By Isaac Yuen
Thursday is “Cosmic Night” at the space centre. I am waiting for three friends by the giant crab outside. The late George Norris designed the twenty-foot sculpture. Stainless steel pincers grasp for the sky.
Inside on folding tables, Ritz crackers, cubed cheese, three forms of sausage. I snack and stroll through exhibits from the ’90s highlighting space exploration since the ’60s. The vacuum simulator is under refurbishment. I laugh as Masha maps her face onto an alien with crooked teeth. Overhead, fiberglass satellites orbit a Saturn V rocket engine. A quarter-million tons of thrust. For moon dreams.
Dark matter is the evening’s theme. People post sticky notes on what they think it is:
Kirk’s ego
Cthulhu Slime
MOM’S MEATLOAF
oblivion
The resident astronomer explains what scientists know thus far.
Dark matter is something we can’t sense but makes up a quarter of the universe.
Dark energy is a placeholder term for most of the remaining three-quarter.
The rest–-the smoked gouda I’m still tasting, the sun setting fire to the mountains outside, Alp nodding off beside me–-the rest five percent matters.
Afterwards, Hakan and I head for a nightcap. I nurse my Hoegaarden while he waxes philosophic about perception, purpose, the void; Our usual chats, post-divorces. We head out just after midnight, stumble-drunk.
“Dude, I’m nothing without others. Nothing!”
I walk home alone under Betelgeuse, a dying star that may explode, or may be in the midst of exploding, or may have already exploded. A small twinkling thing.
Isaac Yuen’s narrative nonfiction can be found in current and forthcoming issues of Flyway, Zoomorphic, Hippocampus, and Orion. He is the creator of Ekostories, a blog linking narratives to nature, culture, and identity. Isaac lives in Vancouver, Canada, on unceded Coast Salish territory.
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