I wanted to
put in a full price offer but Mike talked me into going in lower. It was already after 8pm, so Mike warned me
that I probably wouldn’t hear back that night.
I still jumped every time my phone vibrated. Or when I heard something that sounded remotely
like a vibrating phone.
Once I got home, I pulled my phone
out. I had several texts from Kelly and
Erica, and a response from Dan. It said,
“Sure, let me know when. Good luck!” I was glad he understood, and I texted him
back, “Well, I just made an offer! And how about tomorrow?” I got an immediate text back saying, “Awesome! Good luck!
I have dinner plans tomorrow but could do drinks around 9. Otherwise I’m free Saturday.” We settled on drinks on Friday, then I
text Kelly and Erica to tell them the good news, then headed home.
I didn’t hear anything that night,
and I didn’t sleep. I lay awake,
alternately tossing and turning, then staring at the ceiling, imagine how I
would furnish and decorate my new house.
Then I’d have to remind myself that it wasn’t my house yet.
By the next
morning, I was anxious. The house went
on the market today, and I had hoped to have a deal made before that happened,
so someone else didn’t come in and make a better offer. I wished that Mike hadn’t talked me out of
offering full asking price. Then I
reminded myself that he knew what he was doing and I did not.
I tried to
not be glued to my phone while I worked on Friday, but it was nearly impossible
not to be. Luckily, my office was fairly
casual and no one cared about our phone use, as long as we weren’t ignoring our
job duties. I finally got a call from
Mike around 3, and after asking one of my coworkers to cover the phones for me,
I hurried outside and quickly called him back.
“Well?” I asked, when he answered.
“Hi,
Jenna,” he replied with a laugh. “I’m
sorry, they didn’t accept your offer.
They countered at full asking price.”
“Well
that’s stupid,” I grumbled. “Let’s just
do that.”
“I think
you should ask for them to pay closing costs if you’re going to pay asking,” he
suggested.
I sighed in
frustration. “I just want this house,” I
told him. “Let’s just make it happen.”
“Jenna,
they haven't listed it yet.”
“What do
you mean?” I asked, not fully understanding him.
“I mean,
they planned to list it today, but they haven’t done anything with it yet. I assume that means they plan to sell it to
you. Let’s ask for closing costs.”
I
considered this and then relented.
“Fine,” I agreed.
“You’re
making the right decision,” Mike assured me.
“I’ll call you back as soon as I hear something.”
As it
turned out, I didn’t have to wait for long.
Mike called me back about a half hour later. I again asked a coworker to cover the phones,
which she did gladly. The whole office
was about as excited as I was to find out about the house. “Hello?” I answered, a little more politely
than I had earlier.
“Congratulations!”
Mike crowed. “The house is yours! Pending financing and the inspection, of
course.” But I barely even heard that
part, because I was too busy jumping up and down and squealing. Yes, actually jumping and squealing. Don’t pretend like you wouldn’t! “They also agreed to the quick close that you
wanted, but that means you need to move fast to get your inspection scheduled
and get stuff taken care of with the bank.
You don’t have time to lose on this, Jenna.”
Luckily, I
had already done my inspection research and had the numbers of two different
inspectors that were highly recommended.
As soon as I hung up with Mike, I called the first one. I left a message, then called the
second. Someone answered, and I managed
to get an inspection scheduled for Monday.
I decided
to put off calling and cancelling my lease until after the inspection, just in
case. I had a feeling I would lose my
entire deposit, but the rental market was pricey enough here that I’d still
actually save some money over the course of the year. Provided, of course, that nothing
catastrophic happened where I’d need to replace or fix anything major.
I did,
however, reschedule my movers. I figured
regardless of what happened with this house, I’d be moving one way or the
other, so I’d better just reschedule and not cancel. They weren’t very happy with the last minute change, and I
apologized profusely and ended up paying a rescheduling fee, but got them
rescheduled for when I wanted them.
When I went
back inside, an expectant head popped out of the office closest to my desk. “Well?” asked Rachael, one of my favorite
coworkers. I couldn’t hide my huge grin
and her face lit up. “You bought a
house!” she shrieked, earning a disapproving glare from one of the more senior
employees. “You bought a house!” she
repeated, her volume much more reasonable.
“I bought a
house!” I confirmed, grinning like an idiot.
“Well, I committed to buying a house, provided the inspection goes okay
and the bank comes through with the loan.”
Rachael
rolled her eyes at me. “Stop it,” she
said. “Let’s do happy hour after work!”
“I have a
date at 9, but could definitely do something right after work,” I agreed.
Rachael
cocked an eyebrow. “A date at 9? What kind of date is that? A ‘date’?” she asked, using air quotes around
the word date.
Just then,
the office phone rang, and I hurried back to my desk. “I’ll tell you about it after work,” I
promised. I made it to the phone just in
time to pick it up. “Smithson Staffing
Solutions, this is Jenna, how can I help you today?” I answered brightly. Rachael snorted. She said I had a special voice that I used
for answering the phone, and she thought it was hilarious.
Luckily,
the last hour of work went quickly, and Rachael and I walked over to a nearby
restaurant that had great happy hour specials.
