Abandoned amongst the stars, where the womb of space brings no warmth. |
Abandoned amongst the stars, where the vast womb of space brings no warmth. My rescue may have been possible, had I completed my repairs to the engine. Instead I misplaced my foot whilst cutting into the hull and managed to sever my support wire. It has been a while since I could see my shuttle. So much for my five year plan. I have always been somewhat uncoordinated, though I have never come close to a mistake as grand as this. It would seem my greatest error is to be my last. At first I couldn’t see the stars. Then they were all I could see. Then came the colours and shapes, and for a while I enjoyed them. Darkness flooded over like ink introduced to water. Grotesque images formed, followed by the misery and the shifting and the eyes watching from the depths of the cosmos. I tried to swim from them, but remained on my trajectory. There came heavy breathing on the other side of the intercom. I challenged it but received no response. My fate will bring no tears to my parents’ eyes, our ties cut when I revealed to them my atheism. I imagine they would be indifferent to the fact my last breath could come any minute; on my readout, my oxygen levels have long since depleted. I flinch as the light in my helmet goes with a pop, and its familiar hum is taken from me. In the shadow of Earth, I am left in silence. Repeatedly I am convinced I see the white of the shuttle in my peripheral vision. Then I awaken beside my wife. I am about to tell her of my dreadful nightmare when I am again suddenly in space. Around me constellations throb and skew, and there is the pulse of distant industry. I flinch again as my intercom spits and become aware of how heavy I breathe. I stare into the darkness as I try to regulate my lungs, ignoring the permutations and the nausea and the abhorrent displays. My helmet seems to be filling up with milk. |