Chapter 1 The Conditional Feminist
Chapter 1: The Conditional Feminist
Lizzie
My name is Lizzie, and if I’ve done something wrong, I’d prefer prison. Not this.
Ten blind dates in one month. Ten different men handpicked by my mother like I'm some overripe fruit she's desperate to sell before I spoil.
My only crime?
I turned twenty-three and didn’t come with a husband.
“When I’m entertaining colleagues,” The man sitting across from me said as he folded his napkin with ceremonial precision, “I expect my wife to stay out of sight unless she’s serving something.”
Kenneth Greene. The tenth and the worst one this month. And by all indications, my mother's favorite.
I blinked.
Not because I hadn’t heard him. Because I wanted to confirm that the sentence had indeed existed outside a Victorian etiquette manual and inside my present reality.
Kenneth smiled across the table with the benevolent patience of a man who had never, in his entire life, been contradicted. “You strike me as someone who understands her place. I’m certain we won’t encounter any difficulties in that department.”
“Oh… I see.”
Ten men. Ten restaurants. Ten variations of the same conversation delivered with different accents, different watches, different bank accounts — but identical expectations.
Ten reminders that my mother loved the idea of me married far more than she loved me happy. She cherished the idea of a wealthy son-in-law and a powerful last name.
Somehow, my thoughts went back to Reese Blackwood like it usually did these days. My cousin's brother-in-law. The last decent man I'd encountered.
And the man I gave my virginity to in a one night stand nearly two years ago.
The man with broad, solid shoulders that had pressed me firmly into the sheets and destroyed every filthy book I've read.
The man whose eyes were greener than the ring on Kenneth’s index finger.
That is a reckless night I'd told myself to forget a thousand times. And yet, every single man my mother paraded in front of me, I measured against him.
Kenneth's smile was too smug. His jaw too soft. His voice too self-satisfied. His shoulders too sloppy.
None of them were Reese. None of them could ever be.
How would my mother react if I'd brought back the son of the ex-president home as a husband? Blackwood was a much stronger last name than Greene. So I bet she'd be happy.
Then at least I wouldn't have to be stuck in hell with Kenneth. But alas, things with Reese ended up quite messy.
Across from me, Kenneth was speaking again. He had been speaking continuously, in fact. I suspected he would continue speaking even if oxygen were removed from the room.
“Your mother mentioned you enjoy writing,” he said, clearly encouraged by what he mistook for receptive silence. “A charming hobby. But naturally, after marriage, my wife wouldn’t need to concern herself with career ambitions. My income is more than sufficient. Domestic focus creates harmony.”
My mother had described him as traditional. Apparently, that meant he intended to marry me, silence me, and store me neatly beside the cookware.
I pictured gently placing his head inside the bread basket and closing the lid. Harmony indeed.
Smile. Sip. Breathe. Just a little longer, Lizzie.
I smiled pleasantly. “You don’t seem to seem to like intelligent women, Kenneth.” I noted.
He did not flinch. “I admire intelligent women, Lizzie. As long as they know when not to use it.”
Ah. A rare specimen. The Conditional Feminist
He straightened slightly, as though preparing to deliver a particularly impressive revelation. “Our mothers spoke again this morning.”
I set my glass down carefully. “Yes?”
“She mentioned something admirable about you.”
My spine went rigid. I had learned through long experience that nothing my mother described as admirable benefited me.
Kenneth’s expression softened into what he clearly considered reverence. “She said you’ve preserved yourself for me. That you’re a virgin.”
The words settled on the table like something unpleasant and sticky.
He watched me expectantly, eyes gleaming with satisfaction—the look of a collector who had just confirmed the authenticity of a prized acquisition.
“I’ve always intended to marry a chaste woman,” he said proudly. “The idea of a wife who has been with other men is… revolting, frankly. One expects purity because experience in a wife suggests poor judgment. I find it difficult to respect women who arrive with history.”
Something inside my chest went very still.
I lifted my glass again, studying the wine as though evaluating a scientific specimen.
“How interesting,” I said calmly. “Are you a virgin, Kenneth?”
He blinked. Then he laughed — not nervously, but confidently. The laugh of a man who had never once imagined his own standards might apply to him.
