The sour of the metal spoon clings to the roof of my mouth. My eyes water, lips pucker, as my hands tremble underneath the low light of the humid room.
The movement of time grates on my frozen nerves, thrumming within heated flesh. Death sits across from where I am, as I feast upon the offering that life gives.
The food is cold. It is ash in my mouth. For I have stuck to the same food for so long, I have found, I am not content with the serving I have chosen. But Death waits patiently, in his alcove of mystery.
It is time, and I know.
I dine with death, with spoon and fork in hand, and this is the food I have chosen.
This is the life I have lived. My choice that I ponder, and we concede. It doesn't matter what food we eat, with what we eat, and how we eat it. But by the end, I know.
I have chosen something terrible, and Death will hold me by the hand alone, as we leave, side by side, to the door outside.