The way they loved each other was like a drug to those who watched. You found yourself entirely consumed by the exchanges taking place in their eyes, the conversation transpiring through body language, the sheer throbbing of their presences pressing up against one another. Many nights, when I returned home from an evening with them, I would fall into a chair and slowly let my breath expire. Whooshing outward, slow and soft, from every muscle and bone as if I’d been holding it in all night long. Their love wasn’t beautiful. No, that isn’t the word. It was… so straightforward, so unfeigned. It risked everything in its authenticity. It only knew how to be one way, come hell or high water, which often it did. I didn’t covet a love like that for myself. I just wanted to be near it. Like a drug, you know.And then, he was gone. She’d come around and it was as if you could see this empty space beside her, inside her. Her sorrow trailed her in a way that seemed to unsettle even the sidewalk in her wake. It was in watching her walk away from me one day, as my eyes traced the waves of grief rippling out from the soles of her shoes that I decided I would write her story. Their story. It wasn’t beautiful, it was better than that. In my drugged state of dependence, their story looked my deepest fears straight in the eye. Their story set me free.
