The skeleton sat in his chair, legs crossed nicely at the knees, head tilted back and eyes somehow closed.
He pressed a cold cloth to the bare bone of his forehead and sighed the sound of emptiness.
He was quite lovely, the white of his limbs unencumbered by dusty flesh,
and seemed to know it, his form reposed in the chair like a throne.
He acknowledged me without Looking. And spoke.
He didn’t tell me what it was like to die.
He didn’t explain the sensation of skin and strong muscle and ***** tissue rotting, falling away, consumed by the vermin of the earth.
His words were brief, for his jaw was unused to such human movements. But he said to me a few precious simplicities. And then left me to wither away.
“A truth: To be human is to be Heavy. To be dead is to be Light. But when goes the weight of Beating hearts, So leaves the substance Which Gives death itself Meaning.”