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I felt left out of things on that visit. Both Jill and Ailsa had taken up smoking, and they would sit up late at night, drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes at the kitchen table, while they waited for the baby’s one o’clock feeding. (My mother fed this baby from her breasts—I was glad to hear that no such intimate body-heated meals had been served to me.) I remember coming downstairs sulkily because I couldn’t sleep, then turning talkative, full of giddy bravado, trying to break into their conversation. I understood that they were talking over things they didn’t want me to hear about. They had become, unaccountably, good friends.

I grabbed for a cigarette, and my mother said, “Go on now, leave those alone. We’re talking.” Ailsa told me to get something to drink out of the fridge, a Coke or a ginger ale. So I did, and instead of taking it upstairs I went outside.

I sat on the back step, but the women’s voices immediately went too low for me to make out any of their soft regretting or reassuring. So I went prowling around the backyard, beyond the patch of light thrown through the screen door.

The long white house with the glass-brick corners was occupied by new people now. The Shantzes had moved away, to live year-round in Florida. They sent my aunts oranges, which Ailsa said would make you forever disgusted with the kind of oranges you could buy in Canada. The new people had put in a
swimming pool, which was used mostly by the two pretty teenage daughters—girls who would look right through me when they met me on the street—and by the daughters’ boyfriends. Some bushes had grown up fairly high between my aunts’ yard and theirs, but it was still possible for me to watch them running around the pool and pushing each other in, with great shrieks and splashes. I despised their antics because I took life seriously and had a much more lofty and tender notion of romance. But I would have liked to get their attention just the same. I would have liked for one of them to see my pale pajamas moving in the dark, and to scream out in earnest, thinking that I was a ghost.

FIRST VINTAGE INTERNATIONAL EDITION, NOVEMBER
1999

Copyright © 1998 by Alice Munro

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in hardcover in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York, in 1998.

Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage International and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

Some of the stories in this collection were originally published in the following:
The New Yorker:
“The Love of a Good Woman,” “Cortes Island,” “Save the Reaper,” “The Children Stay,” and “Before the Change.”
Saturday Night
(Canada): “Jakarta.”

Grateful acknowledgment is made to A. P. Watt Ltd., London, on behalf of Michael Yeats for permission to reprint excerpts from “The Song of Wandering Aengus,” from
The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats.

The Library of Congress has cataloged the Knopf edition as follows:

Munro, Alice.
The love of a good woman : stories / by Alice Munro.—1st ed.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-48776-6
1. Canada—social life and customs—20th century—Fiction.
2. Women—Canada—Fiction. I. Title.
PR9199.3.M8L68 1998
813′.54—dc21   98-36721
CIP

Author photograph © Jerry Bauer

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