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Stephen King - A Good Marriage

Here you can read online Stephen King - A Good Marriage full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2014, publisher: Scribner, genre: Science fiction / Romance novel. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Stephen King A Good Marriage

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Now a major motion picture, Stephen Kings brilliant and terrifying story of a marriage with truly deadly secrets. Darcy Andersons husband of more than twenty years is away on one of his routine business trips when the unsuspecting Darcy looks for batteries in the garage. Her toe knocks up against a hidden box under a worktable and in it she discovers a trove of horrific evidence that her husband is two menone, the benign father of her children, the other, a raging rapist and murderer. Its a horrifying discovery, rendered with bristling intensity, and it definitively ends A Good Marriage. Stephen King is the author of more than fifty books, all of them worldwide bestsellers. His recent work includes and , now a major TV miniseries on CBS. His novel was named a top ten book of 2011 by and won the Book Prize for Mystery/Thriller as well as the Best Hardcover Book Award from the International Thriller Writers Association. He is the recipient of the 2003 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. He lives in Bangor, Maine, with his wife, novelist Tabitha King. About the Author

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Stephen King

A GOOD MARRIAGE

For Tabby

Still.

A GOOD MARRIAGE - 1 - The one thing nobody asked in casual conversation - photo 1

A GOOD MARRIAGE

- 1 - The one thing nobody asked in casual conversation Darcy thought in the - photo 2

- 1 -

The one thing nobody asked in casual conversation, Darcy thought in the days after she found what she found in the garage, was this: Hows your marriage? They asked how was your weekend and how was your trip to Florida and hows your health and how are the kids; they even asked hows life been treatin you, hon? But nobody asked hows your marriage?

Good, she would have answered the question before that night. Everythings fine.

She had been born Darcellen Madsen (Darcellen, a name only parents besotted with a freshly purchased book of baby names could love), in the year John F. Kennedy was elected President. She was raised in Freeport, Maine, back when it was a town instead of an adjunct to L.L. Bean, Americas first superstore, and half a dozen other oversized retail operations of the sort that are called outlets (as if they were sewer drains rather than shopping locations). She went to Freeport High School, and then to Addison Business School, where she learned secretarial skills. She was hired by Joe Ransome Chevrolet, which by 1984, when she left the company, was the largest car dealership in Portland. She was plain, but with the help of two marginally more sophisticated girlfriends, learned enough makeup skills to make herself pretty on workdays and downright eye-catching on Friday and Saturday nights, when a bunch of them liked to go out for margaritas at The Lighthouse or Mexican Mikes (where there was live music).

In 1982, Joe Ransome hired a Portland accounting firm to help him figure out his tax situation, which had become complicated (The kind of problem you want to have, Darcy overheard him tell one of the senior salesmen). A pair of briefcase-toting men came out, one old and one young. Both wore glasses and conservative suits; both combed their short hair neatly away from their foreheads in a way that made Darcy think of the photographs in her mothers MEMORIES OF 54 senior year-book, the one with the image of a boy cheerleader holding a megaphone to his mouth stamped on its faux-leather cover.

The younger accountant was Bob Anderson. She got talking with him on their second day at the dealership, and in the course of their conversation, asked him if he had any hobbies. Yes, he said, he was a numismatist.

He started to tell her what that was and she said, I know. My father collects Lady Liberty dimes and buffalo-head nickels. He says theyre his numismatical hobby-horse. Do you have a hobbyhorse, Mr. Anderson?

He did: wheat pennies. His greatest hope was to some day come across a 1955 double-date, which was

But she knew that, too. The 55 double-date was a mistake. A valuable mistake.

Young Mr. Anderson, he of the thick and carefully combed brown hair, was delighted with this answer. He asked her to call him Bob. Later, during their lunchwhich they took on a bench in the sunshine behind the body shop, a tuna on rye for him and a Greek salad in a Tupperware bowl for herhe asked if she would like to go with him on Saturday to a street sale in Castle Rock. He had just rented a new apartment, he said, and was looking for an armchair. Also a TV, if someone was selling a good one at a fair price. A good one at a fair price was a phrase with which she would grow comfortably familiar in the years to come.

He was as plain as she was, just another guy youd pass on the street without noticing, and would never have makeup to make him prettier except that day on the bench, he did. His cheeks flushed when he asked her out, just enough to light him up a little and give him a glow.

