A Good Woman On His Mind-The Trials and
Tribulations of Lance Lawrence
By Seth Garth
Sam Lowell had never seen anybody as
skirt –crazy as his old friend Lance Lawrence, a guy that he had met in
college, met at Boston University when by the luck the draw they became
roommates freshman year and had remained in contact, sometimes with serious
lapses of time, sometimes like now over forty years later almost daily. Day one
freshman year they had hardly gotten their books from the bookstore when Lance
had propositioned some young thing (his expression for the fair sex, for young
women, okay, which he has used until this day even though who he is speaking or
thinking of had lost the sweet bloom of youth long ago), Not only had propositioned
her but had coaxed her (Sam’s gentile word for a lot more than some innocent
coaxing) up into their dorm room on Bay State Road (leaving Sam, for the first
but not the last hanging somewhere not in the dorm). That seduction, no that
coaxing a definite no-no in the hard-pressed later 1960s when freshman were
supposed officially by the in locus parentis school authorities to be above such
sexual desire and ways to relieve those desires. Nothing ever came of that
indiscretion and like a million other Lance indiscretions for which he became
something like campus famous never looked back, never thought such conduct was
anything but the natural order. Lance’s natural order and if pressed today
would probably wonder what the hell anybody was talking about, making a big
deal about it as just the way he operated in his silver spoon world. And he had
had since those fresh bloom days three, count them, three full-fledged divorces
and a myriad of affairs to put paid to that sense of wonder.
No question Lance was a good-looking
guy, a good-looking guy in that sly, wicked way that guys back in the day
looked to the opposite sex and which no longer commands those longing loving
looks from forlorn midnight sitting by the telephone young women who charted
his life and theirs by their meaningful glances (now waiting almost anyplace by
the cellphone). Tall, not too tall, lanky, a little wiry which meant don’t mess
with him and which on occasion especially under drink was very good advice, a
long tousle of dark black hair and bedroom eyes (that remark made Sam mad when
girls, his date girls, would ask him who the guy with the bedroom blue eyes was
with a slightly suggestive sexual emphasis that usually did rouse to his
benefit later in the evening). So, yes, Lance was a piece of work. And although
Lance had lost several steps in the aging process he still believed that he had
what it took to get the now no longer young “mature” women who engaged his
attention a quick tumble just like that first freshman day.
So yes skirt-crazy as ever. Skirt-crazy
through those three marriages two which broke up due to that very chasing (the
third, his first flighty one when he expected to be shipped out to Vietnam and
had worried himself to perdition that he would die unsung, and unmarried, was
due to her chasing some football player type while he was in Dear John Vietnam
without a scratch on him). Of late Lance had been momentarily down in the dumps
due to the break-up of his latest affair, an affair with Minnie Murphy whom he
had had an affair with, the gentile way that he put it to Sam one night over
drinks at Sam’s favorite watering hole in Cambridge, Joey’s Grille, although
they had been shacked up for at least a decade before she gave him his walking
papers. The breakdown of the Lance crisis had not been that he had done his
damnest to earn those walking papers by his ever-lasting philandering, which he
had, or at least that went unspoken but you never knew with quiet Minnie, a habit
of hers drilled in childhood by a drunken father who made it his business to
shut his whole brood up. No, Lance was beside himself with the fact that he was
lady-less, was without a companion after an almost endless string going back, well,
going back to that first freshman wayward day. Had been alone almost a month at
that point.
Lance at least in Sam’s presence had
never before been known to be reflective about his romantic downturns so Sam
was rather surprised when Lance mentioned how his inattention, his distance,
his indifference to Minnie’s feelings and he self-absorption had left Minnie no
choice but to flee the scene, to go on her own quiet quest to “find herself” without
the tensions of having to bear whatever mood Lance was in at any given time.
