(Note to readers: Every character in this story is at least 18 years old.)
*
This is a warning. Don't ever do what I did. If you're an average woman, like me, always keep in mind that this is what you are. One thing that's lifting me out of months of misery is the hope that I can help you avoid those months. Please, please, if you're swooning over an Alpha male, and he actually notices you, and decides to accept your swoon, run away.
Joe was so far above my level that it never occurred to me that we could get involved. I know, that kind of thinking isn't supposed to exist, we're all on equal terms and any two people can find each other, blahblahblah. But Joe was so thoroughly Alpha, more so because he didn't seem to think about that or work at it. Every straight woman seemed drawn to him. Myself included, as much as I hate to admit it.
Still, I tend to be more practical than imaginative, so as much as I liked to be around Joe, I didn't get carried away fantasizing about him. Sometimes I got these little brain-flickers, of me and Joe getting all steamy. I also got them about other hot guys (mostly pop singers). This was from a part of me I call The Crush-Getter, or just Crush, which my rational mind ignored. The flickers fizzled out without me having to dismiss them. My emotions, with regard to everything, stayed on an even keel (or maybe they flatlined). Just the way I am. Or was.
I live in a big city with lots of young singles, and friend circles that formed in college and at work and through social media and from leisure activities. So, I could find myself with a packed, if vague, social calendar, among large groups hanging out here and there, even though I wasn't close to anyone. I wanted to be around people, but mostly at arm's length.
So, I'd show up at these parties or gatherings or whatever, because that seemed to be a better option than staying alone in my one-bedroom walkup.
(Have you ever noticed that many of us start sentences with 'so,' when we don't need to? Older people don't seem to do that, so maybe it's a millennial or Gen-Z thing. See what I did there? I used 'so' in a grammatically necessary way. Maybe I'll start sentences with a meaningless 'thus' or 'therefore,' to see if it freaks people out.)
(Yes, I know, I'm supposed to be giving a serious, urgent warning to average women, so why am I putting in trivial asides? Maybe because I'm past the worst of this now. This doesn't undermine the whole idea of the warning, because of the months of misery, and avoiding them.)
At this one gathering, in the really large apartment and roof deck of someone I knew at least by name, Joe was there. Incredibly, he had just been dumped, or so it was whispered. Naomi hadn't shown up that night, so I had no data to counteract the whisperers' theories that Joe may have played the field too much while in a relationship. He was now presumed to be on the rebound, maybe short of confidence (and finding that a new experience). He happened to notice me when I was, I don't know, on some sort of biorhythm peak. (Nobody remembers biorhythms. Ask your parents.)
I was sitting in a group of seven, eight people, along with Joe Calderone. He seemed to be his usual, disarming self, holding court only because everyone yielded to him. His rich baritone ennobled his every utterance, which did not mention Naomi, nor their relationship. OMG, that voice. It could make the disclaimer on the side effects of my allergy meds sound magical.
That night, my hair had gone exactly where I wanted it, my legs had become gym-sleek, and flavored coffee made me both witty and quick. I spent the first several minutes unaware that Joe was sizing me up. If I had known that, I would have babbled like an idiot.
People drifted into and out of the conversation. Other women fawned over Joe, but didn't get much response from him. They drifted too, maybe hoping to take him aside later, one-on-one. I stayed where I was, because I liked the chair. It was comfy and the right height for my legs, how they felt and also to show them off. I was also gorging on a sensory feast, not just Joe's voice, but his wavy black hair, just slightly disarrayed, and the calm gestures of his steady hands, and his riveting eye contact with whomever else spoke.
Joe stayed because...I stayed?
The group got smaller. Soon it was just the two of us.
This had gone on long enough for me to observe that Joe didn't seem humbled, or bitter. Had he engineered his 'dumping?'
I decided that Joe saw me as a soft landing, and not a serious prospect, so the babbling never started. Who was I, anyway? That quiet chick guys mostly ignored, and the other chicks weren't close to. If Joe bedded me a few times and then moved on, there'd be no repercussions. Except, you know, to me.
Yet while I was doing all of this clear thinking, I had flickers about Joe. They were quick, gone almost at once. But there were many of them.
I sipped more coffee, seeing it as the principal resource for my self-respect, and said, "Joe, why are you doing this?"
He got no farther than a puzzled look. He said nothing.
"You're not really interested in me, are you? Beyond tonight?" This was at normal volume, and at an eye-corner I saw some heads turn, showing that I'd been heard.
He blinked. "Sure I am, Ginny." Then he blinked again, and the reopened eyes seemed even more piercing. "You're smart, and nice, and honest."
I think he was addressing himself as much as me.
His praise excluded my looks. I'd like that, from some men, as showing respect. But this was Joe. Looks would always be in his equation. His last three girlfriends were total knockouts. That night I had made it to kinda-okay. So where did I get the nerve to say this?
"Right on all three counts. And all three would like you to know that I'm not here to salve your ego. You'll have to work on that yourself. If you'd like to talk again a week from now, I might listen."
Then,
I didn't get up and walk away.
Calmly, I raised my coffee for another sip. As noted, I really liked that chair.
He nodded, stood, and wandered off.
Maybe Joe settled, and took home one of the fawners that night. I didn't know, but I'm ashamed to admit that I wondered.
The rest of the evening, I saw a whole lot of glances my way. There were a few brief conversations that brought me into the orbit, about non-personal topics. But I also encountered my closest acquaintance in that party, Benjy.
"If your moment with Joe were on YouTube," he said with a sly smile, "It'd get a thousand views in ten minutes."
We were alone, more or less, at the coffee urn. "I just told him what I think, okay?" The voice was calm, but I seemed to be moving too fast as I added hazelnut syrup to my reload. "No way he's thinking about me long-term, and I'm not interested in anyone short term."
That zapped his smile. I knew Benjy was interested in me, and I overreacted at the thought that I'd hurt him. What I'd said wasn't even true, merely convenient. So much for my honesty.