out to be. There was a chance that without the rescue he mightâve backed off when she proved too much trouble, but in her gut she felt there was an equal chance he couldâve turned into a rapist.
Is this what itâs come to? she asked herself. Is it not enough to be let down, disappointed, that I have to be scared to death and real damn close to being a victim? Is that what looking for the right man gets you? Itâs utter madnessâand it has to stop. I have to quit looking for the right guy. I just canât take it anymore. The heartbreak is just too much.
Single women of twenty-nine never admit to anyone, not even their priests, that what they fear most is being alone forever, dying alone someday. Since she was about twenty-five, her greatest fear was that sheâd never finda partner. Cassie wasnât independent by conscious choice, it was by defaultâshe had no real family. She knew women her age whoâd had a couple or even a few false starts before they found the one, the forever guy, but Cassieâs longest relationship had lasted maybe four months. Four terrible months. She didnât know anyone like herselfâwith no living parents, no close relationships with siblings, no one. All she wanted was someone permanent who loved her, wanted children with her, a family man. She even wanted the bickering that went with all the regular adjustmentsâbickering that ended with making up and great sex. She hated it when someone said, âBut youâre still so young. Thereâs plenty of time!â Plenty? She would be thirty in six months and she had yet to meet someone who lasted six months with her. Or, âHeâll show up when you least expect itâ¦.â And then theyâd tell a story of meeting their own lifetime mate, but they were never more than thirty with a bad track record. If there was anything harder than facing the terrifying truth, it was having that fear not taken seriously. âYouâre beautiful and smartâyouâll find the right guy.â Well, it wasnât happening.
Her mind was jumbled with numbers. If Iâm thirty when I meet him, give it a year to see if weâre in sync, a year-long engagement, and then if I donât get pregnant easily, am I thirty-five before that first babyâs coming? And always: What if he doesnât come along until Iâm thirty-five? What if he never shows up? Reallyânever! I can get together with girlfriends and say, yeah, it would be great to find the right man, but, hey! If I donât, I havea lot more fun than you girls. After all, Iâve had sex with a couple dozen menâ¦.
âSteve,â she said in a tearful whisper. âIâve had sex with a couple dozen men.â She rubbed his floppy ears. âDo you still respect me?â
She had sex the first time at seventeen. She had been soooo in love. Sheâd had sex the last time five months ago. In thirteen years of sexual activity, it didnât take long to get to a couple dozen, or the vicinity; she couldnât actually count them without writing them down, an act that repelled her. Even so, she didnât feel promiscuous. She felt, frankly, completely lost.
Steve turned his beautiful black eyes up to her and made a sound. Then he licked her arm. He would never leave her.
But he would, she reminded herself, and Steve was her only real family. Big dogs didnât last long. The life span of a Weimaraner was twelve to fourteen years and Steve was five. What would she do without anyone special, without her mom, with a life so solitary? She had her girlfriendsâJulie, Marty and Bethâbut everyone else had parents, brothers, sisters, spouses.
The tears came harder. She missed her mom so much sometimes; they had been best friends. Even though she hadnât gone to live with her when sheâd moved away, theyâd still talked all the timeâtwo or three times a week for an hour at a
Janwillem van de Wetering