Entry tags:
11 June 1989, Morning
When Meg got back from the hospital on Saturday evening, she found her suitcase sitting at the foot of her bed in the hotel room.
It was almost surreal to open it, to find all her things still neatly folded and arranged just so, from when she packed it in what now feels like a previous lifetime. She half-expects things to be jumbled, since the suitcase went through the same car crash she did.
It's oddly comforting to find that it looks just as it did when Alain put it in the trunk of his car in her parents' driveway. And there is something reassuring about having her own clothes back. It feels slightly more normal.
Sunday morning, she picks a green dress and a white sweater, leaves off the sling, and goes down to the breakfast in the hotel's lobby early, feeling more like herself than she has in about three days.
It was almost surreal to open it, to find all her things still neatly folded and arranged just so, from when she packed it in what now feels like a previous lifetime. She half-expects things to be jumbled, since the suitcase went through the same car crash she did.
It's oddly comforting to find that it looks just as it did when Alain put it in the trunk of his car in her parents' driveway. And there is something reassuring about having her own clothes back. It feels slightly more normal.
Sunday morning, she picks a green dress and a white sweater, leaves off the sling, and goes down to the breakfast in the hotel's lobby early, feeling more like herself than she has in about three days.

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Dave blinks at her. She doesn't register to him as especially short - but then, Dave's perspective is a little skewed.
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It's a fairly deliberate misunderstanding.
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. . . it's a weird conversational topic, but what the hell.
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"It helps, to have my own things."
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More thanking! Dave is awkward again.
"Yeah. Familiar stuff helps."
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"And clothes that both fit and don't clash."
Meg likes order. She likes neat and tidy. And she feels off kilter when things aren't.
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"I get that."
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"And you probably have even more trouble than I do, finding things to borrow."
It can be easier to wear clothes that are too big than too small.
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"For a couple of reasons."
The size factor, and the relatively few people he's on any kind of borrowing-things terms with.
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Meg finishes her juice.
"I should go get ready for church, and I should let you get back to work."
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"But point taken. Have -" Do you tell people to have fun at church? Dave's family's not religious. "- a good service."
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She stands.
And then pauses.
"Hey, Dave? For whatever it's worth, I'm really glad my sister has you."
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"It's worth a lot.
Thanks."