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  <title>Comments on 'Fred'</title>
  <subtitle>I gave him one of my many looks. He told me once that I have exactly 17 different exasperated looks and he can make me give each of them. He got look number 12 for that remark.

&amp;quot;There's nothing that needs fixing.&amp;quot;

&amp;quot;Come on, Nat! Don't you ever want a boyfriend?&amp;quot;

I turned around to stir the brown rice I was making. &amp;quot;No, actually, I don't.&amp;quot;

&amp;quot;Fred will be awfully sorry to hear that.&amp;quot; I could hear Ted's smirk. Not that the boy stopped smirking. He smirks in his sleep. He's crashed on my couch enough times for me to know that.

&amp;quot;This,&amp;quot; he made a dramatic gesture he'd used for one of the various high school plays he'd been in, &amp;quot;is Fred.&amp;quot; 

Fred apparently missed his cue. 

&amp;quot;Duh, duhduh DAH!&amp;quot; Or not.

A boy with shocking red hair and a face speckled with freckles jarred at the sliding glass patio door that is always open when anyone is home. There's a trick to it. After awhile, and after Ted had gone up and opened it, Fred walked in and waved at me. He looked shy. Shy and I don't mix. </subtitle>
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