Step 1. The Meeting
Last November Mary Elizabeth Kawicki went out to the supermarket on a Monday evening to do her week's grocery shopping. Usually she would have done that on Friday night or sometime on Saturday or Sunday, and then again on Wednesday. But she had worked late on Friday night, and then on Saturday she was a little under the weather and depressed, and on Sunday she visited her mother and her younger sister.
To be honest about it, visiting her family also made Mary Beth a little depressed. Her mother worried very audibly about the way the younger daughter was turning out, and Mary Beth couldn't quite bring herself to say that she was not sure it was worth the worry. Susan was wilder than her older sister, but Mary Beth wished she herself had been more that way. At least sometimes she did.
Part of her depression on Saturday was because she was not doing anything on Saturday night. That had been true for a couple of weeks, but she wasn't used to it yet. Mary Beth was getting over a long relationship, and still wondering if she had done the right thing in being out of it.
The man in question had wanted her to do things that she didn't feel she was ready for -- you know which ones. And she couldn't really be sure that she should have said no to him. She was in a pretty blue mood.
Mary Beth sometimes thought that she should avoid the food store on weekends, since that was when everybody else seemed to do their shopping, but to judge by this Monday it wouldn't have made much difference. The place was packed.
She filled her cart and got in line and she was up to third in line when the cash register broke down. She looked quickly around, but all the other lines were even longer now than when she had picked this one as slightly the shortest. This in a strange way cheered her up, since she now had something to complain about that took her mind off her personal worries.
The man in front of her turned around and introduced himself to her. He said a bit wryly that they may as well get acquainted since they seemed likely to spend some time together here. Mary Beth had to admit that if this was a blatant pick-up line, it was also an honest one. And it superficially made sense. She decided that she might as well talk to him, since they were not going anywhere at the moment.
It was close to twenty minutes later before the register was repaired and they were rung through. She probably could have left before then by going to another line, but after the first minute or so she wasn't paying attention to the time. This man, Frank Davis, was interesting to talk to. And nobody but her cat would notice if she got home a little later.
Frank got through a minute before she did, of course, but he stayed right there and helped her pack her bags. They shared a cart out to the parking lot, still continuing the conversation.
His car was closer in than hers. When they got there, Frank turned to Mary Beth and asked her about a date next Friday night. She had been expecting this to come, and expected to say no... But then she had second thoughts. She felt that he was nice, she knew now that they shared some interests, and she could do worse -- God knows she had at times, and on longer acquaintance.
So she said yes to dinner and a movie next Friday, and she gave him her phone number.
Step 2. The First Date
Mary Beth wanted to wear something for Frank that would counter-act the impression he would have gotten of her from the jeans and wool sweater he had seen her in at the super-market. But on the other hand she didn't want to get too fancy. She decided on a plain black dress with a necklace and a little jacket.
Frank picked her up at seven, exactly on time, and they went to a restaurant. The food was very good, and the conversation was better than it had been in the check-out line, perhaps from being in a more relaxed atmosphere.
He had picked a nice romantic movie, the kind that never seems to get made these days. (Mary Beth thought to herself that Frank had more of an understanding of her tastes than she expected from just twenty minutes of talk in a supermarket line, but she wasn't going to complain, thank you very much.) She left the theatre half-dreaming, and not just because it was getting late.
Afterward they went out for coffee in a little place only a few blocks from where she lived -- and therefore some distance from where he lived. To her surprise, the waitress knew him by name. Frank said only that he used to come here a lot. She guessed from this that he came here with an old girlfriend, but why not? She was years past wanting a man who had no experience with women, if she ever did. And anything about his past that was relevant she could find out later -- and what was she doing thinking about being that serious about him already, anyway? He might not be interested in dating her again.
Frank drove her to the door of her apartment house and they stood for a little while talking there. She hated to let an evening as nice as this one end, but it was getting late. Mary Beth did not want to invite him in now, since she felt it would give him the wrong impression. (He had been in her apartment when he picked her up that night.)
He also knew that they must say good night soon, so he asked her if she was willing to go out with him again on the next Saturday night, eight days away. Mary Beth was very happy to say yes to him and she told him what a nice night he had given her.
She was old-fashioned enough to not want to give a kiss on the first date, but still she was thinking very much of making an exception in this case. Mary Beth was trying to make up her mind about it, and how to state her attitude if she decided against it, when Frank just planted a kiss on her cheek, said "Goodnight, Mary," and walked off down the street whistling.
She stood a moment trying to decide whether Frank had been forward enough to object to or not. He had been so gentle about it!
Step 3. The Second Date
The next week went fairly quickly, but Mary Beth still found herself thinking about Frank Davis at times. Nothing serious, but she kept recalling that he had a nice face and a nice smile, and that the evening she had spent with him had been even nicer.
The Saturday before Thanksgiving, this was. It was warm that autumn, and the city squeezed some extra concerts into their series in the park. That was where they went when Frank picked her up at eight. That was the last concert for the year, and the weather was barely warm enough by the end. She kept her coat on for the last part of the concert.
Mary Beth had been working on laundry all day, and she was a bit sleepy. Between that and the little chill and the way the music got her dreaming and the way Frank was so warm with his arm around her, she did not want to get up at the end. Frank Davis was very comfortable and relaxing to be with, she found.
They stopped in a coffee-shop after that, and the pie and two cups of coffee she had woke her up again. When Frank took her home they parked for a while just outside her apartment house. When she thought about the evening, as she wrote of it in her diary, she could not remember when they parked nor how long they sat in the car talking, but it was well after midnight before she went in.
Frank got out of his car to walk across the street with her, to her door. This time Mary Beth had decided (oh, around Tuesday or Wednesday) that she did want to kiss him goodnight. He certainly deserved that much encouragement from her.