In the era of the app, a vacuum could not exist in a market for long. Once a need was newly discovered, many developers tried to muscle everyone else out of the market, be they the originator or the imitator. Quite often, the app that started everything wasn't the one to make it out on top, as someone with greater capital would use that to cement their place in the market and pus out the innovator. It was an environment that killed originality and progress.
But there were some apps seemingly immune to this. Social media programs and sites existed in tandem, spread out atop each other like overlapping dimensions. Not everyone used them all, but many used more than one, and neither were the lesser for the divided attention. The person behind the screen was the product being sold, not the digital town square in which they all existed and argued about television shows.
This was especially true of that refuge of the lonely and desperate: the dating app.
Lycurgus was one of many contenders in the online dating space. It was unique because it didn't allow for posting pictures. Users were sorted by geographical location and further sorted by what they were seeking in a partner, be this a particular temperament, hobby, marital position or variety of genitalia. The app chose people based on their powerful Love Machine, some form of computerized brain larger in scale and power than the classic Uniac machine.
Users of Lycurgus were also discouraged from imbibing alcohol. If someone wanted to get turnt to find a woman, the procedures for this were already well established. (It seemed likely that the developer of the app knew the history of Lycurgus and wrote out this rule because he thought he was clever. How serious anyone took this was anyone's guess. Even Lycurgus could not watch what they did outside the app.)
This was how Al found himself sitting in the corner of a coffee shop he'd never been to before. He had his back to the corner, watching the huge picture window across the shop, wondering which of the people walking past might be who he was waiting for. What a metaphor for dating that was, eh? Hundreds of candidates, half of which whom were not his type, and ever smaller percents that actually stirred his interest any... and those that did might not find him appealing for whatever reason.
Al thought he had cleaned up pretty well. He got a haircut, put on a nice shirt, wore that watch he hadn't put on since his brother's wedding... just enough to not look like he was trying too hard. It's not like he was wearing a tie or anything. He just hoped her hadn't done all this for someone who had decided not to show up.
From one side of the window, a woman appeared. A woman conspicuously more beautiful than everyone else around her, almost suspiciously so. She had dark hair cut just to her shoulders, swept behind her ear with a large gold hoop in that earlobe. She wore a red sweater seemingly made of the thinnest material ever devised by man, allowing her breasts to bound a bit as she walked.
Al's eye followed her, not paying attention to the others moving through the noontime pedestrian traffic, as she turned and entered the coffee shop. He tensed. Could this be her?
The woman's eyes moved across the entire shop, landing on Al. She smiled immediately, and approached his table.
Al had hit the jackpot. Up close, the woman was even more lovely. Exotically beautiful with golden eyes, thick eyelashes, a small nose and plump red lips. Her eyebrows were thin, and her right cheek had a few tiny beauty marks below her eyes, almost like freckles. Her neck was slender, leading down to her hourglass figure. Her shirt was cut tightly around her body, the shadow of ab muscles visible underneath. She wore a pencil skirt, sensible heels and gold anklets around both ankles.
"Are you Al?" She asked with an expectant smile. It looked like she was really hoping that the answer was 'yes.'
Al stood from his chair immediately. "Yes, that's me." He stuck out his hand for a handshake, only to realize that she was wearing large red mittens. She pinched the top of his hand around his first knuckle and shook it twice. Already, this date was off to a bad start. Men and women on dates don't shake hands. What was he thinking? A hug seemed too far for this stage, not that he wouldn't like to get closer to her.
They both took their seats. "I... took the liberty of getting us black coffees for starters." He gestured to the two mugs in front of them, and the corresponding miniature picture of cream.
Tabbi poured a bit of the cream into the coffee and drank the entire cup in one long sip, setting the mug back into the saucer with a soft clink. "Thank you very much." She said after licking her lips.
"I figured you might like coffee, since the app says we're not supposed to drink alcohol." Al said. "Everyone does one or the other, right?"
"Not everyone." Tabbi said. "The Mormons refrain from drinking coffee, though not for the same reasons as abstaining from alcohol. There's a prohibition from drinking hot beverages. It's not clear if the restrictions apply to caffeine itself. Some Mormon missionaries are known to take caffeine pills rather than imbibing it."
"Interesting." Al said. "I've never met a Mormon, or one that cared to declare it to me."
Tabbi didn't respond, sitting there smiling, hands in her lap.
"Are you... religious?" Al said, looking at her necklace. It hung in a way where it appeared to have a charm on the end, maybe one shaped like a cross, but it was underneath her shirt.
Tabbi saw him looking at the chain. She touched it through her shirt, though didn't pull it out for him to see. "I've seen the good and bad that these beliefs can bring about. I think that a life is better lived worrying about how you choose to see the world. Even if these beliefs tell you to enforce that, I think people live better when we all try not to trespass on other's lives."
Al really didn't think he'd find someone THIS beautiful and thoughtful on a dating website. One would think that any man in the world would happily snap her up, even if she came across slightly socially awkward. Even if she had high standards, there must be some hedge fund manager race car driver porn star that would meet them, to make the most attractive progeny ever brought forth.
"So... why don't you tell me about yourself?" Al asked.
Tabbi looked off. "I... never know what to say with an open-ended prompt like that. I find it easier to answer specific questions."
Al thought to himself. Maybe he should have prepared for this. "What's your sign?" He asked.
"Oh, I'm on the Cusp of Energy, which lies between the signs Taurus and Gemini." She said. "But I'm not certain that really makes a difference for my personality. It's hard to find clear guidance as to what the signs mean. And the idea of being on the cusp is called a hoax, even among astrologers."
"Yeah, I don't know anything about astrology." Al shrugged. "I don't even know what the signs mean. I just didn't know what else to ask to learn about your life."
"Unlike other women my age, I don't pretend to have a more interesting life on social media. My life is not really noteworthy. But what about you?" Tabbi smiled. "Tell me about your life."
Al took in a deep breath. "Where to start... I'm from West Philadelphia, born and raised. But I moved to Chicago to work for a paper supply company. But my cousin showed up from eastern Europe to live with me. Turns out, he was living a double life as a drug dealer in the southwest. So I went back to Philadelphia, where they say it's always sunny. But I've found a job as a bartender aboard the MS Pacific Princess, where we boldly go where no man has gone before."
Tabbi looked enraptured. "What an interesting life you've lived."
Al nodded shortly. "I do alright. But romance has never come easy for me."
Tabbi grinned. "Is that what we're trying for here? Romance? Men seem afraid of that word."
"Well... it's easier than saying 'love.'" Al admitted.