
Then I noticed the shadows ahead of us. All along the other side of Santa Monica Boulevard : moon shadows, in horizontal patterns of dark and blue-white bands.
I caught her at the corner.
The moon was setting.
A setting moon always looks tremendous. Tonight it glared at us through the gap of sky beneath the freeway, terribly bright, casting an incredible complexity of lines and shadows. Even the unlighted crescent glowed pearly bright with earthshine.
Which told me all I wanted to know about what was happening on the lighted side of Earth.
And on the moon? The men of Apollo Nineteen must have died in the first few minutes of nova sunlight. Trapped out on a lunar plain, hiding perhaps behind a melting boulder… Or were they on the night side? I couldn’t remember. Hell, they could outlive us all. I felt a stab of envy and hatred.
And pride. We’d put them there. We reached the moon before the nova came. A little longer, we’d have reached the stars.
The disc changed oddly as it set. A dome, a flying saucer, a lens, a line…
Gone.
Gone. Well, that was that. Now we could forget it; now we could walk around outside without being constantly reminded that something was wrong. Moonset had taken all the queer shadows out of the city.
But the clouds had an odd glow to them. As clouds glow after sunset, tonight the clouds shone livid white at their; western edges. And they streamed too quickly across the sky. As if they tried to run…
When I turned to Leslie, there were big tears rolling down her cheeks.
“Oh, damn.” I took her arm. “Now stop it. Stop it.”
“I can’t. You know I can’t stop crying once I get started.”
“This wasn’t what I had in mind. I thought we’d do things we’ve been putting off, things we like. It’s our last chance. Is this the way you want to die, crying on a street corner?”
