“Hey, I'm on my way,” I told my sister over the phone as I started the car engine. My ancient little Pontiac purred to life and I thanked my lucky stars. Some days she decided to drive like a dream, and on other days she was hell on wheels. Today would have been a terrible day for her not to start. There was no way I was walking back into that restaurant to get a jump start.
“How was the date?” Rosie asked.
“Awful,” I said, pulling out onto the main road. “It'll be great for readers. I really think they're going to eat this one up.”
I could hear her moving around on her end of the phone. “You're the only person I know who gets more excited about bad dates than good ones,” she replied.
“Are you moving stuff around again?” I asked, ignoring her statement.
“No,” she answered defensively before sighing. “Yes. Fine. I'm moving the crib to the other side of the room. I think the draft from the window will make him cold.”
I couldn't help but smile. She was so excited for her first-born child that she had moved that darn crib at least six times in the last week. “You better figure out where to put it soon,” I told her. “You've only got another month to figure it out.”
“Oof-” She was obviously pushing the crib into place. “I know. I can't wait until I don't waddle anymore. I feel like a penguin.”
“A cute penguin,” I said, taking the next turn.
Rosie laughed. “That's what Thomas says, too.” She panted slightly. I was going to have to tell her husband not to let her push that heavy stuff. Not that she'd listen to either of us, but it had to at least be said.
“Okay, well, I'll be there in about five minutes,” I said, pulling off the highway and heading to her place. It was tradition to go see her after a failed date. Rosie had the best perspective and came up with the most epic tag lines for the blog entries.
“Oh good, you'll be here before Mom leaves,” Rosie replied.
“Mom's there?” I asked. I nearly hit the brakes. It wasn't that I didn't like my mother. I loved her a lot. She just hated my blog, my love prospects, and what I was doing with my life. I could already feel the lecture.
“Is that you, Harper?” My mother's voice took over the phone. “I was just getting ready to go, but I'll wait until you get here. I brought the most adorable thing for the baby. You'll love it.”
“Great, Mom.” I wondered if banging my head against the steering wheel would make the airbag deploy. Then I could at least claim I got in an accident and I wouldn't have to explain to my mother, yet again, what I was doing with my life.
I pulled up to the house, making sure not to block my mother's exit in any way shape or form. I actually even parked on the opposite side of the street, just so that she could get out easier. Anything to help her leave as quickly as possible.
I didn't bother knocking. Thomas turned and waved from the living room as I walked in. He was a nerdy-looking guy, all elbows and knees, but he had a great smile. He wasn't my type, but he made my sister happy, so I loved him.
“Hey, Harper,” he said. “How'd the date go? Awful, I hope?”
“Yup. It was perfectly terrible.” I laughed, pausing by the couch to talk to him. “How's doctoring going? Not awful, I hope?”
He smiled. “I'm here and not at the hospital working, so things are good.”
“Are you on call today?” I was stalling. I knew my mother and sister were in the baby's room, but I wasn't ready to face my mother just yet. Maybe I could just talk to Thomas until she had to leave...
“You can't avoid her forever.” Thomas gave me a meaningful, I know what you're doing and it's not going to work, look. “And yes, I'm on call tonight. So don't swallow pennies or any other weird stuff tonight, okay? I want to stay home.”
I chuckled. Thomas was a gastroenterologist at the local hospital. That was how he and Rosie met. Rosie was a radiology technician and the two had fallen in love over a barium x-ray. That was three years ago, and now they were expecting their first child in just a little over a month.
“You sure? Would swallowing pennies get me out of my mother asking me for the upteenth time why my love life is just a bad dates blog?”
Thomas looked thoughtful. “Nope. She'd probably just gown up and keep talking the whole way through your exam. And then she'd try and set you up with the first male nurse that walked in the door.”
I shook my head and chuckled. That would be exactly what my mother would do.
“Harper?” My mother had heard us.
“On my way.” I looked at Thomas. “If you hear screaming, don't come in. Just be prepared to help bury a body.”
“Yours or hers?” Thomas asked.
“I'm not sure. It depends on who grabs the lamp first.”
“Okay,” Thomas agreed. “Just don't use the cute baby elephant lamp. I like that one.”
“No baby elephant lamp, got it.”