Sam
should have known that such self-analysis was a “cover,” a convenient way to
introduce some latest scheme to grab some skirt rather than own up to his
boorishness with Minnie. (Sam, a victim of his own two divorces and scads of
college-weighted kids always had a soft spot in his heart for Minnie, especially
after one meaningful night when he half-drunk brought up the subject and Minnie,
gently as was her way always, told him that she had some feelings that way too
but Lance was her man and that was that, damn Lance.)
What had Lance down in the dumps was
his latest “search” for some skirt. See, as he told Sam that bleary
self-confession barroom drinking night he had recently joined a senior-oriented
in-line dating service, Seniors Please, and had been hard-pressed to find his
niche, his place in such an off-hand way of meeting women, “mature” women but Sam
knew in his mind Lance was working the same game plan he had used to floor
women since he was about six. Lance, as long as Sam had seen him operate under
all weathers, always depended on those piecing bedroom eyes and a gift of blarney
that would make any honest Irishmen weep for their inadequacies. That meant
that he would meet some woman at a bar or at work (or at a bookstore when that
was in style and there were bookstores, brick and mortar bookstores, where
women would congregate to get their weekly reading materials and as it turned
out when he found out later lingering around if any prospective men within
fifty miles of the place the idea being that a guy who at least read a book was
a likely prospect. Yeah, the bar was pretty low.). Then work his magic based on
some chemistry between them or some lust (on her part as likely as his also something
Lance had found out from experience).
This on-line dating business was
ass-backward. You filled out a “profile” of rather simpleton and non-responsive
questions, some bullshit prompted lines about what you were looking for (sex of
course, not only the province of the young), and a decent photo. The hook
though was when you placed your profile on-line and got a few bites you couldn’t
respond because you were not a member of the service and had to pay the entry
fee which Lance begrudgingly did. Once he did that he got very few responses
that he was interested in (what he would later find were benighted trolls, a
blight on all social media sites and something he had never expected “cougars,”
older women “stalking” younger men, that could be an eighty year old hunting
for sixty year old, Jesus). The photo and bullshit written profile did not play
to his strong suit, did not play to that chemistry. The old days were long gone
when you met somebody live say at a party, clicked, and exchanged phone numbers
(or when out to parked car if it was that kind of night). So what was an “active”
man to do when there were no other obvious ways to meet women when there were none
at work or in the law profession in general who were around his age and were
interested in anything but making partner, where the “meat market” bars were
way behind him and where his hijinks in the art museum he was advised to go to in
order to meet women only gave him a headache.
Lance made Sam laugh with some of the
stuff he mentioned he had run into (out loud because some of the situations were
funny and secretly that finally the playboy of the western world had been taken
down a peg or two). That cougar older woman hunting young man business but also
the way Lance talked about what women, seemingly rational and intelligent women,
put on-line. The expected bullshit “profile” stuff about finding a soul-mate
and eternal love but also some impossible stuff like seriousness, good manners,
and gentlemanly behavior. Jesus, Lance told Sam what the hell did they expect
from guys who probably had at least a passing acquaintance with the 1960s and
looser styles and mores. But the photographs were the tip-off that Lance was in
deep trouble. He could not believe that these same women who were looking for
eternal love unabashedly put photographs of themselves with their broods of
grandchildren in the lead photographs (although Lance loved his own brood of
grandkids he hardly would advertise himself as grandpa of the year). Could not believe
that they put amply photographs of their pets (sometimes looking cuter than their
owners) among their selections. Had flipped out when one woman had a photograph
of her big bruiser of an adult son who looked like a professional football player
all surly beside his mother looking for all the world like he would bust some
guy’s nose if he looked cross-eyed at his dear mother.
Lance went on with his funny descriptions
until he and Sam had had enough to drink and decided to head for their respective
homes. As they parted after going out the door Lance said to Sam that he had to
go home and boot up the computer to see if greeklady123 or coolocean47 (on-line
monikers that everybody assumed on site) had responded to his messages. Yeah,
Lance was a skirt-crazy guy, no question.
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