Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Telephone Pole meets Hillary's Wrist.

Wednesday (yesterday) I wrote Bio, my last exam at 8am...early. Finished and hurried home only to find that I could catch the city bus to the Greyhound depot in 45minutes or 12 minutes, and I hadn't eaten or finished packing and I didn't want to get to the depot too late, and I like run on sentences.... So I scurried around packing and rushed out the door laden with bags, waddling toward the bus stop about 2.5 blocks away. Let's change verb tense now.
A quarter of a block away from the stop, what should I see coming but the bus, so I make a dash for it and start waving my free hand wildly, trying to get Mr "Must keep staring straight ahead and not pay attention to struggling potential passengers" attention, when my hand catches on one of those telephone poles with the nails and staples sticking out of them from flyers and whatnot, and of course the bus driver goes right on by the lonely bus stop.
Verb tense change...now! I was so angry...still am...but then I looked down at my hand and saw blood and the biggest chunk of skin...except I guess you could say human...fascia missing...I could even see a tendon...so I crawled back home and freaked out Boyda, who could never be a nurse, and ended up catching the 11:01 bus (which came at 10:57, for the record) and getting to the depot with plenty of time for the 12pm bus.
Postscript: it took me 5 days to finally realize, HEY! I should go to the doctor! The ER nurse scrubbed out the wound with a bristle brush that HURT, and I learned I could have easily had stitches. Great. Now I just have a huge scar on my right wrist, by the radial artery...forevah.
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Pizza Pops, ruined forevah

Setting: my house. Back when it had carpet...very possibly it had boarded windows as well, but that is different story that isn't very funny...
Who: me...kind of my Dad...well, he was there, but sleeping downstairs. His presence being mentioned is only to satisfy those of you who think a young kid of 12 should not be alone after school...although I was a latch-key kid, if you know what I mean.
The other Ws need not be addressed...
Okay, so my little snack after school at that time was always a Pillsbury Pizza Pop, baked in the oven. I unlocked the door and skipped in, the sun shining on my gorgeous face that was framed by to-die-for brown locks of beauty, threw my school stuff in a corner, and headed for the fridge. The golden pops of goodness in their plastic kingdoms of packaging smiled at me as I opened the door. Not long after, they were plopped on a blacker-than-black baking pan and shoved into the 250F oven. A long 20 minutes later (spent watching Degrassi Junior High...how cool did Joey Jeremiah think he was?), I was preparing for my long-awaited first bite into the Plentiful Pocket of Pepperoni and Cheese. Slowly I brought my snack towards my chops...closer...closer...oh, wait...closer..and.... Blech!!! Yuck! A green substance of questionable viscosity oozed out into the space that was my oral cavity. With horror I prompty disposed of the remaining scariness into the garbage... And never again have my rosy red lips touched a Pillsbury Doughboy Pizza Pop!
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The Grade 7 Science Olympics Fiasco (I still haven't forgiven my mother)

