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I won't have you dress like that, Lizbeth's mother said, eyeing her daughter's too short skirt, because she had outgrown it, but still wore it, and the blouse tight across her ******* What's wrong with it? Lizbeth asked, taking in her mother's stare, the downturn of mouth. It's too short; it shows too much, her mother replied, sensing rebellion in her daughter's stare. But I like it: don't like that other thing you bought, Lizbeth said. Go and change; put on a dress; something that isn't too short, her mother stated. Lizbeth sighed and left the room and stomped the stairs to her bedroom and slammed the door. She closed her eyes; heard birdsong from the open window, opening on to the garden. Downstairs her mother had switched on the radio and classical music erupted. She undid the skirt and stepped out of it and kicked it across the room. It lay next to the record player and the Billy fury LP. She stood in front of the wardrobe mirror and gazed at herself. She wished Benny was there eyeing her. Not that he'd stare; he'd look away shyly. She pulled open a drawer and took out the skirt her mother had bought: flowery and pink and red. She stepped into it and zipped it up: it fell past her knees. She turned the top shortening the length. It was above her knees now. She gazed at it: maybe I could make it shorter, somehow.
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Oct 13, 2018
Oct 13, 2018 at 11:12 AM UTC
Dress Sense 1961
I won't have you dress like that, Lizbeth's mother said, eyeing her daughter's too short skirt, because she had outgrown it, but still wore it, and the blouse tight across her ******* What's wrong with it? Lizbeth asked, taking in her mother's stare, the downturn of mouth. It's too short; it shows too much, her mother replied, sensing rebellion in her daughter's stare. But I like it: don't like that other thing you bought, Lizbeth said. Go and change; put on a dress; something that isn't too short, her mother stated. Lizbeth sighed and left the room and stomped the stairs to her bedroom and slammed the door. She closed her eyes; heard birdsong from the open window, opening on to the garden. Downstairs her mother had switched on the radio and classical music erupted. She undid the skirt and stepped out of it and kicked it across the room. It lay next to the record player and the Billy fury LP. She stood in front of the wardrobe mirror and gazed at herself. She wished Benny was there eyeing her. Not that he'd stare; he'd look away shyly. She pulled open a drawer and took out the skirt her mother had bought: flowery and pink and red. She stepped into it and zipped it up: it fell past her knees. She turned the top shortening the length. It was above her knees now. She gazed at it: maybe I could make it shorter, somehow.
A girl and her mother 1961
TerryCollett
Written by
Oct 13, 2018
Oct 13, 2018 at 11:12 AM UTC
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