I once saw a man sitting at the bar of one of my favorite dives, and he looked so handsome in his profile, his lips gingerly kissing a bottle of craft beer, his suit fitted just right against his sculpted frame.
He stared intently through his trendy glasses at the glow of his laptop screen, and I imagined he was reading something involving important business, or maybe a book about a new age philosophy as he pondered the meaning of life.
He seemed so comfortable and familiar in his solitude, like he traveled often and had grown to love himself immensely; he valued his alone time.
I imagined he went to some ivy league school, like Brown or Cornell, where he studied business and made his parents proud. He still likes to learn and finds the world to be a blissfully curious place.
I was enthralled with the picture I had drawn in my head as I gazed at his strong jaw and white smile, and I couldn't help but whisper to my friend how infatuated I was with the view from my seat in our wooden booth, when my friend chuckled nervously, his brows downturned as he erased all I had drawn and replaced the picture with he's homeless.