Back in Grade 7, I thought it would be cool to enter the Junior High Science Olympics. My Science Projects teacher, Mr. Ashworth, recommended that Brittney and I build a cantilever (a architectural masterpiece...I may or may not have picotos of it...) out of 100 popsicle sticks for the competition (actually, every team had to build a cantilever and then have weights hung from it... There were also two other tests of scientific proficiency done at the competition...). I spent hours on the thing, adding a popsicle stick here and adding gobs of glue there. There must have been about 60 coats of glue on that thing...the rules said 100 popsicle sticks and nothing about how much of the sticky stuff!
The day of the Peace Country Science Olympics arrived, and cantilever in hand Britt and I walked into the COMP gym strutting our stuff. We got free t-shirts that were huge...it fits me quite well nowadays, and has Science Rules across the front in a font size that would make Bill Nye proud. Mr. Ashworth was along to supervise, and my mom was there as a science cheerleader.
The time came for the 1st event...we were to fashion a paper basket that would distribute the weight of 10 pennies so that when hooked to a balloon and dropped from a certain height, the pennies would enjoy a soft, safe ride to the ground. We failed miserably, as I can remember...but it was a stupid event, anyway. The 2nd event was way better...using various sizes, shapes and types of rock, gravel and sand and a funnel made out of a 2-litre pop bottle, we were to filter a cup of muddy water through to make it as clean as possible. The science people walked around and electronically tested the cleanliness of each team's water... Our high-tech filtration system, bottom of the funnel to top, held large gravel, then rocks that decreased in size and increased in fine-ness as it went up in layers, until a final top addition of sand. Our water was crystal clear and in my opinion clean enough to drink. We got 1st in the event... We had no idea what we were doing.
And then the moment of triumph. The Cantilever Test! The 3rd and final event that would determine the Gold medal winners of the prestigious Peace Country Science Olympics had come at last! The format of the test involved a written estimation of a mass that your team thought your cantilever could hold before breaking. As Brittney, Mr. Ashworth and I pondered and argued over our estimation, my mom temporarily excused herself from the cheerleader role and urged us to take a chance...and write down an estimated weight of 22kg for a popsicle-stick "structure" made by 11-year-olds. 22kg it was.
The highest estimate in the 10 or so other groups was around 5kg. Now, I don't know if you're aware, but 22kg is 48.5lbs. Roughly the weight of one of a 5 year old boy. Thanks, Mom.
As we watched the cantilevers of other teams crumble and crack holding 5lbs, Brittney and I stole frantic looks at my mother and slowly shrank back into the crowd. Alas, our turn came. We watched with bated breath as our sturdy little cantilever-the beautiful creation that had been my life for 2 weeks-had 2lbs added to it. We prepared for the worst...but it never came! Pound by pound, our little wooden structure held up. 15 pounds...at least 10lbs over all the other cantilevers...then 16...17...a threatening crack echoed throughout the gym...18...almost there...except not...19lbs...and CRUMBLE!!! CRASH!!! KA-BANG!!! It was over.
Now, you'd think we'd be the winners of the event, but... Turns out the point system was arranged so that the team closest to their estimate got more points than the team that had more weight but were farther from their estimate. A team whose cantilever held only a few kilograms was 1st...and Brittney and I got a special bonus point for our structure's extraordinary performance. We didn't even get 3rd in the event.
The conclusion of the Science Olympics came with the presentation of the medals and the respected anthems being played...well, they could have been. Though we felt cheated scientifically (if that's possible), Britt and I still held on to our remaining threads of hope.
"And GOLD goes to...Bob Loblaw and Jane Doe!" Not us. We watched as the two mini Bill Nyes walked on stage to accept their certificates and...wait a second...a $50 bill??? Grrr...
"SILVER to...Murphy Minnesota and Rhonda Romanus!" No money for them, but it was little comfort.
"BRONZE to... Hillary Johnstone and Brittney Hammond!" (please note that for memory reasons, the Gold and Silver recipients' names have been altered. But Bronze names are real!)
Thank you, thank you! You flatter us with your applause. What? We get medals? And certificates??? Awesome...oh, thank you!! We are the 3rd place CHAMPIONS! This is so unexpected!!!
That coveted certificate is still hanging on my bedroom wall at home...if you would like to see it, please schedule an appointment with my mom...I mean manager. I'm still a little bitter toward my mom for causing the Gold to be taken away from us...but that was 7years ago, and I should really move on. But some day, I'll return to the Science Olympics and claim the Gold that was rightfully ours!!!
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Bun Making Blog Post of 1st Year