I started walking to the baby's room, feeling my shoulders tense up. I told myself to stop it. Maybe this time Mom wouldn't comment. Maybe this time she'd just show me whatever cute baby thing she'd found. Maybe she wouldn't bring up the fact that my younger sister had a real job, a husband, and a baby, while I was writing fluff pieces and wasting my life.
Maybe.
“There you are, Harper,” my mom said as I walked into the baby's room. “I was beginning to think you forgot where the baby's room was.”
“Nope, just talking to the baby daddy,” I replied, going to give my sister and mother each a hug. “So, what did you bring?”
“Isn't it adorable?” My mother held up a little onesie with suspenders and a bow tie printed on it. To be fair, it was absolutely adorable. “I got one with a little tie, too.”
I took the small outfit into my hands and studied it. It was so tiny. And cute. My nephew was going to be freaking adorable and the best dressed baby this side of the Atlantic.
“It's perfect,” I replied, handing it off to Rosie. Rosie beamed. She looked amazing, even eight months pregnant. Her dark hair was pulled back into a ponytail and she was only wearing light makeup to accent her brown eyes, but she glowed. People always said we looked alike, and I hoped I looked half as beautiful as she did right now.
“So, when am I going to be able to purchase one of these for you?” Mom's question made my heart sink. We'd made it all of three minutes.
“Mom!” Rosie scolded. “Not cool.”
“I'm just concerned about you, Harper.” Mom pulled out the second onesie and put it on the changing table. “You just don't seem to be going anywhere.”
“I'm going plenty of places, Mom,” I told her through gritted teeth.
She put her hands on her hips and looked at me. It was easy to see where Rosie and I got our features. We all shared the same dark hair and eyes, a fairly average build, and noses that were probably just a little too big for our faces.
“You keep going on these terrible dates and not caring that you're not finding anyone. I know you just got back from another terrible one that you're super excited to share with the world. How are you going to find love like this?” Mom's features looked concerned, but I knew exactly the words that were coming next. “It's like you're not even trying, Harper.”
Every time. Those words killed me every time. Because I was trying. The whole reason the Never After Dates even existed was because I was trying and not getting anywhere. It was making lemonade out of the lemon dates that life kept handing me.
The fact that I now hoped for bad dates had nothing to do with it. Now, it was part of how I paid my rent. I had found that lemonade could be profitable.
“I do write other things than this one dating blog,” I reminded my mother. “Just last month, I won the General Excellence award for my travel piece in Now Magazine.”
“Yeah, but, honey, that isn't going to get you someone to love.” My mother frowned. “I'm just worried about you and your future. I want you to be happy.”
“I was happy until about three minutes ago,” I said quietly. My mother glared at me. I did my best not to roll my eyes. “I have plans. I have aspirations and I'm not hopeless, okay? I'll find someone when I'm ready.”
There was a moment of silence. You’d think a woman who spent so many years unhappily married would at least be willing to support a child who wasn’t even bothering with the notion of marriage at the moment, rather than push for intense focus on finding the right one.
“You're not getting any younger, Harper,” Mom scolded. “I don't want you to end up wasting your life going on these terrible dates and ignoring the possibility of finding actual happiness someday. You're just sabotaging yourself.”
“Right, Mom. I do this all so I can be miserable and alone. I want to end up as a crazy cat lady.” I stalked over to the baby elephant lamp. It was a good thing Thomas made me promise not to use it, because it was incredibly tempting to throw it at my mother's head at the moment.
“Harper, she just wants you to be happy.” Rosie said softly. She was always the peace-maker.
I didn't say anything. The only things I wanted to say, I knew I'd regret because they weren't nice. I really wished I got along as well with Mom as Rosie did, but Rosie was the golden child. She'd always done everything right. I was the screw up.
Rosie cleared her throat. “But, at least you have that really promising date coming up, right?”
“Of course I do,” I replied automatically. Technically, every date was a really promising one. For my blog.
“You do?” My mom looked skeptical. “A good date or a bad date?”
“A good one,” Rosie assured her. “A real, positive, find love kind of date. She's trying out this new dating service by Kindling Dating. They have this brand new application that's basically guaranteed to find your true love. And she has a date through it.”
“I do?” I looked at Rosie and she widened her eyes to tell me to play along. “Oh, right. I do. I totally do.”
“Sure.” Mom crossed her arms. “Who is he?”
“A local business owner,” Rosie answered. “And super cute. He likes football and has a great sense of humor. He's basically perfect for Harper.”
