
…All around the planet, as it turned in the wash of Venus light, human faces were lifted to the sky, shining in the strange light like coins in a well, amused or puzzled or wondering or indifferent…
…And in Houston, Tracy and Jays Malone spoke in hushed tones, so as not to wake the kids.
More than three decades after his Moonwalk, a few years into a whole new century, and here was Tracy with kids of her own, kids to whom Apollo was some sort of Cold War relic — not even that, something prehistoric and incomprehensible, something their grandfather had done. For somehow, as if mocking the old dreams, the space program had become a thing of the past, not the future.
But her name was undoubtedly, famously, written on the Moon — she’d seen photographs of it — and it would indeed be there for a million more years, less the few summers she had spent growing up since Jays came home.
So there had been only one place to come on this strange and cosmic night.
She stood with Jays on his verandah. It was just like all those years ago, except that now she cradled a pina colada in her hand instead of a soda.
And, in the dawn sky, there was a new light, which outshone even the battered old Moon.
“Quite a night,” said Jays, the light casting sharp point-source shadows on his face. “Quite a week, in fact.”
“Yeah.” So it had been, all of seven days after the Venus event first showed in the sky.
According to the TV there had been Venus-watching parties all over the US, a predictable run on telescopes and binoculars in the stores. The Hubble Web sites had crashed from the hit traffic, even though NASA hadn’t turned the Hubble that way yet.
She said, “Those guys on the TV, yammering about anti-matter comets and alien invaders. The most remarkable week since Neil Armstrong touched down on the Moon—”
