As has been the case with my most recent stories, I want to thank my editor, Terry. I wouldn't try to do this now without his help. His advice helps improve the stories and his eyes catch my mistakes. Thanks so much!
*****
Staring out the window, Suzanne wished her mood matched the bright sunny day. It had earlier but her lunch date had been yet another in a long line of disappointing dates. She met him at a friend's party over the weekend and when they discovered that they both worked down by the waterfront, they decided to meet for lunch. He was handsome enough for Suzanne to find interesting. At the busy party they had chatted for a while and he seemed nice too. Towards the end of the party, he finally asked her to lunch and she agreed.
Nothing had gone wrong at lunch. He was indeed nice and they had an enjoyable time. Dressed for work, he was just as good looking. Suzanne knew that if she brought him home, her mother would fall in love with him. The fact that he was a lawyer would just be the icing on the cake. And clearly he found her attractive. Being tall himself, he wasn't put off by her height. At six feet, Suzanne was used to that being an issue. But to compensate for it she had a long sleek body. Her legs usually were the first thing that someone noticed, when she showed them off which wasn't often. Even with a conservative knee length skirt like today, they still caught his eye. The rest of her body was nice but it wasn't curvy the way most men liked. Suzanne was only an A-cup although that didn't bother her. On her body, Suzanne didn't think anything much more would look good. Still they didn't garner her any attention. She had narrow hips that Suzanne often thought were more like a boy's and her ass was nice and tight if small. Her face was pretty with dark brown eyes and high cheekbones framed by her long coffee colored hair. She let her hair cover parts of her face as if to help avoid notice. It didn't work with her lunch date. He made it clear that he found her attractive.
But for Suzanne, without the assistance of alcohol, it wasn't the same. While still recognizing he was a good looking guy, she just didn't feel any spark. Despite really wanting to find one, Suzanne was honest enough with herself to admit it. Having felt it before, she wasn't willing to settle for less. It may have been with she was 18 and in high school, but it didn't change what she was wanted.
When he asked her to go out that weekend, she begged off with the excuse that she had plans for both Friday and Saturday nights. It was only a half lie. She had plans with some friends for Friday night, but nothing on Saturday. He promised to call early next week to see if she was free. Suzanne smiled non-committedly; secure in knowing it was always easier to say she wasn't interested on the phone than in person.
It was just as well that Suzanne had not mentioned him to her mother when they talked on Sunday. She had been tempted when her mom started to complain that she was the only one of her friends without grandchildren yet. It was a familiar refrain. The height of her mother's ambition for Suzanne was getting married and having kids. Suzanne's graduation as one of the top three MBA students in her class didn't carry much weight with her mother. If anything, she felt it inhibited her ability to attract a man.
"Honey, men want someone they can take care of, not someone who puts their career first. They want a wife who makes family and faith her priority," she kept telling Suzanne. Those had been enough for her and her mother saw no reason it should not be the same for Suzanne.
At least her father was a little better. He recognized how hard she had worked in school and in finding a job with a fast rising start up. Even though she had fielded offers from the biggest high tech firms in town, Suzanne had decided to take a risk. It was paying off now. At only 26, she was the senior product manager with a fair amount of equity in a company that was likely to be bought in the next six months by one of the companies she had turned down. It had taken a lot of hard work. Most of the time, Suzanne was thankful she wasn't trying to juggle a relationship while working 11 and 12 hour days, plus time on the weekends. But she wasn't thankful all the time. Sometimes she was just lonely.
The last person that Suzanne dated for any length of time had been back in grad school. Even then she had known it wasn't going anywhere. Gary was a fellow student and mostly it was just convenient. He was planning on going to New York after graduation. He would have liked it if she wanted to come, but he also wasn't broken up about Suzanne's decision to stay in Seattle. Even though he had lacked that spark she was looking for, at least Suzanne enjoyed his company. Since then she hadn't met anyone with whom she had really connected. There had been a couple of one-night stands during the first year after leaving school, but she didn't feel good about them. For Suzanne, sex was connected with feelings. Even though she didn't love Gary, she liked and cared for him.
As the dry spell lengthened, Suzanne admitted that she wasn't trying too hard. What was the point if she didn't feel that initial spark? Suzanne could not see herself really falling for someone if that was not there from the start. Her friends thought she was setting the bar too high but it had been that way in high school. Suzanne felt the spark and fell head over heels in love. It had been the best time of her life. It was why she was sure it could happen again.
Remembering always made Suzanne depressed. She did her best to push the memories to the side and get back to work. Experience taught her that it was the best way to get through the pain. Luckily there was always more work to do.
It was three hours later when Suzanne realized that someone had come into her little office. Engrossed as she was in the customer research report, Suzanne took a few moments to finish highlighting one more sentence. When she raised her head, she immediately flushed a little. It was her boss, the Vice-President of Marketing and one of the company founders. Suzanne was thankful that Jim was someone without too big of an ego. She didn't mean any disrespect and was fairly sure that he wouldn't think she had.
"Sorry Jim, I didn't want to lose my place," Suzanne started to say before he waved her to silence.
"You did right. This is no big deal. We finally replaced Peggy and I wanted to introduce her to you," Jim said. Peggy had been his assistant but had to leave when her husband was transferred. Like everyone, Jim was used to having to wear several hats and replacing Pegging hadn't been a priority. Having a vacancy meant he could hire another marketer. It worked until the CEO complained that the real work wasn't getting done because Jim was spending too much time doing the things that Peggy had handled. Under strict instructions, Jim started looking for a new assistant.
Suzanne had been aware of all that. She just hadn't realized that he was at the point of actually hiring someone. Suzanne hoped she would be good. Peggy had kept things running smoothly and her absence had been felt. Like a number of others, Suzanne breathed a sigh of relief when Jim was ordered to replace Peggy.