Showing posts with label ISS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ISS. Show all posts

Saturday, February 21, 2026

A Giant On The Moon

 Captain Leo Vance floated in the gentle embrace of his sleeping bag, tethered to the wall of the ISS cupola. Below, the Earth was a swirling marble of blues and whites. Above, an infinite black velvet studded with stars. And there, hanging heavy in the viewport, was the Moon—a silent, grey sentinel.


Sleep in microgravity is a strange thing, and Leo’s drifted into a deeper, more anchored slumber than usual. He wasn’t in the station anymore. He was standing, boots planted firmly on a dusty grey plain. The silence was absolute, a physical pressure in his ears. He knew this was the Mare Tranquillitatis. He’d studied it for years. But something was wrong. Or, perhaps, wonderfully right.


A shadow fell over him, long and deep. He turned.


A giant sat on a ridge of crater rim, its back to the sun. It wasn’t a monster; its form was like a mountain given gentle life—a torso of layered basalt, arms of craggy stone, a head that was a single, smoothed boulder. Its eyes were two deep pools of starlight, and when it moved, it was with the slow, tectonic grace of continents adrift.


“Hello, small breather,” a voice said. It didn’t sound in the air, for there was none. It resonated directly in Leo’s bones, a low, grinding hum that felt like the memory of sound. The giant’s starlight eyes were fixed on him.


Leo’s training overrode his dream-logic. “I am Captain Leo Vance of the International Space Station. Identify yourself.” The formality sounded absurd in the vast, quiet dream.


A low, rocky chuckle vibrated through the regolith. “Names are for things that come and go. I am where I have always been. I am the sleeper in the ground, the watcher of the long night.” One massive, stone finger, large as a lunar rover, pointed slowly at the brilliant blue orb hanging in the black sky. “You are from the noisy one. The lively one.”


“Earth,” Leo confirmed, his scientific mind wrestling with the wonder. “You… you live here? How?”


“Live?” The giant considered, the starlight in its eyes dimming and brightening like a pulse. “I am. As the dust is. As the deep cold is. Your kind ‘lives.’ You burn so brightly, so quickly.” It shifted, and a small avalanche of grey dust whispered down its side. “I have watched your little lights appear on my skin. The silent footsteps. The metal bugs.”


“The Apollo landings,” Leo whispered, awestruck. “You saw them?”


“I felt them,” the giant corrected gently. “Taps. Polite, distant taps. Like a pebble dropped on a sleeping giant’s shoulder.” It leaned forward, and Leo felt no fear, only a profound, ancient calm. “You are a different tap. You carry more of the lively one inside you. I can hear its water in you.”


Leo looked down at his own gloved hands, then back at the Earth. “We’re trying to come back. To stay. Is that… would that be an annoyance?” He couldn’t believe he was asking a moon giant for real estate permission.


The giant’s laughter was a friendly, deep tremor that sent puffs of dust jumping around Leo’s boots. “The mountain does not mind the moss. You are welcome to your nests, small breather. But you are so fragile. All that water, all that fire inside you… it is a beautiful, precarious magic.” Its starlight gaze seemed to soften. “Tell the others to step softly. Even a giant enjoys a quiet rest.”


Leo nodded, a profound sense of responsibility settling on him, heavier than any spacesuit. “I will. We will.”


“Good.” The giant began to recede, not by moving, but by becoming more still, more indistinguishable from the landscape. The starlight in its eyes faded to mere reflection. “Do not fear the quiet dark, Captain Leo Vance. It is not empty. It is simply… patient.”


***


A soft chime from a life-support system monitor pulled Leo back. He blinked, the stark white interior of the cupola replacing the monochrome dreamscape. The Moon still hung in his viewport, a magnificent, barren globe.


His crewmate, Maya, floated in, yawning. “You okay, Leo? You’ve been staring at the Moon for ten minutes straight.”


Leo didn’t look away. “Just… thinking.”


“About the Artemis base site selection?”

“About being a guest,” Leo said softly. He finally turned to her, a faint, wondering smile on his face. “We should remember, when we go down there, that we’re visitors. We should step softly.”


Maya raised an eyebrow, amused. “Well, yeah. Sharp regolith and all that. Don’t want to puncture a boot.”


“No,” Leo agreed, his gaze drifting back to the serene, grey face outside the window. “You don’t.” And for a moment, in the play of shadows along the terminator line, he could almost imagine the gentle slope of a shoulder, the patient curve of a back, resting for eons under the silent stars.



A Giant On The Moon

 Captain Leo Vance floated in the gentle embrace of his sleeping bag, tethered to the wall of the ISS cupola. Below, the Earth was a swirlin...