He's a gay virgin.
She's a failing lesbian or filthy bisexual, depending on who you ask.
It's late, and she's out of milk.
If this doesn't sound like your thing, other authors are available. Or try one of my other stories.
If this might be your thing, I hope you enjoy.
This is an entry in the April Fools Day 2020 contest.
'Nearly home,' I thought, as the Tube train I needed for my branch line finally arrived. Two more stops. It was quarter to midnight, but I'd been having fun catching up with some friends-of-friends from uni, and some of their friends, and time had run away with us. Still, Thursday is the new Friday, as they say, so I'd battle through work the next day, just grab a bowl of cereal when I got in...
Shit. I remembered I was out of milk.
'You daft woman!', I told myself, as, thinking about it, I was also out of pretty much any other food. The newsagent's on the corner shut by nine, even if they did obligingly open at 6am, enabling me to run out for bread, butter, or whatever I might need of a morning. I hadn't made the half-hour bus trip to a supermarket in the last fortnight; either working too late or trashy TV being more alluring than venturing out in the rainy winter.
I'd heard a pizza place had started doing delivery, like in America, but that would surely cost a fortune, on top of what I'd already spent on my night out.
Then I recalled the petrol station.
My route home from the Tube was about a six-minute walk; three to a large roundabout with the cemetery entrance and a huge, dire, pub, kept in business only by drunken wakes, then another three minutes down past a small row of shops to my cul-de-sac, where I lived in a small semi with two female colleagues -- pleasant housemates, but not real friends, yet. The other main road off the roundabout led back to town. I'd explored and ignored it as being only a few offices and many houses, but of course, not being a driver, I'd barely given the garage a thought. It was only a couple hundred yards out of my way and the street was equally well lit, so I tugged my leather jacket closer round my neck and strode down the station steps.
One other passenger alighted, but wandered away into the station car park. Middle-aged white man. I was glad I was wearing jeans, my Docs, and the blazer-like jacket -- it meant I wasn't obviously female, despite a long, low ponytail. Not a target, for a lecherous bloke late at night. Not that that stopped guys trying to pick me up almost every time I went on a brightly-lit Tube train. I was twenty-two, tall, slim, white with long dark hair and rosy cheeks -- your typical English rose, I guess, which might be why every lone foreign man seemed to want to give it a go. And half the locals.
It got tedious, which is why on the way home late I'd roughly tie my straight hair back, not reapply any lipstick, and remove any dangly earrings, hoping to avoid attention. Add a confident stride and men would simply step round me, muttering "all right, mate?", not looking closely. Much better, when wandering suburban London in the wee hours.
I strolled downhill to the roundabout, pondering the problems with my girlfriend. I was coming to the conclusion it wasn't working. I was visiting her flat more for her luxurious bed, superior telly, decent sex and stroking her adorable cat, rather than because I was particularly looking forward to seeing her.
Could that be resolved?
I didn't know.
We'd been together ten months, but the not-actually funny 'jokes' were increasingly annoying me. She'd complained I was mardy; I hadn't said it, but I was beginning to suspect that grumpiness of mine was being triggered, rather than alleviated, by her company.
In the meantime, I turned left to the garish lights of the petrol station, dodged a reversing BMW that wasn't looking, and entered the shop. I'd not been in before, so I checked out all three aisles. As expected, they stocked household basics -- milk and bread the same price as my local shop; everything else horribly expensive. A wide range of snacks and instant meals, more flavours of Pot Noodle than I'd ever seen, and a car section containing lots of de-icer, windscreen wash, maps and air fresheners. Also, a large magazine selection. Better than expected, that.
As I browsed the front covers, the lights dimmed.
"Huh?"
"No, it's OK. Take your time! Just, it is quarter to twelve and at twelve I have to close the door. You take your time, do the needful!" The man's voice behind me had a London accent, but not the local one, with a slight cadence and word choice suggesting an Asian family.
I pulled out a copy of Esquire, for the interview with Pierce Brosnan. Generally I'd seen the various repeated articles in women's mags enough times not to bother buying them again. And a four-pint jug of milk, and I went up to the counter.
"That all, lov - mate?"
In the dim light, the counter guy had clearly seen the magazine and reached the reasonable conclusion that I was a bloke.
Some parts of the country, his words wouldn't mean anything. Many places, customers would be duck, hen, or pet no matter whether they were male or female. 'My lover', even, down in the West Country, which I'd always found startling between hulking Bristolian bus drivers! But in London, men use mate to each other, women rarely say mate at all unless in jest, though a youngish woman like me might, to male equals or friends. Women say love to many people, usually younger than them. But men only use love to women, children and the elderly. Some say it's condescending; I say it's the tone of voice that betrays whether they're a patronising git or not.
I wasn't going to object to either, from him. He hadn't sounded patronising. I especially wasn't complaining once I looked up and saw the chap properly! He was your stereotypical Asian lad -- I guessed nineteen or so, probably made to work that shift by his probably-Bangladeshi parents -- but the much better-looking version. Tall, lean, warm brown skin under gelled black hair, small diamond earring in one ear; all in all, he was most remarkably decorative.
I might even consider blokes again... Damn. That really suggested me and Clare weren't working, didn't it?
I gave the guy a big grin, avoiding any feminine giggle. "Cheers, mate." It's not that women never say cheers to mean thank you, but it's much more likely to be a bloke saying it. I didn't want to embarrass this chap if he realised he'd made a mistake.
I took the unlabelled carrier bag home, poured a generous bowl of muesli for dinner, read the magazine as I ate, and crashed out.
Any dreams that night that included a fit Asian lad, all tight jeans, well-hanging jacket, bling and gravelly voice, were not completely coincidental.
To be fair, the dreams were more of the guy from my local newsagent when I was a teenager. Once I was old enough, my parents decided I should fetch the Sunday papers while they made breakfast -- especially if it were raining. "No problem," I said, "it's only a few minutes jog to the shop on Ashley Avenue."
"Oh, no, I really think you should go to Cullen's on Church Street. The other shop isn't very
clean