Tonight, instead of going to the Dinos B-ball or to a movie with Boyda and David, I decided to stay at home and bake buns...quite the endeavour. I looked up recipe online, mixed ingredients together with yeast, waited an hour for it to rise, punched it down, then formed the buns and let them rise...all the while waiting for the rising dough by watching TLC and dreaming about when I have kids... Too much TV for me lately...so no TV tomorrow afternoon (We're having a movie night tomorrow). Anyway, The buns rose, I followed the recipe and turned the oven to 400Fahrenheit...then placed the buns on the 2nd lowest rack and turned to do the dishes.
Roughly 20 minutes later, I turned to grab some more dishes, and what should I see but a furious column of smoke streaming from the oven vent. I squeaked a sound of alarm, ran to pull the battery out of the smoke alarm (no other sound bothers me more!!!), then took the smoking 24 out of the smoky oven. Windows open, doors to rooms closed and oven fan on, I evaluated the state of my baking. To my dismay there was about a 0.5cm layer of pure blackness on the bottom of every unfinished doughy blob. Since I was determined to get them baked, I cleared away the smoke and put them back in...then realized 2 minutes later that it was probably because the buns were on the wrong rack that they burned...so I moved them to the top.
For some reason when I took them out golden brown I expected the bottoms to be "repaired" and bronze-coloured...but they weren't. My attempt to prove myself as a baker seemed to have failed...I reflected on the shortbread cookies of Christmas 2006, and added to the picture the charcoal buns I had introduced into the world... Home alone, I phoned Mom. In the process of the conversation we concluded that it was not my fault entirely...apparently the internet isn't a very good source of recipes, with the 400F heat and whatnot. Also, the rack situation... should have been higher. And we don't have a convection oven like Betty Crocker and Jean Pare... I get off the phone and prepare to put the buns in bags...and realize we have no extra bread bags or large Ziplocs. As I grabbed some large margarine containers an idea came to me. Cheese grater! Cheese grater. Garbage below, bun in hand, grater ready, I grated off the layer of black for each of the 23 buns (I ate one). There were crumbs everywhere!!! It took me a very long time to clean up the mound of useless scrapings, but the cheese grater thing worked like magic! Now the bottoms are only semi-black! Yay! Edible and bearable. I'll enjoy them anyway. We'll dismiss the weird stains on the cookie sheets that aren't scrubbing out. I don't think I'll be baking buns again for at least a month--this experience was too painful.
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Road to the Passport

Okay, so I was very worried about getting my passport in time for April 28th-ish... As of Tuesday I hadn't sent in my application, and I was still deciding whether or not I should wait in the super long line or chance the mail-in. Well, according to Passport Canada (how hard is it to type "Canada"?) the mail-in apparently takes 60 business days...9 weeks...LONG TIME!!! I decided that if God wants me to go to Europe this summer, I would get to the passport building as early as possible and get through the line before pressing engagements, such as...Sport Med volunteering. Not class--I skipped class for to get the pass-to trans-port. Last night (Tuesday), I went to bed early (asleep by...11:30. That's really good!) and awakened at 5:30am to meet my destiny. Since I thought the building wouldn't be open at such an ungodly hour as 6:30am (though I love mornings, not everyone else does!), I put on the long socks, the ski-pants, the mitts, the scarf, the sweater, the vest, the jacket...and packed along a lawn chair. At 6:30am on the nose I opened the open doors to the Harry Hays Building, walked into the toasty-warmness, hopped up the stairs, and...the line was only down the hallway! I peeled off the unneeded clothing and camped out in my chair under the stare of fellow early-risers' eyes that said, "Why didn't I think of that?" (Thank you Mom!). The 1.5 hours of waiting until the "skeleton" crew arrived (that's a real quote, by the way...hire workers, Canada!) consisted of amusing daydreams and listening to the same song on my MP3 player over and over (it's a good song!). Finally the line moved, I waited in a room, I freaked out because I found out the Alberta Health Care Card is an unacceptable supplementary ID, I panicked and checked to see if my mouth was slightly open in my photos, my number was called, and all went well! She was so nice, professional yet friendly. I walked out of there at 9:30amand got to the University in time for my 3rd class! Honestly, Thank You LORD! (you guys have no idea how worried I was about this!!!).

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Murder at Madame Chatille's--Elementary age Hillary

