"You really don't have to stay with me," I told
 
 her. "I was all right last night. I'll be all right tonight." "We decided and that's it," she insisted. "I'll be
 
 fine and so will you. We can talk and talk until we
 
 pass out," she said. "We'll be fine."
 
 "I'm afraid I don't have anything really nice for
 
 you to sleep in," I said. "Just cotton pajamas." "That'll do, although I'll probably look like I'm
 
 floating in them. I don't know why I don't grow," she
 
 complained. "I think my hormones went on vacation
 
 right after I turned twelve."
 
 "You're perfect," I said, laughing. "You're ..." "Don't you dare say 'cute,'" she warned me, her
 
 right forefinger jabbing the air.
 
 "Petite," I risked. She turned over the word in
 
 her mind, smirked and sighed.
 
 "I guess I'll look twenty years younger than I
 
 am for the rest of my life. My mother says that's a
 
 blessing I'll first realize the day I turn thirty. But until
 
 then," she said, "it's a curse. C'mon. Let's go hang the
 
 curtains."
 
 We turned off the lights and started up the
 
 stairs.
 
 "Maybe you'll read me one of your mother's
 
 letters afterward," she said. "Unless you think they're
 
 just too personal."
 
 "I don't know what they are," I replied. Then
 
 after thinking a moment, I added, "After the things we
 
 told each other at Doctor Marlowe's and after what
 
 we've pledged to each other, nothing's too personal
 
 anymore, anyway."
 
 She paused and looked at me on the stairs. "That's how I feel," she said, "only it's nice to
 
 hear you say it. It's nice to know you believe it." "I do," I said.