Death was a shadow. It was cast by Life, sweet, bright Life, for without him, Death had no meaning.
Death was empty. In the beginning - was there a beginning? Yes, there had to have been - before it had tasted of Life, it hadn't even known it was empty. But then had come that first time one of her had come into Death, and Death realized all that it was not.
Death was alone. It was, by nature, an ender, a destroyer, and it could not do otherwise. It wandered, and as it wandered, all it approached withered and were taken into it.
Death was weeping. It could not stop its consumption, for when it tried the hunger grew and grew and grew until it went mad with it, rampaging across the world of their children, taking all without regard for age or race of sex until it was sated.
Death was hidden. It walked across the world taking only one or two of her children at a time, wondering why it, the destroyer, was the only thing that could not be destroyed.
Death was found. Death was found by he who it had seen and thought beautiful from the moment of its birth, she whose children it had devoured, and tried to flee, fearing his wrath.
Death was held. Though it struggled, it could not break free, and felt itself, by its nature, begin to consume this glorious being, the one without whom Death might, at last, die.
Death was overwhelmed. For the first time in its long existence, it understood itself. It saw how, when in Death's presence, Life was faster, kinder, sweeter, brighter - how Life was More than he ever could have been alone.
Death was filled. For in Life's infinite being, it had found the answer to its infinite nothing, and while it could not choose to leave her children be, it knew, at last. It knew, and it would never be alone, for now they could be there with it, to
Death was infinite. And within infinity were all who had ever been brought forth by Life, born again into new selves made of Death, to be as the children once had been before Death, to be reunited with those lost to Death, and, one day, perhaps, to be released from Death.
Death was nothing. Death was everything. Death was happy.
((Did I turn describing Death as a character into a story anyways? Yes, yes I did. I don't know why. ... Aaaaaaaugh I'm going to go bury my head in a hole in the ground before somebody starts lighting this on fire.))