Ann Packer was born in Stanford, California, and educated at Yale University and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She is the author of the novels Songs Without Words; The Dive from Clausen’s Pier, for which she received a Great Lakes Book Award and the Kate Chopin Literary Award; and The Children’s Crusade (Scribner, 2015). She is also the author of the collections Mendocino and Other Stories, which includes work that appeared in The O. Henry Prize Stories 1992, and Swim Back to Me: Stories. Packer lives in Northern California.

Photograph by Elena Seibert.

Molten

A Story

by Ann Packer

At four-thirty Kathryn chose a last CD and put it into Ben’s stereo. Low, gritty guitar chords burst from the speakers, the speed of a terrified heartbeat. She eased herself onto his beanbag chair, her head knocking time. I have a present. It is the present. You have to learn to. Find it within you. She loved this song, the hard, repeated chords, the singer’s hoarse voice. Usually she couldn’t really enjoy the last CD, she was so busy dreading the moment when she’d have to stop for the day: five-fifteen, five-twenty at the latest, in order to be downstairs before Lainie got home from track practice, followed just a little later by Dave returning from work. Today was different, though. Both of them were going out tonight. Kathryn would be back up here by seven-thirty, and then she’d have hours. A vast opportunity. A bonus. A reprieve.

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