They weren't there to pray, but to play.
Specifically, they were there to play board games, and not your rainy-day-at-the-beach-house variety like Monopoly or Trouble, either. No, these games are more complex, more engaging, more grown-up.
Nearly oblivious to their surroundings, they dove into heaps of tantalizing games that Pierce Ostrander and his wife, Ruth, lugged into the room.
It was the first meeting of the Annapolis chapter of the Games Club of Maryland, and, by any...
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