Meowerahhh! Madame Chatille sat straight up in her four-poster bed. A cold, eery shiver crept down her spine as her mind processed the cry for help she had just heard. She sensed the absence of her beloved cat, Johan, from her fee. Horrible thoughts entered her mind as she tried to think of where he could be. As no answers came into view, she snuck out from under her safe and toasty covers, slipped on her pink slippers, wrapped herself in her hand-knitted shawl, and daintily tiptoed to her screen door.
“Johan!” she hurriedly whispered. “Oh Johan!” Still no boisterous, proud Persian cat came to greet her. The hole in the screen door remained vacant as Madame Chatille placed Johan’s favorite delicacy near. A wave of absolute exhaustion enveloped her as she sat, staring at the hole, wondering and waiting for her companion. She hesitantly closed her eyes and drifted off into a deep, dreamless sleep.
“Madame Chatille! Madame Chatille!” Madame Chatille’s eyelids flew up as she came back into reality. She glanced over at her screen door to see her grocery delivery boy, Harvey, awaiting her. His eyes and face revealed a nervous and uneasy look as he stepped in to greet the elderly widow.
“M..Mmm…Madame Chatille, um, are you perchance missing Johan?” Harvey timdily asked.
“Why, yes! I’ve been worried sick about Johan. Do you happen to know where he is?”
A drop of sweat trickled down Harvey’s face as he broke the devastating news to the Madame. “He is outside, Madame Chatille, lying limp and cold. He’s dead.”
Unimaginable pangs of disbelief and shock racked the Madame’s frail body as her worst nightmare came true.
“J…Johan is….dead? How? Who did it?”
Disbelief was replaced by utter rage as she marched outside. Her anger soon collapsed. There was her precious, loving Johan lying numb and lifeless on the sidewalk. She knelt down beside him as a flood of memories entered her mind. She slowly stood up and turned to Harvey.
“I will have vengeance on whoever did this!”
The old lady began to look for any sort of clue that would lead her to the murderer. Anything she could salvage would contribute to the solution of who killed her beloved companion! She hobbled around the crime scene. “Look! I see something suspicious!”
There, in the puddle of mud next to the corpse of Johan, was a large paw print. It was obviously left by a gargantuous beast of a dog. The Madame also found a blue collar with “Bruno” engraved on it.
“Do you know anyone with a massive dog like that?” Harvey inquired.
“Yes…yes I do.” Madame Chatille whispered stonily. She marched over to her newly-married neighbours, Peter and Anna Wilson, and pounded on the door. The door slowly opened.
“Why, good morning Madame chatille! How may I brighten your life today?”
To the Madame, the sweetness in Anna’s voice just kindled the fiery anger in her heart. She disguised her voice into a kind, needy old woman and took a deep breath.
“Anna, dear, I just came to see if your sweet little dog was missing his collar!”
“Zeus? No, I don’t think so! Hang on, I’ll go check.”
Madame Chatille wondered who “Bruno” was, and who owned him. She was a tad embarrassed that she had accused the Wilsons. Anna came skipping back, shaking her head.
“Zeus has his collar on, Madame. Is everything okay?”
“Yes, deary.” the Madame lied through her artificial teeth. She trudged down the stairs and lethargically glanced at Harvey. He was carefully placing the small body of Johan into an old cardboard box.
It was around 5 o’clock by now, and Harvey informed Madame Chatille that he must depart. As he zoomed away in his broken-down Volkswagen, the Madame walked back into her tiny house. She plopped into her willow rocking chair just as the phone rang. She hobbled over to the noisy contraption and squeaked a “Hello” into the receiver. A familiar voice entered her ears, and she relied haughtily, “Monsieur Chien, my dear stepbrother. And how may I be of service to you?”
It took everything in Madame Chatille’s power to keep from hanging up on her evil step-sibling.
“My sweet little step-sister. I was wondering if you would like to come for tea. I have something special to give to you!”
A deep “Rowff!” came from the background, along with a muffled snicker that made the Madame shudder with fright.
“Um, I’d rather not, thank you. Something awful has recently happened, and it will take me a while to get over it. Au revoir!” And with that, she placed the receiver back in its rightful place. She began to bustle around the kitchen, preparing her supper. Disgusting spinach-broccoli soup and a low fat, no salad dressing salad that made her gag were all part of her maddening diet to lower her blood pressure. She couldn’t finish it, so she went to her bedroom and took a photo album out of her bureau. This photo album was marked “Johan’s Memorable Moments.” The sides of the cover had beautiful golden designs of kittens and fluttering butterflies. Madame Chatille returned to her creaky rocking chair and flipped through the worn pages of photos slowly. Tears came to her aging eyes and she became weepy as she relived Johan’s life with her through the pictures. It was about 11:00 before she closed the book and went to sleep in her bed. Little did she know that she was in danger at that very moment.
Pop! For the second night in a row Madame Chatille was awakened from her slumber.
“Monsieur Chien,” she whispered fiercely, “has a monstrous dog. And could his name be Bruno?”
The Madame frantically tried to remember the name of her evil stepbrother’s dog. Could it be? She remembered back to when he threatened to sick his dog…BRUNO on her and her sweet cat. Bruno!
The Madame hopped out of bed and rushed to the phone. She picked up the receiver and dialed the police. Just as a policeman was saying hello, Madame Chatille felt a cold, hard hand on her shoulder.
Over the muffled scream of the Madame (the intruder had their rough hand over her mouth), she heard a familiar voice...But it wasn’t the one she was expecting.
“Good evening, Madame Chatille! Hope you enjoyed your day…it was your last, you know. When you found Bruno’s collar, I knew I had to get it back before you discovered the truth before I arrived tonight. Monsieur Chien is giving me a very generous sum of money to dispose of you. Luckily, all I needed was his Saint Bernard, Bruno, for your mangy cat. That disgusting, drooling mutt slobbered all over my Beetle’s seats, but it was worth it. I’m sorry, Madame, but goodbye!
The Madame felt a long, heavy chain tighten around her neck. Her last images were of Harvey, that timid teenage grocery boy placing the chain back into his pocket and laughing maliciously. No one ever saw Madame Chatille again.
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Hillary visits the Dentist

