By Bettyann Moore
Libby read the same
paragraph three times before she realized that George’s snoring was
interfering with her concentration. She knew, though, that trying to
slip out of bed and move into the living room would be impossible. He
was a notoriously light sleeper. He could sleep anywhere, it was
true, but at the smallest sound, he’d jolt awake, have a devil of a
time falling back to sleep and be crabby all day. It wasn’t worth
it.
He was drooling again.
A long string of saliva hung from the corner of his mouth and pooled
on the pillow. Libby sighed, quietly. George had ruined numerous
pillows with his drooling until she doubled up on the pillow
protectors, and added two old pillowcases beneath the good one on
top. It added to her wash load – she bleached them like crazy, but
they were a lot easier to clean than a pillow.