This heroine was far too forgiving, having dated exclusively for about a year, without preamble, he announces having joined Doctors Without Borders for two years...no discussion.
She recalls sitting across from him in a café thinking they might be heading towards a future, his announcement that’s he’s leaving, without giving her a further thought quickly diminishes any ideas of a future together. She told him to have a good life and walked out.
In retrospect, she thinks she might not have been mature in her reaction, actually her immaturity was falling into his arms, never questioning his sexual history during their time apart and now that he’s back, he wants to try again.
He is the consummate fraud, with double standards, he’s been with women in the past two years since his departure, whilst she’s remained the proverbial wallflower pining for him...her unquestionable capitulation rankled, especially her lack of willpower.
This double standard doesn’t equate to romance, that’s a lack of self-respect.
He didn’t want to think about her with anyone else. Was he a phony? Yes. He didn’t care to remember with WHOM he’d done in the last two years, because they’d meant nothing. He’d close his eyes and see Willow, and right after, he’d be filled with regret.
Not regretful enough to abstain, evidently.
He paused and she had no choice but to meet his gaze. “It’s been awhile, okay?”
“How long?”
“Unimportant. Move,”
“Babe, look at me.”
She had no choice. “What?”
“I need to know.” WHY - to further inflate his ‘ego’❓❓❓
“There’s been no one since you,” she admitted, hating how that sounded. Like she’d been pining for him.
Why do writers need to vilify the love interest to justify the plot❓I found this formulaic — and lacking in substance.