Your friends' new place is by the Red River; You notice the wood signs hung on their wall: Stencils with the first letters of their names comprised of corks from bottles they emptied and another--"Pasta and wine, good times". When they talk, it’s about parties with beer, wine, and ***** spilling out of cups, down dresses onto the floor; recalls of day-drinking and smoking cigars on the balcony in college and oh, just last-night’s partying yes, at Jason’s wedding reception in the Ramada ballroom. Don’t forget the leprechaun loop of bars downtown on St. Patrick’s. or the party buses that bring you there; the first stop will have a schooner waiting with Long Island iced tea. This talk of drinking makes you all hungry, at Barbacoa you order tacos and margaritas. and think of ordering another round. Another day, you drink pink lemonade at Olive Garden and ask, How would it taste in a cocktail? At work, coworkers laugh off a hard day and someone says, “I need a drink.” And someone adds, “We all need drinks.” At the bonfire on Saturday night, someone laughs about the campus’s bikes being thrown and found in the Elm Coulee and another adds, “We like to drink here.” Someone says, “That’s why I have a big cup.” Who needs a bike anyway? They have cars. Some of your friends drinking are driving home. When the cup passes to you, you sip some. The fire flickers and blows smoke that flies into the wind over the rest of town, over a river that can’t quench its thirst.