No coin collections? she teased.

He smiled, revealing even teeth. Small teeth, nicely cared for, and white. It never occurred to her that the thought of those teeth could make her shudderwhy would it?

If I saw a nice set of coins, of course Id look, he said.

Especially wheat pennies? Teasing, but just a little.

Especially those. Would you like to come, Darcy?

She came. And she came on their wedding night, too. Not terribly often after that, but now and then. Often enough to consider herself normal and fulfilled.

In 1986, Bob got a promotion. He also (with Darcys encouragement and help) started up a small mail-order business in collectible American coins. It was successful from the start, and in 1990, he added baseball trading cards and old movie memorabilia. He kept no stock of posters, one-sheets, or window cards, but when people queried him on such items, he could almost always find them. Actually it was Darcy who found them, using her overstuffed Rolodex in those pre-computer days to call collectors all over the country. The business never got big enough to become full-time, and that was all right. Neither of them wanted such a thing. They agreed on that as they did on the house they eventually bought in Pownal, and on the children when it came time to have them. They agreed. When they didnt agree, they compromised. But mostly they agreed. They saw eye-to-eye.

Hows your marriage?

It was good. A good marriage. Donnie was born in 1986she quit her job to have him, and except for helping with Anderson Coins & Collectibles never held another oneand Petra was born in 1988. By then, Bob Andersons thick brown hair was thinning at the crown, and by 2002, the year Darcys Macintosh computer finally swallowed her Rolodex whole, he had a large shiny bald spot back there. He experimented with different ways of combing what was left, which only made the bald spot more conspicuous, in her opinion. And he irritated her by trying two of the magical grow-it-all-back formulas, the kind of stuff sold by shifty-looking hucksters on high cable late at night (Bob Anderson became something of a night owl as he slipped into middle age). He didnt tell her hed done it, but they shared a bedroom and although she wasnt tall enough to see the top shelf of the closet unaided, she sometimes used a stool to put away his Saturday shirts, the tees he wore for puttering in the garden. And there they were: a bottle of liquid in the fall of 2004, a bottle of little green gel capsules a year later. She looked the names up on the Internet, and they werent cheap. Of course magic never is, she remembered thinking.

But, irritated or not, she had held her peace about the magic potions, and also about the used Chevy Suburban he for some reason just had to buy in the same year that gas prices really started to climb. As he had held his, she supposed (as she knew, actually), when she had insisted on good summer camps for the kids, an electric guitar for Donnie (he had played for two years, long enough to get surprisingly good, and then had simply stopped), horse rentals for Petra. A successful marriage was a balancing actthat was a thing everyone knew. A successful marriage was also dependent on a high tolerance for irritationthis was a thing Darcy knew. As the Stevie Winwood song said, you had to roll widdit, baby.

She rolled with it. So did he.

In 2004, Donnie went off to college in Pennsylvania. In 2006, Petra went to Colby, just up the road in Waterville. By then, Darcy Madsen Anderson was forty-six years old. Bob was forty-nine, and still doing Cub Scouts with Stan Morin, a construction contractor who lived half a mile down the road. She thought her balding husband looked rather amusing in the khaki shorts and long brown socks he wore for the monthly Wildlife Hikes, but never said so. His bald spot had become well entrenched; his glasses had become bifocals; his weight had spun up from one-eighty into the two-twenty range. He had become a partner in the accounting firmBenson and Bacon was now Benson, Bacon & Anderson. They had traded the starter home in Pownal for a more expensive one in Yarmouth. Her breasts, formerly small and firm and high (her best feature, shed always thought; shed never wanted to look like a Hooters waitress), were now larger, not so firm, and of course they dropped down when she took off her bra at nightwhat else could you expect when you were closing in on the half-century mark?but every so often Bob would still come up behind her and cup them. Every so often there was the pleasant interlude in the upstairs bedroom overlooking their peaceful two-acre patch of land, and if he was a little quick on the draw and often left her unsatisfied, often was not always, and the satisfaction of holding him afterward, feeling his warm mans body as he drowsed away next to her that satisfaction never failed. It was, she supposed, the satisfaction of knowing they were still together when so many others were not; the satisfaction of knowing that as they approached their Silver Anniversary, the course was still steady as she goes.

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