her apartment and watching Bette Davis play a bitchy career woman on the late movie, some of these thoughts had come back to her and she paused with her teeth sunk into an apple, rather shocked at her own unfairness.
And a voice that had been silent for the best part of a yearânot so much the voice of conscience as that of perspectiveâspoke up abruptly. What you mean is, he sure isnât Dan. Isnât that it?
No! she assured herself, not just rather shocked now. I donât think about Dan at all anymore. That  . . . was a long time ago.
Diapers, the voice replied, that was a long time ago. Dan left yesterday.
She suddenly realized she was sitting in an apartment by herself late at night, eating an apple and watching a movie on TV that she cared nothing about, and doing it all because it was easier than thinking, thinking was so boring really, when all you had to think about was yourself and your lost love.
Very shocked now.
She had burst into tears.
She had gone out with Johnny the second and third time he asked, too, and that was also a revelation of exactly what she had become. She couldnât very well say that she had another date because it wasnât so. She was a smart, pretty girl, and she had been asked out a lot after the affair with Dan ended, but the only dates she had accepted were hamburger dates at the Den with Danâs roomie, and she realized now (her disgust tempered with rueful humor) that she had only gone on those completely innocuous dates in order to pump the poor guy about Dan. What load?
Most of her college girl friends had dropped over the horizon after graduation. Bettye Hackman was with the Peace Corps in Africa, to the utter dismay of her wealthy old-line-Bangor parents, and sometimes Sarah wondered what the Ugandans must make of Bettye with her white, impossible-to-tan skin and ash-blonde hair and cool, sorority good looks. Deenie Stubbs was at grad school in Houston. Rachel Jurgens had married her fella and was currently gestating somewhere in the wilds of western Massachusetts.
Slightly dazed, Sarah had been forced to the conclusion that Johnny Smith was the first new friend she had made in a long, long timeâand she had been her senior high school classâs Miss Popularity. She had accepted dates from a couple of the other Cleaves teachers, just to keep things in perspective. One of them was Gene Sedecki, the new math manâbut obviously a veteran bore. The other, George Rounds, had immediatelytried to make her. She had slapped his faceâand the next day heâd had the gall to wink at her as they passed in the hall.
But Johnny was fun, easy to be with. And he did attract her sexuallyâjust how strongly she couldnât honestly say, at least not yet. A week ago, after the Friday theyâd had off for the October teachersâ convention in Waterville, he had invited her back to his apartment for a home-cooked spaghetti dinner. While the sauce simmered, he had dashed around the corner to get some wine and had come back with two bottles of Apple Zapple. Like announcing his bathroom calls, it was somehow Johnnyâs style.
After the meal they had watched TV and that had turned to necking and God knew what that might have turned into if a couple of his friends, instructors from the university, hadnât turned up with a faculty position paper on academic freedom. They wanted Johnny to look it over and see what he thought. He had done so, but with noticeably less good will than was usual with him. She had noticed that with a warm, secret delight, and the ache in her own loinsâthe unfulfilled ache âhad also delighted her, and that night she hadnât killed it with a douche.
She turned away from the window and walked over to the sofa where Johnny had left the mask.
âHappy Halloween,â she snorted, and laughed a little.
âWhat?â Johnny called out.
âI said if you donât come pretty quick