God, or someone like him, decides to tell a joke.
Here's how it goes.
It's wintertime on the great plains. We're huddled at a giant gas station—ten islands each with five pumps, like little solar systems—and we're alone there in that cold dome of artificial light amid an encroaching, encompassing darkness, like all of space itself has encircled us.
Us being Doris, Blake, and me.
And the winds. The winds on all sides sing no human melody, just a fluctuating galactic plainsong, like abandoned sheets berserked by a gale. Blurs of snow like the flung arms of colliding starfields.
Doris says, "You think she made it?"
Given I watched Sylvie die with my own anguished two eyes, I'm gonna pass on that.
I stomp my feet, Doris hugs herself, and Blake ignores us.
Our exhalations hang in the air like tiny frozen organ pipes.
In the gloom beyond the lights, a pale gathering of rigs lie still, accumulating snow like the corpses of buffalo. I wonder where the drivers are, but again I keep my thoughts inside, for warmth.
And speaking of inside, not a soul moves within the chill fluorescence of the great hangar around which the gas bars orbit. An inconvenience store, I think. Not funny. The place looks like a forsaken terrarium.
Blake hasn't spoken in hours, but he does now. "So this is hell," he says, quietly.
"More like hell's briefing room," says Doris, which makes me look at her and nearly smile. She nearly smiles back. And I try not to think about Sylvie.
How do things go so wrong so quickly? Twenty-four hours seems barely enough time for such a one-eighty. Everything had gone to plan; against the odds, we'd pulled it off; we were superstars; life was about to begin in earnest. But now…
It's all a risk, every step of it. You can tell a joke, even a bunch of jokes, but no one's obliged to laugh.
Out there in the dark, beyond the dizzying supercluster whorls, we watch shapes move like slow behemoths; real or imagined, who knows? All we know is we'll never reach them, on this day or the next, but if they reach us they will end us.
Blake says, "After we soar, how come there's this rule we gotta come down?"
"That's God’s punchline," I say.