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to make your piece more readable, use separate paragraphs when writing conversations or when the subject changes, no matter how subtly. Like this:
A young salesman, assigned to a new territory and unsure of the area, paid a visit to our local Chamber of Commerce where my mother worked. He parked his car, and thinking he'd be there only a short time, fed the parking meter a few pennies.
Unfortunately, he seriously underestimated my mother's gregariousness.
(You should include here a sample of their conversation.)
After what must have felt like an eon (this isn't the right word, "eon") to him, he returned to his car to find a parking ticket tucked under the wiper blade.
Knowing he wouldn't be back before his court date, he decided to pay the ticket before leaving town that day, and so, made his way to the courthouse, where he encountered the Chief of Police.
Hoping to talk his way out of the ticket, he poured on the charm, speaking in glowing terms of the beauty of our town and the surrounding Alleghany Mountains. When he realized his sales pitch was falling on deaf ears, he decided to go for broke.
Apologizing profusely, he said, "Chief, I never meant to break the law, but I didn't think I'd be gone that long. I just couldn't get away from that lady at the Chamber of Commerce. She's nice, but she sure does talk a lot."
At that point, the Chief looked up, grinned, and said, "Son, tell me about it. I've been married to her for thirty years, and I can't get away from her either."
Then he added, "That'll be twenty-five dollars in cash 'cause we don't take out of town checks here."
We never saw that salesman again.
See the difference it makes, just to the reader's eye? And the spacing gives your story a sense of flow, movement, the old narrative arc everyone talks about.
Small hint - when you are using words, and you come to a number, always write out the number ("twenty-five dollars"). It's just one of those old rules that makes prose neater and smoother.
Good luck.
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