I look at you under the cabin arms around her peek-a-boo waist, rubbing her skin with the thin layer of spilt beer on your hands. The snow is falling in little specs like words out of your mouth, the lights inside keep dimming with the slaps of people's hands hitting the ceiling as they dance to the beat of cheap pop music, cigarette smoke waving the frozen air like paint mixing on a palette. Sloppy, you turn to me letting go of her rubbing your eyes trying to catch yourself on the pillar to your right. Another swig of your drink, you ask where I've been. I didn't know how to answer. I've always been here. She comes up to your side, leaning into your ribs like a bridge that carry her over to your lips. You looked at me to say something, but your tongue was too busy tasting the liquor in her mouth. I turn my head tucking the hair behind my ear pretending I was anywhere but here. She pulls away with such sound just to make sure I heard her poison your sweet candy center with promises of bare and willing. With one giant tug she immediately has your hand in her front pocket and looks at me with glassy eyes full of determination a smirk with glances towards you, gray sweatshirt perfection, then back at me just so I know that she won with pursed lips and a chuckle.
As she wildly begs you to come inside, your reluctantly turn but look back at me with the clearest definition: "I'm sorry, but this is the way it is." Yes, this is the way it is. You, head spinning with intoxication partying back inside, because you don't know what else better there is to do waking up in the morning not knowing who's next to you. And then there's me, standing out in the cold putting my hands back in their mittens looking up at the yellow light in the window catching your silhouette wrapping around hers, but backing away without a tear not even tempted to go in and stop you, I've lost you. and I'm sorry but that's the way it is.