“Is that so?” Mom did not look convinced. She glared at me again. “Why didn't you say anything?”
“Well, I... um...” I had no answer because I didn't know what the hell Rosie was even talking about.
“She didn't want to get your hopes up, Mom,” Rosie interjected. “You get so excited for every single date she goes on, like she's going to get married next week if she finds the right one. That's hard to deal with.”
I wasn't sure whether to strangle or hug my sister. On the one hand, a good date would get my mother off my back, but on the other, I had no clue what Rosie had planned. If there was no actual guy, Mom was going to be even more trouble than usual. I'd heard of this Kindling Dating, but as it cost money and actually advertised yielding good dates, I had stayed far, far away from it. My business was bad dates.
What the heck was my sister doing?
“Is this true, Harper?” My mother fixed me with her best mom glare. When I was a kid, I would confess to anything under that look. It was hard not to break down even though I was twenty-six years old and no longer living under her roof.
“Rosie wouldn't lie, Mom,” I answered. It was true enough that I would avoid showing my guilty face.
Mom looked back and forth between the two of us for a moment before smiling broadly at me. “You have a real date?”
“Apparently,” I said while Rosie nodded vigorously.
“I can't tell you how happy that makes me, Harper.” Mom actually looked relieved. “I just want you to find that special someone and settle down like your sister. I need more grandkids and Rosie's baby needs some cousins.”
“That's the plan, Mom. Date this guy, marry him, have lots of babies,” I said, ticking off fingers for each item of my future.
“Don't be sarcastic, Harper,” Mom scolded, but then she wrapped me up in a big hug. “I'm just so proud of you for trying.”
Because I wasn't trying before, I wanted to say, but I kept my mouth shut.
“See, Mom, everything will work out,” Rosie promised.
I looked over at her and she grinned with two thumbs up.
“Okay.” Mom let me go and stood up straight. There were tears of joy in her eyes. If I had known that promising her a good date would make her this happy, I would have done it a long time ago.
“You okay, Mom?” I asked.
“I'm great, honey.” She wiped her eyes and smiled. “I'm just so happy to hear you're actually going to give this one a chance. Please, give him an actual chance? Don't make him hate you like do with all the guys you go out with now.”
I managed not to let my jaw hit the floor. “Yes, Mom.”
“I have to get going,” Mom announced. She hugged Rosie, then dropped to her knees to kiss Rosie's belly. “Be good in there, little one. You keep growing, you little cutie.”
“Drive safe, Mom,” I said.
“I will.” She stood up from the floor and then gave me a big hug. “Thank you for trying this time, Harper. I love you girls so much.”
“We love you too, Mom,” Rosie assured her. I nodded.
“You didn't park me in, did you?” Mom asked, picking up her purse
“Of course not. You're free to go,” I informed her. She smiled and waved and headed out the door. I could hear her saying goodbye to Thomas in the living room as she went and as soon as I heard her car engine start, I let out a huge sigh of relief.
“Well, that was fun,” Rosie commented.
“Yeah.” I turned to face her. “Especially the part where I have a date from Kindling Romance? What the heck was that, Rosie?”
“I should probably explain...” Rosie blushed.
“Yeah, that would be good,” I agreed. “Please tell me how I have a date lined up at a service I never signed up for.”
It was a lucky thing my sister was pregnant. I couldn't kill a pregnant lady.