“Of course not,” he scoffed. “I’m a man.”
I nodded once as I took a sip from my glass, as though he had just confirmed a minor detail on a form.
Then I spat the wine directly into his face.
“What the hell, Lizzie!” he shouted, half rising from his chair. “Are you crazy?!”
Before he could recover, I lifted the glass again and emptied the remaining wine over his head. Red droplets clung to his eyelashes. A thin line of Cabernet slid down the bridge of his nose with tragic dignity.
The restaurant fell silent. Conversations dissolved mid-sentence. A fork clinked somewhere in the distance.
Kenneth stared at me, stunned, blinking through the wine.
I placed the empty glass gently on the table. “You,” I said evenly, “are a pig. A remarkably confident, spectacularly self-righteous pig.”
His mouth opened and closed without sound.
“For someone so concerned with purity,” I continued, rising from my chair and smoothing my dress, “it’s remarkable how comfortable you are with hypocrisy. You want ownership, not partnership. You want obedience, not respect. And you want standards that apply to women but evaporate the moment they inconvenience you.”
My voice managed to remain calm throughout and it actually surprised me.
“I would rather marry a houseplant,” I added thoughtfully. “At least a fern contributes oxygen.”
I picked up my bag.
“Oh, and for future reference,” I said, meeting his eyes, “my personal history is not a commodity for your approval. Nor is it my mother’s bargaining chip.”
I leaned slightly closer, offering him the courtesy of clarity.
“But if you must know,” I whispered, “I am not a virgin. So yes—by your standards, I’m revolting. And as such, this won’t work out.”
Color flooded his face beneath the wine. His hands clenched on the table, knuckles whitening.
“Your mother speaks about a traditional woman for her son,” I added softly, “but she’s also the woman who wears turtlenecks in summer to hide what your father does to her.”
“Shut your mouth,” he hissed, voice low and trembling with fury. “I'll get you for this.”
I smiled pleasantly. “Have a lovely evening, Mr. Greene.”
Then I turned and walked toward the exit.
Behind me, his voice rose in indignant outrage. A waiter hurried forward. Someone gasped. Glassware rattled.
I laughed.
Outside, the night air struck my face and I inhaled deeply, feeling tension unwind from my shoulders.
Nine terrible dates had been endurance. Ten had been education.
“I'm never doing this again.” I muttered to myself.
I pulled out my phone and opened my messages to my mother. My thumbs hovered over the screen, ready to deliver a masterpiece of righteous fury.
Then I paused. Deleted the draft. Switched off the phone.
Why inform her when she would soon be informed by an outraged network of mothers who believed matrimony was a competitive sport?
Somewhere in this city, I decided, there had to be at least one man who did not require basic humanity explained to him like a household appliance manual.
My mind drifted back to Reese. Who knows what he's up to now. Does he have a girlfriend? Is he still single? Is he still mad at me for what I did?
I sighed. “Close that chapter already, Lizzie. Reese has probably moved on.” I muttered to myself.
I began walking home and I did not look back. Each step toward home felt like walking towards what was out to get me. The quiet stretched as the city seemed to hold its breath with me.
When I reached my street, the house stood at the end like a verdict. Every light was on. Even from the gate, I could see her silhouette through the curtains—still, upright, clearly waiting for me.
My pulse quickened.
This wasn’t over. This was the beginning. I reached for the door handle. But something shifted inside…
And then… the door opened before I could even touch it.
