By Rachel M. Hollis
“Where did the meteo hit? The one that killed the dinosaurs.” He’s only five and while he sounds much older in these moments, he’s unready for the truths he’s asking.
“Northern Mexico,” I answer. He already knows, just wants to hear it again.
“Okay but did they know it was coming?” he asks.
“I don’t know,” I yawn.
“Do you not know, or does nobody know? Because if you don’t know, you can wook it up on your phone, Mom.”
He thinks every question has an answer. A map, an explanation, a truth from millions of years ago. Delivered before bedtime.
“Nobody knows,” I say.
He pulls the blanket up past his chin, only his narrowed eyes visible in the glow of his nightlight.
“If the meteo comes back, will we know?”
And the truth is: I don’t know. No one does. Not even Siri.
“Yes,” I tell him, “we’ll know. NASA will warn us. We’ll have time.”
He blinks, satisfied enough to close his eyes. I envy him.
When his breathing evens, I slip out and type: how much warning before asteroid hits. The first result says six months. The second says none. I leave the tab open, the screen glowing. Like we’re already on fire.
Rachel M. Hollis lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, child, and a deeply unmotivated dog. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Gone Lawn, Sky Island Journal, Blink-Ink and elsewhere.
Image by Bruno Abdiel courtesy of Pexels


































































































































































































































































































































that’s wonderful!
that’s really beautiful, Rachel Hollis
i was the type of child taht always had something to say or to ask. this made think how many times my questions where my parent’s questions too and how they gave me answers even when they didn’t knew what to say. amazing! made me go back to childhood
I love your son.
beautiful
This is powerful and timely. We ARE already on fire.
Chilling in its brevity and quiet. . .which is how the real hit will be, I believe.