“Kindling Dating?” I rounded on my sister as she put the cute onesie away into a closet full of onesies. “Did you really sign me up for Kindling Dating or was that just a way to get Mom off my back?”Rosie didn't answer right away. She took her time putting the new clothes into the closet and then turned to face me.“You really are signed up and you really do have a date,” she finally said. “If you want it. No pressure.”“No pressure?” I flopped into the rocking chair, nearly flinging myself right back out of it. “You told Mom. She's going to follow up on this until I marry the the poor guy!”Rosie frowned, her hand going to her swollen belly and pushing as the little boy inside of her kicked her like I wanted to do. “I thought it would be good for you. I thought you'd be happy.”“You signed me up for a dating service, Rosie,” I said, trying to calm myself by rocking. The motion was soothing, but I was still agitated. “One that costs money. There's a reason I stay on the free ones. I
“And so it is, Mr. Bathroom shall be forever memorialized for his unique ability to use a toilet as refuge from paying the bill. Ladies be warned; if you get picked up by a guy whose meal costs more than what he pays for rent, abort mission. Flee the scene. Leave before he comes back from hiding. At least today we know he gets to go back home to his mommy- let’s just all hope she preps him a little more before his next date.”My arms fell from the keyboard as I allowed them a momentary rest. This was going to make for a great post, I could already tell. Posts like these came effortlessly with the most challenging part being accurately recalling the extent of the disaster. Every little detail was required to paint the full picture of what I had dealt with, and my readers ate it up.As I was doing a final skim over the passage for any typos or grammatical errors, my phone buzzed obnoxiously on the table. I was usually good about not allowing my phone to distract me in the middle of writ
“So, what do you think, Cora?” Anticipation bubbled through my voice.“So good!” she paused, obviously re-reading a section. “I think it’s your best one yet to be honest!”I let out a grateful sigh. If my best friend Cora said a blog post was good, it was golden. She was the most honest and appreciated critic of my work.I had finished and posted my blog late last night and had woken to a barrage of comments. My readers were the reason I loved my work. It was always nice to wake up to great feedback after a long night. Their comments made all the bad dates worth it.“This is more hits than you’ve gotten in awhile, yeah?” she asked. I could hear her clicking around on her computer over the phone.“Yeah, I think so” I said, scrolling down the comments. I was glad to see such a positive response to the post. Cora was right, there were more comments and shares than I had received in awhile.“I guess Bathroom Dude was a big hit! Wait, hold on,” she said as there was a muffling noise from t
The computer screen glowed against the backdrop of the oncoming evening. The dark blue of the sky as night felt was soft and comforting like a blanket around a child. It was another warm night in Miami and the intense heat of the day had mellowed into a pleasant temperature and the humidity was actually comfortable. On a normal night, my computer screen became the only light in the room and I used it to get lost in my blog.However, this evening was different. On this particular evening I needed to research and make sure I was prepared for my date. I had gone deep into the conversation that my sister had begun. I was like a student studying over a textbook before a big test; I knew their conversation held valuable information, it was a matter of trying to dissect it and uncover his personality.The mask that Rosie had assumed while trying to imitate me was hilarious. I had already scanned their conversation several times and had paused frequently to laugh out loud. She either had no i
Here comes another great blog post, I thought, as I stood outside of the very nice restaurant and reevaluated my shoe choice. I frowned and hear Rosie's voice in my head. No, be nice. It might be great.Given my dating history, I wasn't expecting much. The best I could really hope for was that I wouldn’t get stuck with the bill like last time. If that happened at this restaurant, I’d have to go to the poor house. Dove’s was one of the nicest places in town and a two-person meal would be the same amount as a quarter of my rent.A well-dressed hostess greeted me as I entered. I was fairly sure that she made more as a waitress here than I did as a blogger.“I’m meeting someone, but I’m not sure if he’s here yet,” I explained, as I took off my sunglasses and put them in my purse. “I can just wait at the bar.”“Of course,” the woman said, as she turned and led me across the restaurant to a beautiful bar next to a giant window overlooking the ocean. “Enjoy your dinner.”She pulled the chair
“What would you like to eat?” he asked, as the waiter approached us.I hadn’t even looked at the menu. I had been too into our conversation.“Um, I’ll just take an appetizer,” I said, glancing at the menu. I picked the cheapest thing I could find. “Maybe grilled asparagus or something.”“Harper, order whatever you like,” Gabe urged, though he didn’t specifically say that he’d be picking up the tab.“I’d rather have something light, though. I’m not super hungry.” I flashed him a grin. It wasn't a lie: butterflies had begun to flow inside of me, which had put my appetite in check.What is this guy doing to me? I wondered. I was pretty sure that my blog had killed all the first date jitters, but apparently not.I stuck with the grilled asparagus appetizer and Gabe got a 10-ounce filet mignon. The waiter took our orders and disappeared around the corner. Gabe sipped his martini before fixing me with his piercing green eyes. It was impossible to not feel like the center of the universe whe