Next Chapter
Chapters
1. Chapter 1 The Conditional Feminist
2. Chapter 2 What Did You Do?
3. Chapter 3 You’re Selling Me
4. Chapter 4 Lauren
5. Chapter 5 Who Are You?
6. Chapter 6 Your Companions
7. Chapter 7 This Chaos
8. Chapter 8 Focus, Reese
9. Chapter 9 Try Me
10. Chapter 10 You And Me 
11. Chapter 11 I Can Try 
12. Chapter 12 A Week 
13. Chapter 13 I Love To Cook 
14. Chapter 14 I’m Jealous 
15. Chapter 15 Just Like That 
16. Chapter 16 You Want Him 
17. Chapter 17 Was I? 
18. Chapter 18 Little Liar 
19. Chapter 19 Prison Orange 
20. Chapter 20 Game On 
21. Chapter 21 Grab Me 
22. Chapter 22 Take That Back 
23. Chapter 23 A Woman’s Instincts 
24. Chapter 24 My Favorite 
25. Chapter 25 A Spectacle 
26. Chapter 26 I Know You 
27. Chapter 27 Pull Over 
28. Chapter 28 The Man On Duty 
29. Chapter 29 A Solo Ride 
30. Chapter 30 A Family Thing 
31. Chapter 31 Not A Saint 
32. Chapter 32 For How Long? 
33. Chapter 33 It’s Not Fair 
34. Chapter 34 Fragile Flower 
35. Chapter 35 That’s My Girl 
36. Chapter 36 Just My Body? 
37. Chapter 37 We’ve Got Time 
38. Chapter 38 The Reunion 
39. Chapter 39 You’re Grieving 
40. Chapter 40 He’ll Push Back 
41. Chapter 41 Lucky Me 
42. Chapter 42 Meant To Be 
43. Chapter 43 It’s Dead 
44. Chapter 44 Bad Things 
45. Chapter 45 That’s Not Love 
46. Chapter 46 Break That Cycle 
47. Chapter 47 You’re… Red
48. Chapter 48 My Fault 
49. Chapter 49 No Real Risk 
50. Chapter 50 He’d Heard Enough 
51. Chapter 51 It’s Him 
52. Chapter 52 A Choice? 
53. Chapter 53 It’s About Hudson 
54. Chapter 54 Family Comes First 
55. Chapter 55 Crazy Over You
56. Chapter 56 You Were Saying? 
57. Chapter 57 Not A Word 
58. Chapter 58 You're Mine Now 
59. Chapter 59 A Terrible Cook 
60. Chapter 60 They Love Me 
61. Chapter 61 Whirlwind Romance 
62. Chapter 62 Live A Little 
63. Chapter 63 I’m Home 
64. Chapter 64 The Most Precious 
65. Chapter 65 The Fairytale Version 
66. Chapter 66 Trying Too Hard 
67. Chapter 67 Risqué It Is 
68. Chapter 68 Brawls And Catfights 
69. Chapter 69 God Complex 
70. Chapter 70 All The Best 
71. Chapter 71 He’s Always Welcome 
72. Chapter 72 Little Terrors 
73. Chapter 73 My Everything 
74. Chapter 74 Change Is Unnecessary 
75. Chapter 75 Let’s Just Sleep 
76. Chapter 76 One Wild Night 
77. Chapter 77 A Lying Bride 
78. Chapter 78 I’m Her Fiancé 
79. Chapter 79 A Bachelorette Party? 
80. Chapter 80 Only The Bride May Enter 
81. Chapter 81 Punish Me? 
82. Chapter 82 Say It Again 
83. Chapter 83 Talk To Me 
84. Chapter 84 My Wedding Day 
85. Chapter 85 It Was Perfect 
86. Chapter 86 Almost Home, Darling 
87. Chapter 87 Untitled Chapter
88. Chapter 88 Bad Press 
89. Chapter 89 Dangerous Delusion 
90. Chapter 90 The Full Story 
91. Chapter 91 Share No Blood 
92. Chapter 92 Poked The Bear 
93. Chapter 93 Eating For Two 
94. Chapter 94 Blackwood Family Games 
95. Chapter 95 Rich People Are Freaky 
96. Chapter 96 Masks On
97. Chapter 97 Outsmarting The Patriarch 
98. Chapter 98 Diamonds Were Universal 
99. Chapter 99 I Value You
100. Chapter 100 Ready Or Not 
101. Chapter 101 Rich People Club 
102. Chapter 102 The Star Of Tonight 
103. Chapter 103 The Highest Bidder 
104. Chapter 104 Don’t Freak Out 
105. Chapter 105 My Father Did This 
106. Chapter 106 I’ll Leave 
107. Chapter 107 We’ll Rebuild 
108. Chapter 108 It’s A Skill 
109. Chapter 109 Even Monsters Get Old 
110. Chapter 110 I’m Next 
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