Some people consider going to the dentist to be the most traumatic experience of their life. While I cannot wholly agree, I can definitely relate. I had a dentist appointment today, and I may have a touch of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder as a result. When I was little, I had, like, 9 cavities (I blame my parents completely, as I had nothing but junk in my school lunch everyday. I begged for salads, hummus and rice cakes, and what did I get? Chips, chocolate bars, pop and suckers.) Anyway, each time a cavity was filled I got a prize from the prize drawer. Turns out that doesn’t happen when you’re an adult…there’s a needle, shooting pain, horrid sounds, and protective glasses to ensure a tooth fragment doesn’t impale your eyeball. Oh…and a bill. A large bill. My mouth, 15 hours later, can still feel the effects of the needling and the drilling. An unpleasant experience in reality, but such experiences make for superb stories. I shall tell the tale in the 3rd person.

Hillary used to be a well-organized person, punctual and aware of life’s appointments. She obediently visited the optometrist when the optometrist needed to be visited, and faithfully saw the dentist when the dentist needed to be seen…or she’d at least think about going to the dentist after getting a comical postcard reminder in the mail. All this looking-after-self health stuff got shoved under the carpet when university life swept into the scene. (In reflection, I see all that “Hillary is organized and punctual” mumbo-jumbo was actually my mother doing what mothers do, and looking after the details of her children’s health.) Three years into university, Hillary finally decided to be “proactive” and get her teeth checked out. All this commendable proactivity resulted in 3 cavities, a prospective bill of $375, and the harsh reality of miscalculating the amount of my dental benefits (which ended up being non-existent).

Why did Hillary book her appointment at 8am? Why? Tired and groggy, she snaked her way down the icy sidewalks on her bike rather perturbed that the weather had to bring freezing rain the night before her “minor surgery.” Reaching the building, she locked up her bike and entered into the matrix of offices, hallways, elevators and doors leading to mysteries of the unknown. The portal to Northland Dental Care was simply labeled “Door 308.” So unobtrusive; so innocent. The door was locked.

Hillary was early, so she loitered awkwardly in the hall until a small Asian woman dressing in pink scrubs hurried by like the hare in Alice and Wonderland. The resemblance to Lewis Carroll’s classic was uncanny, though the scrubs-wearing woman was not vocally proclaiming, “I’m late! I’m late!” (Let’s face it; that’s what she was thinking when she caught a glimpse of the gorgeous brunette with a stunningly white smile standing in the hallway). Anyway, this woman urged Hillary to step into the Dental office. To borrow a saying, this was the beginning of a series of unfortunate events.

