When Crickets Cry

Cover When Crickets Cry
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The thing was waist-deep and looked like something out of a brothel. Charlie said it weighed three hundred pounds, and Emma absolutely loved it. She'd get the water warm but not too hot and let the tub fill up while she plucked her eyebrows in the mirror above the sink. After she quit sneezing, she'd slide in, sit for a long time, run more warm water as needed, and read. She must have read a hundred books in that thing. Bubbles, wet towel behind her head, feet propped up.
    Sometimes I'd poke
...my head in the bathroom and ask, "You want some company?" And every once in a while, she'd look at me from around her book, move her bookmark, and nod. I'd climb in and lean back, and she'd read to me while I rubbed her feet. We'd step out looking like two raisins.
    I kept the tub when Charlie and I built the house, to remind me of those moments. If I wanted to get rid of it now, I'd have to blow up the house. The thing was so heavy that we'd had to reinforce the bathroom floor to hold it plus the water, plus whoever was in it.


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