when they shake hands goodbye seems to suggest she wouldnât mind him contacting her. He calls his friend the next day and says âThis woman you were withâFrancine. If sheâs not married or anything like that, what do you think of my calling her?â âFine, if you like. Sheâs a great person, stunning looking as you saw, cultured, unattachedâwhat else? One hell of a capable lawyer.â âWhy didnât you tell me about her before?â âYou mean youâre still searching for that ideal lifemate? I thought you gave that up.â âNo, Iâm still looking, though maybe not as hard as I did. Went out with several womenâa couple you even met. Nearly moved in with one, but nothing materialized beyond that with any of them, which has sort of discouraged me a little. But if I havenât found someone marriageable after a year, thatâs OK too, right? Iâve still plenty of time.â âThen call Francine. Sheâs been divorced for two years, no children, and from what sheâs let on in certain unguarded moments, I think sheâs seriously shopping around for a new lifemate herself.â âWhat do you mean âunguardedâ? Is she very secretive, uncommunicative, cool or distantâlike that?â âHardly. Just that some things about herself she keeps inside.â
Howard calls her. They make a date to go out for beers. He feels sheâs not right for him the moment she opens her apartment door. Something overdone in the way sheâs dressed for just beers at a local place. Also her apartment, which is practically garish. The books on the shelves say she isnât much of a serious reader, and same with the music on the radio, records on the shelf, prints on the walls. During their walk to the bar and then in the bar he finds sheâs interested in a lot of things he isnât: money matters, big-time professional advancement, exercise classes, gossip about famous people, the trendy new restaurants, art exhibitions, movies, shows. They walk back to her building. She asks if heâd like to come up for a drink or tea. âNo thanks, Iâve still plenty of work to do for tomorrow, but thank you.â âIf youâd like to phone me again, please do.â âNo, really, I donât think it would work out, but thanks for suggesting it. Itâs been a nice evening.â âActually, I doubt it has been for you, nor in many ways for me either. Weâre a bit different, thatâs easy to see, but I thought after a few times together weâd find much in common. Something told me that. What do you think?â âI donât think so, honestly. Itâs all right to say that, isnât it?â âI suppose, but itâs probably not something we should go too deeply into,â and she goes inside. Heâs walking uptown to his apartment when he sees a pay phone. Call Denise, he thinks. Itâs been two weeks since he said he would. Heâll give a good excuse if he feels from what she says that he ought to. That heâs been so steeped in his work that he didnât want to call till now just to say heâd be calling again to go out with her once heâs done with this work. Or that he simply lost track of time with all the work heâs been doing and also some personal things that are now over. He puts the coin in, thinks no, donât start anything, she isnât right for him. Her looks. The teeth. Something. Plump. Not plump but wider in the hips and he thinks heavier in the thighs than he likes, and her nose. And so sweet. Almost too damn tooâeven meek. He doesnât like meek and overly sweet women either who let the man do most of the speaking and decision making and so on. Thatâs not what he wants. He wants something else. So he wonât call her. He continues walking, passes another pay phone. Why not call her? Because heâs a little afraid to.
Dean Wesley Smith, Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Martin A. Lee, Bruce Shlain