If she gives the smallest bark ' Muriel said ' I'm going to pull his leash so hard he won't know what hit him. It’s for his own good, and you’ve promised not to get upset, remember?
‘Yes, I’ll try and remember ,Macon said.
Soon a biker came past, a girl with a tiny, serious face. Edward put his head up and looked, but marched calmly on.
‘Oh, Edward, that was wonderful’, Macon told him.
Muriel just clucked, as though she had expected Edward to behave himself.
‘So anyhow’, she said.’They finally let Alexander come home, and a few weeks later Norman just walked out. Packed his clothes and went back to his mother. I knew I couldn’t go back to my floks, so I just had to manage. I did all kinds of jobs, sometime to or three at a time, but it wasn’t easy.
She slowed and came to a stop. Edward, with a deep sigh, sat down at her left heel. ‘Looking back, I almost missed the times in the hospital’, she said, ‘The nurses talking and those rows of little babies sleeping. It was winter and sometime I’d stand at a window, feeling warm and safe, and look down at the emergency room entrance and watch the ambulances coming in. Your ever wonder what a Martian would think if he landed near an emergency room? He’d see everybody running out to meet the ambulance, pulling the doors open, hurrying to get the patina would say. Don’t you think so?’
She looked up at Macon then. Macon felt something turn over inside him. He felt there was something he needed to do, some connection he wanted to make, and when she raised her face, he bent and kissed her lips, though that wasn’t the connection he had intended.
‘Well . . .’ he said.