Last night, in the dark before the world remembered light I walked a field: wheat, or poppies, or something left behind by something that once loved the sun.
And there, not waiting, not departing, was death.
Not a blade. Not a silence. She was seated (or maybe had fallen), like a prayer forgotten mid-kneel soft, unfinished and unheard.
Her eyes held the curve of a question too old for answers, too tired for fear.
We didn’t speak. We had no need. We were not mirrors but echoes, trying to remember which silence we belonged to.
For one breath, (maybe longer), I thought: she needs me. And something kind began to rise not from mercy, but from something lonelier: recognition.
But she had found me too. And maybe she thought I had something left to offer.
We were wrong about each other. But right so achingly right about the sky.
I had no name to give her. She had no end to lend me.
So we breathed. And the field, if anything, felt fuller for it.
Then I walked not away, but toward whatever was beginning behind the horizon.
Easter approaches. And sometimes, resurrection requires no witnesses only the will to keep walking until light remembers your name