to be serviced. Even putting the trash in the chute feels like a sadand onerous thing that she should not be forced to do. The dailypaper poses another problem. Having quit her practice of carefully refolding it and leaving it for him on the coffee table, shefinds that its absence can take her by surprise. At times she standsin his wardrobe, rearranging his jackets. One day she took allthe T-shirts out of his drawers, shook them out, refolded them,
and put them back again.
her ar loose ends, but worse