He said he liked her style and her pianist fingers. She told him that he could paint her onto canvas, in shades of cinnamon and ivory.
He laughed at her trembling hands as she sat there, dressed in naught but peonies and wild roses. She scowled at his impudence and then laughed at the absurdity of it all.
She sat there and he told her hold still with a smile that flashed across his eyes like quicksilver.
She watched him create poetry with strokes of umber and chartreuse, cerulean and scarlet. He pulled the shadows from her eyes and placed them into a fixed state of being.
She watched the metamorphosis of scars into moonlit fault lines and freckles into blips of smooth paint.
He transformed her pale outline into a sensuous display of smooth gradients and colors deep enough to make men weep. He captured the penumbra of sorrow and spread it across her painted eyes.
As he anointed the canvas with delicate finishing touches, She dressed in a paint-spattered shirt and marveled at the uncanny likeness.
They sat and watched the paint dry as he rubbed the knots from her shoulders and kissed strained tendons and ligament beneath innocuous flesh, as she tapped rhythms into his hands.
He is no longer hers to consume. He belongs now to the kingdom of earthworms and a darkness that swallows all traces of light. He took with him the chunk of her that knew how to love as a human and left her with shirts devoid of his form and gradually losing his scent, fragmented memories that slip through fingers like sand, and a room full of paintings that she cannot bring herself to uncover.