She wasn't old yet, but she wasn't young either. Though she looked closer to thirty than forty, just the opposite was true. She didn't fear forty—she used to think that she wouldn't attach any special significance to it at all. The false bravado of youth. She knew better now. Forty was significant. Not objectively. A person doesn't crumble with the turn of a calendar page. But because one of our distant and successful ancestors had ten digits instead of twelve or thirteen, we attach an importance to turning forty that we do not to turning thirty-nine or forty-one. And forty is more important than the other multiples of ten because it is about half one's life, and the better half—at least the more exciting, wonder-filled half.
She knew this now—at least the knew that forty was special. But she didn't fear it, didn't even regret it. She had so much else to regret: her failed marriage (she didn't know whether she regretted the failure or the marriage), her past dependency on her husband, the lack of direction now in her life.
She didn't—couldn't—regret everything about her marriage. Her son, Adam, was the great joy of her life. But he was a freshman in college now and was hoping to move out of the house and into a fraternity soon. Then, she would be alone. That would be the test of her strength.
But she had never been weak—she had merely been lazy. It had just been easier to let her life revolve around her husband's. She knew that had been a mistake and she knew, at least roughly, how to change things. She was entering law school in the Fall and she was starting to think like a single person. The last was the scariest. For so long she had been a part of a single entity that consisted of her husband and her; now she wasn't sure she knew what it would be like to be just her.
But she was finding out. She was making all of the mistakes adolescents make in finding out, but she was finding out. As she looked around the bar, she was sure that this was one of the mistakes but she wasn't ready to call it quits. She considered these outings necessary passages, even where they were unsatisfying.
Rick had had casual, almost nameless sex both before and, now she knew, after they had gotten married. She wasn't a virgin when they met and she had even had an affair, such as it was, while she was married. But she had never slept with someone she didn't know and wouldn't meet again. Often the thought of doing this was repugnant—but it was always fascinating. She had fantasized about it frequently, always telling herself that the reality would be unpleasant even if the fantasy was not. But now she intended to find out—if she could carry it through.
She supposed that that depended a lot on who approached her. She thought of committing herself in advance to go with the first man who approached her, but as she surveyed the men in the bar she realized that she would not be able to stay that course. If she tried, she would probably give up the whole thing if some of these men approached her. So she decided to engage in discriminating promiscuity.
She had picked The Red Fox carefully. It was a sort of upscale meat market catering to yuppies and middle-aged business people. The parking lot was filled with sexy cars, but the drivers seemed a poor match for their cars. She wasn't looking for someone to fall in love with, but looking at the clientele she was afraid she might have trouble finding someone she wanted to fall in bed with.
After a few minutes, those on the prowl began to suspect that she was not there to meet someone—at least not someone she already knew. They thought of her as an attractive target. She was dressed in a deep blue knit dress that clung to her down to her hips and flared out below. She wore enough make-up to be obvious without being gauche. And she was pretty—beautiful, even—in a mature and sophisticated way. She had refined facial features: a narrow heart-shaped face, small nose and a sharp jaw line. Her eyes were light and her hair dark. And not a one among the prowlers had failed to notice her figure. She was not particularly chesty, but her small waist and flat stomach accentuated her breasts. Those watching her itched.
Several men approached her. Some, receiving no encouragement, retreated without a word. Others required an icy word or two before retreating. She didn't think herself picky. She didn't even know what she wanted; she just knew that she hadn't seen it yet.
She was on her third drink when a young—very young—guy sat down beside her and ordered a drink. She hadn't noticed him before; he had probably just come in. She was certain that he hadn't even looked at her before sitting down. He wasn't looking at her now.
She resented this boy's sitting here. If there were any acceptable guys in this bar, how were they supposed to approach her if he were sitting next to her? She was torn between moving to another seat and just going home.
"Do you come here often?" At first she didn't think he was talking to her and she was certain that she must have misunderstood him. Do you come here often? But when she looked at him she decided that she had heard right and that she was the intended audience.
"No," she said, bemused. She couldn't believe that he was trying to pick her up. "How about you?" She didn't want to hurt his feelings. He hadn't been rude, just trite. He was a nice looking guy—very attractive actually. But she found the situation preposterous, and she couldn't contain her reaction completely. Surely he would see the smirk or hear it in her voice.
But he seemed not to. "No. First time. I just didn't have any place else to go."
And the way he said it melted her. She looked at him closely for the first time and decided that she had completely misjudged him. He looked depressed. He hadn't come there to pick anyone up, she decided. He talked to her only for the small solace one can find in conversation with a stranger. She judged herself harshly for the assumptions she had made.
She thought decency required her to pursue the conversation and was debating whether to try to draw him out about his problems or to cheer him up. As it turned out, he didn't need to be drawn out.
"I was supposed to go to a rush party with my girl friend. But she broke up with me today." He took a drink of his beer.
"Well, why don't you go to the party anyway? Wouldn't it be a good place to meet other girls or at least to forget about her?" It seemed like reasonable advice to her but he almost choked on his beer.
"She broke up with me to go to the party with the president of the fraternity." She agreed that going to the party might not be the best way to forget about his girl friend.
"Well, . . . uh." She paused, waiting for him to provide his name. Wrapped up in his thoughts, he took so long that she was about to go on.
"Oh. I'm sorry. My name's Allen, Allen Raines."
"Laura Baker." 'Baker' was neither her maiden nor her married name but, nice as this guy seemed, she didn't see any reason he should know her real name.
"Well, Allen. It doesn't sound like joining this fraternity right now is the best thing you could do either. You'd see a lot of the two of them together."