I stood up from the table and followed Gabe out of the restaurant.It had been so long since I'd even had the slightest inclination to let a date go farther. The thought actually terrified me. The butterflies in my stomach started mambo-ing.Gabe tipped the hostess as we walked through the doors and into the street. The sun dipped behind the ocean and was replaced with the fluorescent lights of the street lamps.Dove's was located along the beach in a commercial area. There was a short path to the water that would give us a nice stroll. It wasn't a long walk, but it would be a nice way to end the evening.The water rippled under the moonlight. For a moment I thought I saw a flash of a dolphin in the waves, but I was fairly sure it was just my over-excited imagination. There was no way I was lucky enough to have a good date and see dolphins. We had the path to ourselves, although we were clearly visible to everyone in the restaurant.“Have you ever been to a Blue Jays game?” Gabe asked
This is just writer’s block, right? I mean, surely there was something about last night’s date with Gabe that went terribly. There must be something for me to write about...I sat in my office chair, staring at the blank screen of the word processing program in front of me. I had been gazing at it for half an hour, trying to brainstorm what to write for the upcoming blog post. The problem, though, was that I ran a website that people visited to hear about my bad dates, not the good ones. There wasn’t anything interesting about a good date, or at least anything that my current readers would want to hear. They wanted the ridiculous details. They wanted the men who didn’t pay for dinner and the ones who wore sweat pants to their first date. They didn’t want to read about the charming, good-looking, gentlemanly Gabe.I pressed my fingers against my cheek where he had kissed me. I could still feel the soft touch of his lips, and I could just imagine what they would feel like on mine. I wan
I never thought this day would come.Maybe when I was a little girl, I had hoped that someday it would. But I never actually believed it. It feels like a dream, but I know it’s not because it’s even better than anything I could have dreamt up.I’m marrying Gabe Honors. In just a few moments, I’ll be wed to the love of my life.I’m beyond nervous, but also ready. I’ve spent the last twenty minutes looking at myself in the mirror, making sure that my hair and makeup look absolutely perfect for him.“Hey, it’s almost time,” Cora says, as she steps beside me. “You look perfect, Harper. Seriously, you look gorgeous. Gabe is going to melt.”I hope she’s right.“Well, let’s do this,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady. “I’m ready.”Just outside, my mom is standing there, holding my little nephew’s hand. He breaks away and runs up to give me a quick hug before she tells him to go take his seat. Mom looks almost more nervous than I am. She can’t keep her hands still and she’s tapping her t
The following week I finally sat down to prepare for my final blog post. My decision was made. It was time to say goodbye and pass the reigns onto a new owner. It made sense and it felt right.Gabe had told me to sleep on the decision, and for most of the week I had made my home at his house, which made sleeping really easy. But the truth was that it really hadn’t taken much deliberation; the blog seemed like a thing of the past, something that opened the door to new writing feats, and I was ready to walk through that door.During our time together I had allowed the blog to slip even further off my mind, which was entirely okay with me. I had checked in periodically and had found a quick selection for Worst Wednesday. But besides that, and for the first time in a long time, I hadn’t paid it much attention. It seemed that the blog and I had finally begun to outgrow each other. At one time it had been my baby, but now it was moving out, and Cora was the perfect guide.If there was anyth
I had been fairly sure that I would never see the inside of Gabe's house ever again, but now I was standing on the deck watching the ocean once more. Not that I was complaining, though. I was happy to be there. In fact, the view of the ocean with the sun overhead never looked so good.“I’m glad you came over today. We need to talk. I’m ready to work through this and make things right again. But first, we both have to come clean with each other,” Gabe said, leaning against the railing of his deck.“Yeah, that’s probably a good idea,” I agreed. My palms were sweating, but I felt calmer than I had in weeks.His surprise visit at the restaurant had happened just the night before and this was the first time we had really had a chance to hash things out. This conversation needed to happen. It had been a long time coming.“Where should we start?” he asked. The breeze from the ocean ruffled his dark hair.“I guess what I really don’t understand is why you hid it from me?” I asked, starting th
