After the Concert
The genesis of this story was the ferry ride scene, and I just let it go where it wanted from there.
Thanks to MaryFrancis36 and UpperNorthLeft for their thoughtful editing. Their suggestions made this a better story.
Β© 2024 by Jalibar62
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Months ago, my daughter Rachael bought tickets for my wife and me to go see Chris Stapleton at the BB&T Pavilion, in Camden, New Jersey. Ingrid Andress was the opening act, and I was eagerly looking forward to both performances. It was an anniversary gift, and I had planned a whole weekend in Philadelphia for us.
Monique knew about the concert on Friday, but I was going to surprise her with tickets to the Kimmel Center on Saturday to see the Philadelphia Orchestra, then wrap it up at the Museum of Art on Sunday, where I would give her the emerald earrings that I'd picked out. And maybe find some rekindled romance along the way. We'd been a bit distant of late, and I was hoping this weekend would be a step toward fixing that.
About a week before the event, she had begged off, saying she had to work; her boss was calling an emergency meeting of all the senior managers, of which she was one. They were going to meet at her company's main office in DC. When I reminded her of the concert, she rather offhandedly suggested that I sell the tickets.
That pissed me off. "Are you serious? Rachael bought us these tickets! We've been looking forward to this! And it was supposed to be a surprise, so thanks for ruining that, but I had a whole romantic weekend planned! Are you seriously choosing work over our thirtieth anniversary?"
That shut her up for a moment, and she did look... guilty? Or just annoyed? Whatever it was, she covered it quickly and shot back, "I'm sorry, Greg, I just can't get out of it. I'll make it up to you, I promise."
I stared at her in shock. She could see it in my face, but she merely turned and went upstairs.
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Monique and I were both 52. We had gotten married right after college, where we both dated around before meeting at, of all places, a dance marathon. The university's Greek community sponsored it every year to raise money to fight childhood cancer. It was a pretty big deal, and it was very well organized. Anyway, we wound up next to each other during one of the many choreographed events, and I went the wrong way and crashed into her, both of us going to the floor in a tangle. I managed to twist around so that she fell on me, rather than vice versa. Not entirely unpleasant, at least from my perspective.
I helped her up, apologizing profusely, but to my surprise, she was laughing. Probably because we'd been up for nearly 30 hours straight at that point, and she - well, both of us - were a little giddy from sleep deprivation. We wound up talking and helping each other stay awake for the rest of the marathon. After it was over, we hugged, congratulated each other, and staggered off toward our respective houses for some much-needed rest.
When I woke up fourteen hours later in my room at the frat, I realized I hadn't gotten her number.
"Greg, you moron," I groaned to myself. Then I remembered that she was wearing a Sigma Alpha sweatshirt - well until it got too warm, and she took it off. To this day, I remember that moment. The T-shirt she was wearing underneath got hung in it, and dragged up her body, revealing the smooth skin and alluring contours of her abdomen, almost to the point where... I chose to be a gentleman and grabbed it, stopping it from going any higher. Even so, the movement of her breasts as the sweatshirt caught momentarily, and then released... I was hard in an instant. Again, sleep-deprived. That's my story and I'm stickin' to it.
She started to get upset with me until she realized what I had done, and then she stopped and thanked me, laughing softly at my eyes-averted, beet-red expression. She went up on tiptoes and kissed me on the cheek, and I was a goner.
But I digress.
Anyway, I had a half-formed plan of going over to the ΣΠhouse and asking around, maybe leaving a note. You can imagine my surprise when I opened the door to leave, and standing in front of me, hand raised to knock, was Monique!
"Umm, hi!" I stammered.
"Hi yourself," she chirped. "You off to class or something? Sorry, I didn't mean to just drop in, but..." and she trailed off.
"No, actually... you might not believe this but I was just headed out to see if I could find you! I've been kicking myself for not getting your number and was panicking about how to get in touch, until I remembered your sweatshirt. Ξ£Ξ, right?"
"Oh! Yep, that's right!" Her cheeks pinked, just a bit. "So, umm... maybe I can buy you a coffee? Or something?"
"I'd really like that," I replied.
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That was February of our junior year. We dated the rest of that semester, becoming intimate after our sixth date. It wasn't the first time for either of us, but we weren't very experienced and enjoyed learning and experimenting together.
Before we went home for the summer, we had a long talk. The gist of it was that we were falling for each other, not sure if it was love yet, but agreed that certainly, it was on the horizon. Heart in my throat, I asked if she considered us exclusive. Before she replied, I told her that I hadn't dated anyone since I met her.
When she didn't answer right away, my chest started to get tight.
"Greg, I haven't been with anyone else either since we started dating, but..." she wouldn't look at me, "we're going to be apart for the next three months."
It was true; I was headed to Eastport, MD to stay with my grandparents, where I had a job lined up with a large yacht broker, doing sailboat maintenance and minor refurbishment. She was flying back to St. Cloud to work in her mother's store.
With ever-increasing dread, I asked, "What exactly are you saying, Monique?"
She still wouldn't look at me. "I just... I don't want to promise you something and then not be able to keep it."
I was confused. "So, you're saying you want to see other guys? And by not promising to be exclusive, you expect me to be okay with it. Jesus, Monique, we've been dating for three months and sleeping together for two. Have you already gotten tired of me?"
"No! That's not... shit, this is coming out all wrong. I don't plan on seeing other guys. I just... I don't know, I don't want to lie to you. And I don't want you to have to lie to me, either." She stretched out a hand to me then, and I could tell she was trying to get me to understand something, but I wasn't having it.
I leaned back, out of her reach. "The only way I can interpret this conversation is that you don't
intend
to, but you don't want to rule out the possibility, is that it? And you don't care if the same thing applies to me. So that's a 'no' on exclusivity. Got it. Glad we had this conversation."
"Greg..." she pleaded, but I was already getting up.
"Have a good summer, Monique. Maybe I'll see you around."
I left her calling after me. It sounded like she was crying but I didn't look back.
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I guess in her mind she felt like she needed to be 'honest' with me, but it still hurt. I ignored her, for as long as I could, anyway, but I was young and thought I was in love, and I eventually returned her call. We wound up chatting fairly regularly over the first part of summer break and even tried some phone sex. But I admit, I was still pretty insecure. A couple of times when I called her house (in those pre-cell phone days) on a Friday or Saturday evening (yes, I admit I was trying to catch her out), it went straight to the answering machine. Or I'd get her mother, who would tell me that she was out with friends.
When she didn't call me back until two days later, my imagination had already gotten the better of me, and I just stopped calling. Yeah, childish. I couldn't help what I felt.
I lost myself in my work. I was part of a crew of four, two other guys and a girl, and we worked well together. All of them had girlfriends - well, in Allison's case, a boyfriend - but we still had a good time, both on the job and hanging out afterward. Allison and Sean both played guitar, and more than once we'd find an empty corner of the boatyard where we could build a small fire in an empty drum, sit around sipping cheap wine or beer, and singing. Even though I was a bit of a seventh wheel, it helped keep my mind off Monique.
So... yeah. When she did call, I would answer, and try to be positive, but the intimacy had been damaged badly, at least for me. She would ask what was wrong and I would give her noncommittal answers, like being tired from work.