The priest performed a simple solemn service for the internment of your ashes.
Your close family were there by the graveside; the small dug hole, the sacred plot, the green carpet.
Your sister brought your wooden casket, carrying you for the last time.
Your nephews and nieces cried as did we all inside or out.
I guess you were there, my son, in spirit looking on, taking in the whole service from start to end; the flowers; the wooden casket with your name on top; watching your brother place it carefully in its resting place; ashes to ashes, the priest said, but the soul lives on, his words meaningful in the afternoon warmth, the sun lazily there; bird song; you listening, my son, nearby, silent as you usually were, eyeing the proceedings, sensing our loss and ache at your departure in a ****** sense; but you are here and there in spirit as our recompense.