Dale's Women (Chapter 1)
Kathryn M. Burke
Dale Willis was an altruist.
At twenty-four, of independent means as a result of the early death of his parents, he was constitutionally disinclined to undergo the tedium of pursuing a career. He had had his share of dalliances with the debutantes in and around his hometown of Greenwich, Connecticut, but their frivolity and baby-doll prettiness had become unutterably wearying, and so he sought to expand his horizons with involvements with females of a very different sort.
In other words, he became interested in older women.
He was well aware that the women of his parents' generation, whether they were safely married, divorced, or widowed, were by and large unhappy with their lots. Those who worked found some diversion in their varied occupations; but the stay-at-home wives or widows seemed ineffably bored with ordering servants about or arranging one more garden party or bridge game. And it did not fail to come to Dale's notice that for many of them the single greatest factor in their dissatisfaction was a very obvious one.
They weren't getting good sex.
Their husbands, paunchy and balding, were hardly likely to be expert performers in the bedroom, assuming they could even take enough time away from their high-powered law firms or doctor's offices to do anything between the sheets. And many of the married couples had been together so long that any mystery or novelty in the sex act was a thing of distant memory. In Dale's opinion, the women had preserved themselvesâboth their bodies and their mindsâfar better than their spouses, and he found their ripe beauty, mingled with a certain world-weariness and even cynicism about life and their place in it, a powerful aphrodisiac.
In the two years since he had graduated from Cambridge College (a small liberal arts college in Ridgefield), he had been involved for a longer or shorter time with a number of older women. Their marital status didn't concern him: if they were married and took up with him, it was a clear sign that they were unhappily married, and he felt he was doing a kind of public (or, more properly, private) service in bringing a little cheer into their lives. He never used force; only persuasion and his mild-mannered good looks. Single, divorced, or widowed women were of course safer, but there was an adrenaline-pumping thrill to affairs with married women that was not to be denied.
Dale was rather short in statureâno taller than five foot sixâand that gave him an unthreatening air that he found beneficial to his efforts. His soft brown hair and honest, regular features worked in tandem with a slim but muscular physique to lure women in their forties and fifties into his arms and into hisâor theirâbeds with some regularity.
But let it not be thought that he was only after crude physical satisfaction. He knew that sex was better if you genuinely liked and admired your partner. He couldn't say that he had actually fallen in love with any of his inamoratae, but in a few instances he had come close. It was, indeed, they who had discarded him far more often than the other way around, and he was always on the lookout for a more permanent relationshipâor series of relationships.
His methods differed depending on what kind of women he was at that moment seeking. The stay-at-home wives could be chatted up in grocery stores, drugstores, or coffee shops during the morning and afternoonâunless, of course, they were so wealthy and indolent that they had their maids do their shopping for them. Working women were most conveniently secured by way of the well-known New Haven Line commuter train that regularly left Grand Central Station in Manhattan for points east, making stops at all the major cities along coastal Connecticut up to New Haven.
That was where he found himself one fine spring day. It was late afternoon on a Friday, and everyone seemed relieved that the work week was over. Dale was too young to have had personal experience with the "bar car" that used to provide alcohol to the weary commuters at the end of the dayâand he sensed that his luck would have been even better than it was if that car had still been in existence.
Right now he focused on a fine-looking womanâapparently in her early fifties, her blond hair appealingly pinned up in a bun but with random strands brushing her face, her figure trim and fit, and encased in a power suit that accentuated her gentle curvesâwho by some miracle had a vacant seat next to where she was sitting. Dale plopped himself down on the seat a little too hastily, slightly jarring the woman's elbow as she was reading a thick stack of papers.
"I'm very sorry," he said in his mild baritone voice. "I couldn't believe my luck in getting this seat."
She smiled at him out of one side of her mouth. "I was beginning to wonder if I was radioactive."
That was a good sign: she didn't glower at him for jostling her, and even made a little witticism. She had a somewhat low voice for a womanâsomething he didn't care much for, but he figured he could live with it in light of the woman's other virtues. He noticed no ring on her finger, but didn't know what to make of that. It could mean anything or nothing.
"You're certainly not that," Dale said gallantly, but she paid little attention to the weak compliment.
After a pause he went on. "You shouldn't be workingâit's a Friday, and time to relax."
He didn't think there was a double entendre in that, and in fact he didn't intend it. He found workaholic women even more troubling than workaholic men, and wished people would come to their senses and chill out once in a while.
Without looking at him, the woman said: "I may have to be working all weekend. This job doesn't give me much time off."
"And what job is that?"
For a few moments the woman debated whether she even wanted to have this conversation. At last she said somewhat warily, "I'm a literary agent."
Dale's eyes widened as he looked at the big pile on her lap. "And that's some great American novel by some unknown genius?"
That made her smile again. "Hardlyâit's a purportedly rousing blood-and-thunder spy novel by someone you might actually have heard of."
"Is it good?"
"No, but it'll sell."
Dale frowned. "Shouldn't you be in the business of promoting good work rather than stuff merely meant to tickle the rabble?"
He worried that he'd gone a little too far: perhaps the woman would think he was insulting her, or at least insulting her profession. But she merely glanced at him with a cynical little smile and said, "If I did that exclusively, I wouldn't be eating very much. 'Stuff' like this"âshe tapped the thick manuscriptâ"is what pays the bills so I can focus on that great American novel by some unknown genius."
"Good point," Dale admitted. "But are you going to be tied up with that all weekend?"
She sighed heavily. "I probably should finish it by Monday, but I suppose the world won't come to an end if I don't."
Dale thought she was close to putting the manuscript aside and devoting her entire attention to him. He realized the next few moments were critical.
"I'm surprised you're not reading that on a tablet, or even on your Smartphone," he said.
She now looked at him right in the face. "If you were your age, maybe I would; but I'm of a generation that still remembers what print is like, and I feel it's only fair to an authorâeven a hack like this oneâto read him the old-fashioned way."
Dale wasn't entirely sure he liked the sound of that: it made him think she was overly concerned about their difference in age. But perhaps that very point could be used to his benefit.
But he didn't want to harp on that issueâyet. Instead, he boldly extended his hand and said: "I'm Dale Willis. I live in Greenwich."
She seemed taken aback by his words and his gesture. No doubt she had lived in the New York metropolitan area long enough to be suspicious of strangers who sought to cultivate one's acquaintance: almost always it would be for something nefarious. But he counted on his open countenance and neat, well-dressed appearance to put her at least somewhat at her ease.
But it took her several seconds to take his hand and say quietly, "Gloria Washburn. I'm getting off at Stamford."
How cagey! She didn't say she
lived
in Stamfordâmaybe she left her car at the Stamford Park-and-Ride and drove many miles inland to a house in some remote enclave.