and blissfully collapsed onto her bed.
“Uh-oh,” said her roommate, Allison Pilsky, lying on her bed on the other side of the room. “I’ve seen that look before.”
“Not on my face,” sang Karen, looking at the ceiling. “I have positively never felt this way before in my entire life.”
Allison shut her book, sat up, crossed her legs in front of her, and leaned back against the wall. “Tell me everything.” Propping herself with one elbow, Karen told her roommate the whole story—from their awkward conversation at the glass door, to their slow walk to get coffee, to their shock about discovering they lived in the same town, to their glorious kiss in the middle of the road. “What kind of kiss was it?” asked Allison, squinting and tilting her head slightly to the side. “Did he put his tongue in your mouth?”
Karen frowned. “Of course not. It was soft and sweet, and I felt it everywhere. It traveled from my lips to my fingertips, to my earlobes, right down to my ankles. It was pure and noble. It was the most beautiful kiss I’ve ever had.”
“Did he touch you?” Allison was eager in her inquiry.
“You are so gross. I’m telling you about the most chaste kiss in the history of the world, and all you can think about is whether he tried to put his hand under my jacket.”
“Well, did he?”
“No! This is not the beginning of a two-week physical relationship. This is the beginning of something different.”
Allison raised her plucked black eyebrows. “You’re in love?”
Karen thought for a moment. “Since I just met him, no. But there’s a strong possibility I could be there twenty-four hours from now.”
Allison reached for her book. “Go slowly, Miss Spears,” she said, eyes back on the war novel she was reading for history class. “As you already know, some of the Romeos out there are pretty smooth operators.”
Karen closed her eyes and inhaled before saying, “His name isn’t Romeo. It’s Bob. Bob Parsons.”
After Bob rounded the corner of the bookstore, he started running. He ran all the way to the library, through the glass doors, and up the stairs to the third floor. Evan was sitting at his carrel with his head bent over a large textbook with colored pictures. Bob stood next to Evan’s chair. “Guess what?”
Evan shifted his gaze slowly from the book to Bob’s face. “I’m not going back to the party. It was a nice break. I drank one beer. I’m relaxed, but still able to study, and I’ve got a test tomorrow. I’m not going back, no matter what you say.”
“Go to the lounge,” said the same reprimanding voice from before. “You can talk there and not bother absolutely everyone on this entire floor.”
“Good idea,” said Bob, holding up the index finger of his right hand. “This will take one minute, Ev, and I promise it’s worth it.” Evan took his time standing, stretched, put his socked feet back into his worn sneakers, and then followed Bob down the carpeted hallway to the empty glassed-in lounge. Bob was talking before the heavy door shut behind them. “I met her.”
Evan gave him his best blank look. “Met who?”
“The girl. The girl I dragged you to the party to meet. The girl I saw in the student center this morning. The girl I’ve been thinking about all day.”
Evan crossed his arms in front of his chest. “You have got to be kidding.”
“I am most definitely not kidding. I cut through the student center to grab some chips, and I’m about to walk out the doors near The Grape, and there she was.”
“Did you talk to her?”
Bob laughed. “Man, after I found my tongue, yeah. I was so blown away when I first saw her, I couldn’t say anything.”
“How awkward was that?”
“Very,” said Bob. “But she was totally cool with it.”
“So, does this mystery girl have a name?”
“Karen Spears.”
“I know Karen. She’s in my art history class.”
“You know her?”
“Well, I know who she is. She sits in front of me.”
“I didn’t even know you took art history. She has a test tomorrow.”
“As do I.” Evan pointed at his watch.
“What’s she like, other than perfect?”
Evan shrugged. “She seems nice.”
“Isn’t she gorgeous?”
“She is, in a very natural kind of way.”
“I like that in a girl. Those made-up faces scare me. You know? Like clowns. You never really know what’s going on underneath.”
“I guess.”
“What else do you know about her?”
“Not much. She’s there every time and seems to be a pretty good student. She laughs easily.”
“She and I grew up in the same town. How crazy is that?”
“That is pretty crazy.”
“And what are the chances of meeting her the very day I discover her?”
“Slim. It must be fate.”
“I know it’s fate. I’m going to marry her.”
Evan laughed as he moved toward the door. “How about a date first?”
“Already booked,” said Bob. “Tomorrow night is the official beginning.”
Evan reached for the doorknob. “No pressure, right?”
“You know me.” Bob followed him out the door. “I thrive on pressure.”
NOVEMBER 1988
Karen stood in front of her closet, looking at the jumble of clothes within. She took a couple of steps closer and examined her skirts clipped to a hanging rack, but she was not inspired to remove any of them. She wanted to look mature, in control, not like a schoolgirl. That thought led her to the leggings she routinely wore on the weekends. She pulled her favorite pair off their hanger and inspected them. She had worn them only once since they had been washed, to the basketball game last Saturday and, afterward, Anthony’s Pub. Remembering how smoky it had been, she held them to her nose. Nothing but the faint aroma of her laundry detergent. Karen took off her jeans and pulled on the pants. She crossed the room to her dresser and took her thigh-length, fuzzy orange V-neck sweater out of the bottom drawer and pulled it over her head. She put big silver hoops in her ears and a silver chain hosting a clear crystal pendant around her neck; she brushed her hair, and then stood in front of the full-length mirror hung on the exterior side of the closet door. When she glanced at the clock next to her bed, she was disappointed that she had another fifteen minutes to wait. Grabbing a short story she had to read for her English c
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