Hillary crossed the threshold into a white-washed world of molars, Sensodyne, pearly whites and sterile dental workers. An eerie instrumental tune floated into the room from some unseen place. The little woman beckoned the rather apprehensive patient (still advertising the stunningly white smile, though with nervous undertones) to the Chair. The Orb of Light appeared as she lay down; this glow that didn’t hurt her eyes that the strange man in the white jacket controlled and maneuvered to suit his viewing needs. The Dentist was a young Asian man, clean-cut and prim and probably sterile (but only in the present, physical application of the word. To be sterile in such a way is to be “free from living germs or microorganisms”—something every health care provider should strive for.) He had nice teeth…or did he? Hillary couldn’t see any of his molars or canines due to the white mask that protected this professional from infection. Incidentally, the mask also protected the man from actually having to talk to his patient. He handed her a pair of plastic glasses to shield her own orbs of beauty from the drills, the geysers of water, and the occasion tooth fragment. This was all rather strange.

“You’ll feel a little pinch” the Dentist murmured aimlessly as he jabbed the needle into his patient’s gums. Hillary could have slugged the guy had she not been in such a precarious situation involving sharp biohazardous syringes. There were about 5 jabs for one side of freezing, each one causing serious panic, discomfort and shallow breathing. Hillary’s knuckles were whiter than her teeth as they clutched the arm of the Chair. Tears came to her eyes, but still she sat still. The needle was gone, but the pain remained. An odd tingling sensation was permeating her buccal fat pad and tongue. The small pink-scrubs woman swiveled into view and produced a green rubber sheet and what looked like a pair of pliers. She proceeded to transform Hillary’s mouth into a surgical field, cranking open the jaw and expertly positioning the rubber so only the back molar was exposed. Hillary found this technique of dentistry excessively particular, but decided it was best to be careful when it comes to bacteria and teeth. With the sterile field established, the Dentist loomed overhead.

Such sounds! Vrrrrrr! Reeee! Bang! Erg! Arg! Water spritzed up and landed on her protective glasses. Her jaw ached from the demands of the procedure. Her head struggled to remain still while the Dentist drilled and heated and clamped and extracted Heaven knows what. Two down, one to go. Of course, Hillary’s 3rd and final cavity was on the other side of her mouth, so the freezing needle was needed yet again.

“You’ll feel a little pinch.” The Dentist mumbled yet again. Hillary felt a pinch…but this pinch quickly progressed to a feeling of stabbing pains up through her Left Facial Nerve. Her leg started kicking in an expression of pain; her knuckles tightened around the arm of the chair past the point of circulation. Her eyes gazed up at the Dentist, pleading for relief, but he took no notice. The needling ended, and her mouth was frozen on the right side and half-frozen, half-screaming on the left. She couldn’t decide if her mouth was open or closed, smiling or frowning. Hillary touched her lip and experienced the fantastical sensation of feeling only her hand’s warmth on a mass of foreign, unfeeling skin. It felt like she was drowning. The green rubber sheet descended on her once again and was secured in place thanks to the skills of Pink Scrubs, and the Dentist settled in to work on the 3rd cavity. Hillary felt like she was in a movie theater watching a movie; two masked figures bent over her sterile-field of an oral cavity, humming and hawing, tapping and scraping. The Dentist kept asking for things like “suction” and “the Etch” and some weird hair-dryer type thing that either warmed up Hillary’s tooth for the filling or killed all those bacteria lurking in the dark, dank and dreary depths of her mouth. She tried to distract herself from the pain by staring at the Orb of Light glimmering with ethereal beauty…

It was finished.

Hillary removed the protective glasses, thanked the sterile dental workers, staggered to the coat hangers for her belongings, and collapsed into a chair in a wave of exhaustion, nausea and dizziness. She snuck a look at herself in the mirror while Pink Scrubs gathered paperwork and noted that her left lip drooped, her lips were drier than the Sahara, and she couldn’t see any shiny metal caps on her teeth. “What’s this?” she thought. “Invisible cavity fillings? Bonus! Now…which ones actually ARE the cavities?” Try as she might, she could not distinguish her new cavity top from her healthy teeth. For all she knew, the Dentist hadn’t filled any cavity at all! Pink Scrubs processed her payment of $375, and reminded Hillary to refrain from eating until the numbness wore off. This was the icing on the cake; no food for Hillary for 3 hours was like asking a cat not to bath itself. She had to get out of this white-washed wonderland. With one last look around and one smarting throb of her Facial Nerve she exited out through Door 308 into Reality, praying that the portal behind her would be sealed off forever…or at least until the postcard reminder came in the mail.

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