“Hey, look, the moon's beautiful tonight.” He said to the woman lying beside him.
By the lake, at two in the dawn. He flips the rock, and it docked in the water—creating an enormous sound to crush the ghostly silence, where they rest amid the fallen woods and the hidden lake.
He chuckled and turned to her side and smiled.
“You are such a beauty, Delilah.” He pinches her cheeks and scoured her silky black hair.
The fireflies that prowl around lit up the whole area. They wandered and buzzed into the quietness of the forest. The shadows of the blue lake mirrored the pastel of the moon.
It was such a captivating scene for them both.
But a tear escapes her lips, and he dried it with his palm. “You will be all right in time, Delilah.” He reassured her.
There she was, lying in silence. Eyes are cold and dead. He gazes from where Delilah was so engrossed in to—there he closed his eyelids; hoping the spirit would just drift and fade. She was in her bare feet, with blood splattered across her dress woven in a white long garment; a smile painted—loneliness was caught in a glimpse of her. Shadowed by the blue lake—the moon's lighting out her face.
“Please, let me go.” She pleaded and disappeared.
He turned to his side and grasped her lifeless body—her bones are digging up the outside—her eyes are swollen and blood dried her lips.
His cracking voice was the only music the black allowed to play in the deafening cacophony of trees wavering—this is where he met Delilah, a beauty in the storm. But her time was short-lived—yet with joy.
He danced with her amid the buzzing fireflies and the lake's clear water, while the sirens beneath were singing for them.
“Now, you have discovered the elegance of the moon. I can now let you go.” He mourned in silence and pecked her on the forehead.
“Goodbye, Delilah. The moon's beautiful tonight.”
I love looking at the beauty of the moon. I never thought I'd write this. What do you think?