He floated lower, passing the news kiosk at the corner of Press Street and Hologram Avenue. It was recapping the final statements of the astronomers. Brooks hovered and listened to the kiosk’s pleasant voice: it was the liquid voice of Tandra Mellowe, the holo personality.

  “The planet-sized body moving in on our Sun from interstellar space is roughly three hundred and twenty-five times the mass of the Earth, making it somewhat greater than that of Jupiter, the largest planet in the Solar System. In diameter it is approximately 91,000 miles and, because of its collision course with the Sun, has been named Vastator, from the Latin meaning destroyer. Preliminary calculations indicated the asteroid would hit the Sun directly, boring in at a thirty degree angle. However, as the body nears, revised computations advise Vastator will only graze the Sun, tearing off a great piece of the corona. Unfortunately, this will not affect what will happen to the Earth. The spray of radiation—chiefly high-energy protons and helium nuclei—will strike the Earth as the Sun sprays the heavens. All life will be first sterilized and shortly thereafter vaporized by the solar storm. The soil will melt and fuse into a glaze, and the oceans will begin to boil. It will be approximately eight minutes before the sight of what has happened to our Sun reaches the Earth, but no one will be here to see it. No one except Haddon Brooks, the well-known poet…”

  Brooks rose and went away from there.

  He sailed over The Hundred Lakes, joined by their floater locks. Small boats and catamarans drifted across their surfaces idly. “Sunday strolling,” he said, and went over unseen.

  “I am above the ghettos now. They remind me of verses from Mother Goose. It must be fine to be a member of a minority, to know where you came from, and what certain words that cannot be translated completely mean. No one could have been happy here. Deathbeds of illusion. Invisible walls. These were the hollows where men and women gave themselves to yesterdays so their children might have tomorrows. But I cannot be sad about them. They knew a kind of love hidden from the rest of us. Where you go now, to whatever new places, make sure you leave room for those who need that specialness; we cannot all be the same, it isn’t even right that we should be.”

  He soared to the highest levels of the residence shelves, passing through byways and underpassing flying bridges, skimming over slideways and casting his long shadow over the pebbled surfaces of walls and other walls. Sloping outer surfaces and sudden apertures. Concavities and tunnels fit for the needs of those who liked cool, dark places where the scent of mountain gentian still lingered. He stopped in a tiny forest of dwarf bonsai and tried to compose another poem, this one for his wife.

  “This may not be right, Calla, buy it’s the best I can do right now…I find my thoughts split. I want to say something special to you and the children, but time is growing short and it serves me right if I’ve left any love or respect for you unsaid after all this time. You were the best moments for me, the brightest colors, the deepest sighs, the sweetest sugar of life. You were always what I was afraid I’d never be worthy of. But I’m content now; I held your love. Oh, hell, my love, my best, I can’t compose a poem now. Forgive me, but all that come to mind are another man’s words. He was called Randall Jarrell and he lived a hundred years ago and never saw the stars from Mars or looked into the burning heart of our poor Sun from the quicksilver domes of the Moon, but he knew my love for you and he said:

  “But be, as you have been, my happiness;

  Let me sleep beside you, each night, like a spoon;

  When, starting from my dreams, I groan to you,

  May your I love you send me back to sleep.

  At morning bring me, grayer for its mirroring,

  The heavens’ sun perfected in your eyes.”

  Then he heard the voice in his head that called the end.

  “Mr. Brooks, impact.”

  His breath froze in his nostrils.

  The voice again, caught in a sob, “Oh my God, it’s beautiful, so terrible…”

  And he knew he had eight minutes.

  A strange prickling assaulted his flesh and he cried out to Calla, far away aboard an Orion, “I’m done…there can be no other children…” And he stopped himself; he knew there were less than four hundred and eighty seconds and he had to tell it all, tell it so well the children of Earth would always be able to draw on his cassette with his visions and words and dreams on them.

  He settled within himself, leaped from the shelf and went down to stand in the silver street where he would spend his last moments.

  Haddon Brooks spoke then, of the living space that had finally come to hold the dearest hopes of humankind. He spoke of the caverns beneath the pulsing city where energy was channeled into light and heat and rain that would fall when the women called for rain. He spoke of the racetracks where adventure could still be found in trying to beat sound waves as they raced to targets. Of the oceans that had been calmed so men could sail across without fear. He spoke of the best of people and the ways in which humans had come to know themselves well enough to laugh at the thought that wars were inevitable.

  This had been the city in which he had been born, in which he had found the words to make his songs, where he had met and joined with Calla, where the children had grown from their bodies; the city where he would become vapor at the final moment. Some of it was even poetry, but not much.

  “I’m afraid, up there. I’m afraid of my vanity to be the last one here. It was foolish, oh how I want to go with you now. Please forgive me my fear, but I want so much to live!”

  If there had only been time. He was chagrined for just a moment that he had let them down, had failed to do what he had been left behind to do. But that lasted only a moment and he knew he had said as much as anyone could say, and it would be right for the children of the dark places, even if it took them a thousand years to find another home.

  Then he turned, as the seconds withered, knowing the solar storm had drenched him and at any moment he would vaporize. He looked up into the water-blue sky, past the blinding sun that suddenly flared and consumed the heavens, and he shouted, “I’ll always be with you—” but the last word was never completed; he was gone.

  Soon after, the seas gently began to boil.

  Los Angeles, California/1972

 


 

  Harlan Ellison, Approaching Oblivion

 


 

 
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