Every April
by
Trigudis
Every April, at the "official" opening of cycling season, Hannah Sullivan and I connected by phone. We belonged to a cycling club that rode on weekends and in the evening after work during daylight savings time. When daylight savings time ended, we rode on weekends, weather willing. Unlike me, Hannah wasn't a cold weather rider. Come late fall, she'd spin indoors until at least late March.
We'd known each other for over twenty years. She'd refused to give her exact age. However, she'd drop enough hints to tell me that she was born during the Nixon presidency. Which made her around fifty-three, a few years younger than me. Unlike me, she never married. "My only regret," she told me a few times, "is not having found someone to spend the rest of my life with. I'm tired of being single, of living alone."
She hadn't lacked for boyfriends. One relationship lasted about a dozen years, a 'friends with benefits' deal where her friend--Perry was his name--was close to twenty years younger. The sex was "wonderful," she had told me. Realistically, however, they both knew that it couldn't go any further. She'd dated guys with more potential, age-wise for commitment. But, for various reasons, those relationships ran their course, stopping short of marriage.
Why, she couldn't say, but it wasn't for lack of looks on her part. She didn't just look good for her age. In fact, she didn't look all that different from when we met two decades ago. She could've been a poster girl for what hiking, cycling and other exercise could do to keep one's body in good shape and working order. Not to mention the "right" DNA.
Hannah was no skinny Minnie, nor was she the kind of super-jacked chick you might see in a hardcore fitness gym. She stood around five-foot-three, with curves galore. That included full, solid thighs, shapely calves and a slender waist. If there was another middle-aged gal (or younger gal for that matter) that looked sexier in tight jeans and a low-cut blouse, I had never seen her. And don't get me started on how great she looked in spandex, how the male riders in our group enjoyed riding behind her for a delicious view of her sexy butt and shapely quads, flexing gloriously with every pedal turn. As the summer rolled on, her smooth skin took on a glowing, tawny hue. She was also pretty--her green eyes and pouty lips, as well as her killer bod, got her noticed wherever she went.
Being in sales for most of her working life, she developed a commanding, sometimes pushy personality. I guessed that those personality traits were intact even before she got out of school--ideal for a career in sales. Ideal also for rubbing people the wrong way. It took me a while after joining the cycling group to find my way around it. I saw her snap at people also for things that seemed to me, ridiculously petty. That said, she was a loyal friend, charitable as well. For over twenty years, she volunteered at the Special Olympics. And her keen sense of humor made her a blast with whom to party.
We'd never socialize one on one; it was always with the rest of our group. But, on the phone, and sometimes after a group ride, we'd have heart to heart talks, mostly about her and her distaste for living alone for so long.
Which leads me back to those April phone calls. Sometimes she called me. Other times, I took the initiative, as was the case this past April. Hannah had recently returned from one of her trips. She travels a lot, goes to Europe on cycling and hiking tours. Last fall, she emailed our cycling group a pic of her floating in the Dead Sea in Israel. We talked about her time overseas and then got into more personal matters. She again talked about wanting to meet that special guy to "spend the rest of my life with."
"Marriage can be quite difficult," I said. "It ebbs and flows. One day you're in a bed of roses, the next day in a bed of thorns. Being divorced, I speak from personal experience."
"Yes, Jacob, but at least you got there," she countered. "I never have." When I asked why she thought that was, she drew a blank. "Haven't a clue," she said. "Maybe it's just not in the cards for me."
She referred to a male rider in the club who had died of a massive heart attack. He was in his sixties and had been married to another bike club member (Millie) for twelve years. "A terrible thing to happen," Hannah told me. "But, if I had to choose, I'd choose to be in Millie's position rather than mine. At least she got to spend twelve years with someone she loved and shared her life with. So far, I've never known what that's like."
I sometimes thought of telling her that she might be difficult to live with, but never have. The fact is, everybody in their own way is difficult to live with. Not in the cards? Well, perhaps, though I've never been sure what that meant.
I continued: "The rides that our bike club offers are male-heavy. I'd guess that in a typical weekend group ride, about eighty percent are guys. All to your advantage."
"Yes, but it seems that they're either too young, too old or married," she complained.
She had tight age parameters. Too young was below forty-five, too old above fifty-six. Being fifty-six myself, I just made her cut. We both knew club riders that fit into her age requirements. When I began to name names, she rejected one after the other for one reason or another. Then she said, "Maybe I'm just too picky."
"Maybe you are," I said. "I mean, nobody's perfect."
"You're right, nobody is," she said, "but there are people who approach perfect, at least perfect for me."
"Anyone I know?"
She laughed. "I sure as hell hope so. I'm referring to you, Jacob Anders."
"All this time and you're just letting me know?" Thinking this had to be a goof, I began to laugh.
"Jacob, you were married for a good part of the time I've known you. Which is a good reason that we've remained just friends. As I've said before, barring my brothers, you're my longest male relationship."
Hannah has said that many times. She's fond of announcing it to others in our group, usually during one of our post-ride tailgate parties. Her 'longest male relationship'...It was one of her staple themes of party conversation. Being divorced for close to ten years, I figured just friends we'd always be.
"So what makes me approach your idea of perfection?" I asked.
"Well, besides the obvious, your commitment to cycling, your jacked physique and all that, I can talk to you about stuff, personal stuff that I haven't revealed to too many people. Not anyone in the bike club, that's for sure. You're a good listener and you don't judge me. Plus, you've told me things that I doubt you've told anyone else in the club. True?"