100 Bad Dates: #80

Date #80 was a girl I blatantly hit on while walking my dog in the park one day. She was sitting under a tree, reading a book, and the way the light filtered through the leaves and bounced off of her dark hair made her look like an angel. Or a girl in a feminine hygiene commercial.

Date #80 was a girl I blatantly hit on while walking my dog in the park one day. She was sitting under a tree, reading a book, and the way the light filtered through the leaves and bounced off of her dark hair made her look like an angel. Or a girl in a feminine hygiene commercial.

Now I am not normally bold (I can count the people I have asked out on two hands), but I had just gone through a breakup and, prior to leaving the house, given myself a pep talk.

“Open your heart,” I told my reflection in the mirror, “It’s statistically impossible that every person in this city is a dick.”

(These are the things I say to mirror-self, along with “What’s wrong with your hair?” and “Go get ’em, Fergalicious!”)

She looked up from her book as we walked by and said, “Oh, hiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, little doggie!”

I was smitten.

We chatted about the weather (I know, duh, but it was sunny after days and days of funk), and I brought up how nice it was going to be for the music festival coming that weekend (smooth, right?). She slipped the word “ex-girlfriend” in the conversation (also smooth), so I asked if she wanted to get some lunch and go to the festival together.

She showed up looking boho chic, wearing a tank top, skirt, and flippy floppies. We nibbled on salads (girl-on-girl cuisine is weird) and made small talk at lunch. As far as depth is concerned, I’m no Loch Ness, but Date #80 was a puddle two days after the rain. She talked about “American Idol” and “The Bachelor,” her non-ironic love of bad music (Coldplay, I swear it’s true), and what she thought of A Million Little Pieces, the book I had seen her reading at the park. She was cute…and not terribly interesting.

We finished up and went to the festival. I remarked that one singer reminded me of Veruca Salt from Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory. She said, offhandedly, that she’d never seen it. How does one get to be a grown-up and not see that movie? I said that she could come over and watch it sometime. She said, “How about now?”

I gave Date #80 directions to my house, and we met up there. I had to use the restroom before starting the DVD and told her to feel free to have a seat on the sofa. I emerged just a few minutes later to a shocking sight.

She was on the couch on her knees, with her skirt pulled up to her waist and her panties pulled down. She was moaning slightly and doing a strange sort of fondling to her backside, which was facing me. I mean “facing” in the biblical sense. She didn’t seem to notice I was back in the room and continued to…well, yeah.

I made a slight throat clearing noise and she stood up quickly.

“Hi,” she said, obviously embarrassed.

“Hi,” I said, trying not to laugh or freak out. “What’s up?”

“Nothing,” she answered and pulled up her underwear, without a word about it.

I thought maybe she was coming on to me, but it appeared that she was just pleasuring herself on my sofa. I wasn’t particularly into the come-on and also not so excited about a stranger giving herself bootytickles in my living room.

We sat on opposite ends of the besmirched furniture during the movie, and the only sound was me quietly singing the Oompa-Loompa song. When she asked, “So, *where’s* the bathroom?” I told her and tried not to imagine what she was doing in there. After the movie she said I was right about it being good and she had to go.

Date #80 and I didn’t go through the motions of exchanging numbers. I spotted her in a nearby coffee shop about six months later, but I was coming as she was going, and we sort of pretended not to see each other. She was with some people, and I could see slight panic in her eyes when she caught sight of me, so I just kept walking. I guess I’ll never know exactly what was going on in my living room that night, but it looked like happy times. I did, however, give the couch cushions the Febreze-and-Flip.

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The Checkout Girl

The Checkout Girl is Jennifer Lemons. She’s a storyteller, comedian, and musician. If you don’t see her sitting behind her laptop, check the streets of Richmond for a dark-haired girl with a big smile running very, very slowly.

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