“So all of your readers think you’re out with Brian right now?” Cora asked.I nodded. “Yep, I’ve duped them all into thinking Brian is a real person that loves me just the way I should be loved. It’s too bad I had to make all that up, though, isn’t it.”“Whatever. I think it’s fine.” Cora just shrugged. “But I have to ask you an important question, Harper.”“What is it?” I asked, a little nervous.Cora turned to the side and set her jaw, making a serious face. “Do I look like a Brian to you?”I busted out laughing. Her goofy antics got me every time.“You know, you actually do!” I exclaimed. “You make a perfect Brian! Wow, I’m one lucky girl to be on a date with such a handsome man.”“Aw, thanks!” she said, as she turned back to face me and grinned. “If I talk like this does it make me sound like a Brian, too?”She lowered her voice as much as possible and crinkled her eyebrows together. I was laughing so hard that tears were streaming down my face. The good kind of tears, though, not
I sat down at my computer and clicked on the Internet. It was always the first step in starting a new blog post and I could almost feel the writer’s block start to set in as a blank window popped up on the screen and began loading.It had been just over two months since the breakup and about a month and a half since I had introduced Brian.Brian was a tall guy with a toned body, dark hair and eyes bluer than an open sky on a summer’s day. He was funny, smart, a hard worker in his career as a physical trainer, a huge sports fan and… completely fake.I had decided to create Brian in order to appease my Mother and to use as a marketing tool for the blog. After my readers had obsessed over my relationship with Gabe, Brian was designed to be Gabe 2.0 and to carry the burden of a new and passionate relationship. And completely fabricating a fake relationship was much easier than actually getting consumed by one.Brian took me on elaborate dates to all the exciting places around town without
I took a break from watching my blog to make some belated dinner. I heated up some left over lasagna and made a milkshake with some of the ice cream still left in the fridge as post-breakup comfort food. I couldn’t help but make fun of myself and my current state of affairs. It felt only fitting to throw on an episode of Grey’s Anatomy on Netflix.After about a half hour I heard the phone ring.Immediately my heart skipped a beat. I had posted my blog late at night and had done so purposefully to avoid an instant reaction from Rosie or my Mom. But with as late as it was, realistically they were the only ones that would be calling.I checked the caller I.D. on the phone before answering. It was Rosie, which was better than Mom. I took a deep breath and clicked to accept the call.“Hey, Rosie,” I attempted cheerfully.“Hey, Big Sis!” she exclaimed.“What are you doing up so late?” I asked.“I fell asleep kind of early, and then the baby woke me up. My sleep schedule is so crazy now, thi
Well, the time has come. Every beginning has an end, and my relationship has found its end. Two weeks ago, Mr. Perfect Match and I broke up and it is time for the corresponding blog post (because blogging about breakups is the best way to move on, right??)It’s not the typical kind of post I’m used to writing. My life is filled with many more bad dates than bad breakups, and maybe that’s a good thing. But it also means that I’m entering new territory without the right map to guide me. They say it’s better to have loved and lost than never to have lovedI stopped writing and glared at the screen. I highlighted the last sentence and hit delete as if the force of my click would hurt the words as they left the page. Love. It was like a bad word, something I had been conditioned not to say. And Gabe deserved no exception, even if it would appease an old stupid cliché about breakups.After a few moments of contemplation I picked up again where I left off.Time is a weird thing. It has the a
The plane ride to Orlando only took less than an hour, but it felt like an eternity. I spent the entire trip trying to hide my sobs, but of course it was impossible. Luckily, I had sat in the window seat and was able to face away from everyone while I cried, but I still knew that people were looking at me. The older lady sitting next to me even asked if there was anything she could do to help. I responded with, “If you can make men honest, that would help.” She just laughed and said, “I don’t think there’s anything I can do about that one.”My makeup was ruined, my hair was a mess and the clothes I had on were a day old. Needless to say, I wasn’t looking like I was ready to hit the town when I crawled off of the plane. It didn’t matter, though. Cora didn’t care what I looked like. She wouldn’t judge me. That was why I had come to see her in the first place.I had only taken a few steps out of the front doors of the airport before I heard Cora calling out my name. I hadn’t even gotten
After storming out of Gabe’s office, I went back to the bedroom and got dressed as quickly as possible. I was teeming with emotion, but I didn’t want to let out a single sob. I could save that for later, when I could enjoy a pint if ice cream and a few days of binge watching my favorite TV show. But for now, I needed to keep it together and act tough.So once I was dressed, I gathered my makeup from his countertop in his bathroom and tossed everything into my overnight bag. To think, I was considering what it would be like to spend my life with the guy and now I was doing everything possible to speed up the process of leaving his house for good.I can’t believe this. I should have known that it would only be a matter of time before something like this would happen to me, I thought. Why did I fool myself into thinking I could actually meet a decent guy?I zipped up my bag and tossed it over my shoulder. Before leaving the bedroom, I took one last look at the bed, where the blankets wer