There were few diners in the place. I found a window booth, and put the sack with the mist bottle beside me.
Sue has a new boyfriend. Should've seen it coming. We couldn't last forever. (What was it we had, anyway?)
The waitress set coffee on my table. I'd ordered it, but wasn't really interested.
What to do with the bottle? Sue's bottle. The gift ungiven.
In the weeks I'd known her, she had excited me in a way I hadn't felt in years. Thought of her both day and night. Even dreamed of her. Found her already occupying my waking thoughts, before I'd pawed crust from my unfocused eyes.
I'd felt just this way about my wife, once. Identical giddiness. But after about six months had passed, that initial swoon was replaced by a calmer, settled love.
But it wasn't that delicious fever we'd begun with. The one that turned everything on its head. The change was natural, I supposed. Nothing green can stay, and all.
If that infatuation rush didn't subside, 80 year-olds would be chasing each other around dining room tables. Still, you do miss it.
I'd found it again, with Sue. I remembered the way her brown eyes crinkled when she laughed. And she often laughed. Those eyes always made me feel somehow weak and strong, simultaneously.
She was young. Vital. Effervescence curved.
I studied the scented mist bottle. Its sides boasted "Victoria's Secret," in upraised print.