Ginny Adams was very glad to be where she was, but she still woke up every morning wishing that she wasn't.
She had felt lonely when she was living on the family farm; the boys (and later men) around there went much too quickly from being too young to drive to the farm to having already moved out of the area. There was no future for her in working on the farm, at least if there was anything else she could do; the farm was clearly going to her older brother, who wanted it. Ginny didn't want to own the old place anyway, though being a farmer's wife she wouldn't rule out.
Living on the farm, also, things were a little cramped, with her older brother and her parents and the two younger children who were getting bigger all the time -- especially her 12-year-old brother. And it looked like her older brother's girlfriend was going to marry him and move there soon, though they would be going into an outbuilding, at least to sleep.
So Ginny took training in electronic bookkeeping and got a job at the Wayne Bank in Philadelphia, working on account problems. While she couldn't say that the work was interesting, it was more so than she expected.
In Philadelphia, Ginny had an apartment that gave her three times the room to live in that she had on the farm. While the place was spare when she moved in, she had spent the last six months finding furniture and odd decorations she liked, until she had to control herself and quit because it was getting cluttered.
She missed the rooster every morning. Neither the alarm nor the rush-hour traffic was quite the same, especially on weekends when she turned the one off and the other didn't arrive. While the city had perhaps as many odors as the farm, if they were noticeable they were unpleasant.
There was a future in working at the bank, if she wanted it. Job openings came regularly, and there was no telling where they might go. So she should have been content, over all.
But Ginny was lonelier than before, in a way. There were young men around, certainly. Every one of the single women working at the Wayne Bank was attached to one, it seemed like. They all talked about shows and dinners and trips to the country with them. Ginny was more than a little shy about speaking to men whom she didn't know, and she didn't know any in the city. She wanted to make a start somewhere, but she couldn't see any way to.
If there had been more married women in her office who could invite her to parties along with unattached young men, it would be different, perhaps, but so would this story.
As it was, Ginny devoted herself to attending concerts and visiting museums and, especially, reading books from the library.
Christmas was coming up next Friday. It was a three-day weekend this year and half the single women were taking leave to make it last four days or more. Carla said that she and Robert were going off to Lancaster for a ski trip. Janine and her Matt were going to visit his family up in Connecticut. All around the room the talk was of romantic excursions and parties and big dinners.
Ginny herself had just talked to her parents the night before, on Monday, and had reluctantly agreed that the expected snow would make it not worth trying to drive to the farm on unplowed roads. So she was going to spend the weekend alone.
She had been sitting there being a little unhappy when Carla asked: "What about you, Ginny? What are you going to do?"
Before Ginny could think of what to say, she heard herself saying: "Oh, David and I have decided to stay in town and have a quiet Christmas together."
All around the room there was a silence broken only by the rustle of eyebrows raising and ears pricking up. Carla said: "Who is David? We knew you were a quiet sort, but have you been keeping him a secret from us?"
"Oh, he's my boyfriend," Ginny said blithely.
All the other single women gathered around, and a couple of the married ones as well.
"What's he like?"
"Where did you meet him?"
"Where does he work?"
"How serious are the two of you?"
Ginny had to think very fast. That last little sentence had gotten her in deep waters and she would have to paddle hard.
She mentally seized on a man whom she had seen walking on the street nearby, and then at a concert that she went to on one particularly lonely night.
"Well, he's not very tall, only an inch or so more than me," she offered. And they waited for more.
"He has broad shoulders, though," Ginny continued. "He works as a claims adjustor at Center Life." That was in the building across the street, and indeed she had glimpsed someone there through the window who might have been him.
Her flow of invention was running easily now. "He calls me his vegetable love, because we got to know each other slowly."
"He calls you a vegetable?" laughed Carla.
"From the poem. 'Vaster than empires and more slow,/ My vegetable love doth grow.' From 'To His Coy Mistress,' by Andrew Marvell."
"He calls you a vegetable and slow and you like him?" laughed Carla again.