We ordered drinks and a couple appetizers to share, and then I filled
her in on my date. “It’s just a second
date,” I explained. “We were supposed to
go to dinner last night but I bailed on him to go look at this house, so we
rescheduled for tonight.”
“At 9?” she
asked skeptically.
“Yes, at
9,” I replied, rolling my eyes. “I’m not
looking for anything serious anyway, so don’t start on your ‘No man that wants
to be your boyfriend is okay with just taking you out for drinks in the middle
of the night’ speech.”
“I don’t
know what you’re talking about,” she scoffed.
“I’ve heard
you give the same speech to Katie and Erin,” I pointed out. “And anyway, 9 isn’t even that late.”
Rachael shrugged. “When you catch feelings and he’s 1am
booty-calling you, don’t come crying to me.”
“I won’t,”
I assured her. “But when he catches
feelings and I just want a 1am booty call, I might come crying to you. Because that’s annoying.” She laughed and let me change the
subject. We stayed for a couple hours
before I figured I should probably head home and get ready for my date.
Kevin was
in the living room when I got there, so I took the opportunity to update
him. “My moving date has changed. I’m
having movers come on the first now.
Sorry for the switch.”
“Okay,” he
replied. He didn’t move his eyes from
the TV. I didn’t wait for him to say
anything else, I just turned and walked downstairs. I jumped in the shower, careful not to wet my
hair. I redid my makeup, used my curling
wand to put some loose waves in my hair, and pulled on a casual but cute
outfit.
“Going out?”
Kevin asked, as I came upstairs and headed to the closet for my boots and coat.
“Yep,” I
answered, not saying anything else.
“Cool,” he
replied, sounding bored. I pulled my
boots and coat on, grabbed my purse from where I’d set it on the floor, and
left without another word to him.
I was in such a hurry that I didn’t even realize how early I
was until I parked. It was only
8:40. I briefly considered just going in
and getting a table and having a drink by myself while I waited, then quickly
discarded that idea, because I was just not confident enough to drink by myself
in a bar. So I fiddled with my phone,
reapplied my lip gloss three times, and managed to smudge the wing of my
eyeliner while trying to de-clump a tiny section of eyelashes—all in the span
of a mere 4 minutes. I was so intent on
distracting myself that I jumped when my phone sounded from my purse on the
passenger seat.
“I got here a little early so I grabbed us a
table,” Dan’s text said. I laughed
to myself that he had done exactly what I hadn’t. I didn’t want to look like a crazy person, so
I forced myself to wait 3 minutes before I replied. “Just
got here, I’ll be in shortly!”
I checked
my makeup and hair one more time and then headed inside. “Hi,” I greeted Dan as I found the table he
had taken over.
“Hi,” he
replied. “You look great.”
“Thanks,” I
said. I realized as we greeted each
other that our greetings sounded a little stiff. I chalked it up to nerves, but noticed that I
didn’t really feel any sort of excitement when I saw him. This
isn’t the movies, Jen, I scolded myself in my head. And
anyway, you’re not looking for anything serious. You’ve just got to get back into the game.
“So, any word on the house?” he
asked, when I returned from the bar with a drink. I recounted the story for him, and he seemed
genuinely happy for me. I relaxed a
little and we settled into easy conversation.
About two
hours into our date, Dan frowned thoughtfully, and then said, “This is really
random, but can I ask what you’re looking for?”
“What I’m
looking for?” I repeated. “What do you
mean?”
“Like, are
you looking for a relationship, something casual, you know?”
“Oh!” I
replied, blushing. “Obviously. Something casual. I’m not in a hurry to get in a relationship,
so casual dating and…well…” I blushed even darker, realizing what I just
implied.
Dan bit his
lip, trying not to laugh at me. “Got
it,” he said, nodding and saving me from whatever embarrassing thing was about
to explode out of my mouth.
I took a
long drink of my gin and tonic to give myself a chance to collect myself. “What about you?” I asked, when I had it
together again.
“The same,”
he replied, taking a casual sip of his beer.
“If I find something great, then that’s awesome. But I’m not looking for it.”
I thought
that going back to regular conversation would be hard after that random
interjection, but it wasn’t. We ended up staying another couple of hours before
parting ways.
Since we’d both made our
intentions clear, I hoped that the evening would end with at least a kiss, if
not an invitation back to his place. It
had been far too long since I’d kissed a new person (Jamie didn’t count,
because I’ve kissed him before), and I was slightly giddy with anticipation. But
Dan just hugged me and promised to text to set something else up for next
week. Disappointed, I got into my car,
wondering if he’d actually even text.
I was all worried her ex messed with her purse because she left it on the floor in the room with him.
ReplyDeleteI feel like Jenna is settling because she just wants to cleanse Kevin from her system and get on with the moving on process. I hope she finds someone who makes her feel sparks soon - it's not just something that happens in movies!
ReplyDeleteOMG, I honestly totally relate to Jenna's home-buying situation!! I feel like I'm reading about my life last month. hahaha
ReplyDeleteI agree with Allie ^, I think the *thing* she's looking for doesn't only exist in the movies... she can find it - she just has to be patient! I don't necessarily think she's "settling" though - she has openly stated she's just looking for casual and fun (which to me means a FWB/hooking up situation; nothing too serious, and does not imply settling!).