Asteroid City May 2026

Woodrow knelt beside her. "What makes you say that?"

The creature extended the cube toward Woodrow. The cube rotated in the air, unfolded like origami, and projected a star chart onto the dust. But the stars were wrong. They were constellations that did not exist, patterns that would only appear in the night sky three billion years from now, when the Milky Way and Andromeda had begun to merge. The creature made a sound—not a voice, but a harmonic vibration, like a cello string plucked with a feather.

Stanley was a celebrated actor in another life—or perhaps in this very life, it was hard to tell. He had a habit of stepping out of the frame of a conversation, as if searching for his mark. He stood now at the rim of the crater, a man in a rumpled seersucker suit, and stared down into the geological punchbowl. The impact, millions of years ago, had fused the sandstone into a glassy, malformed obsidian that reflected the sky in distorted, funhouse fragments. Asteroid City

Where is the other one?

Then the sky flickered.

For three seconds, nobody moved.

Woodrow was not there with his parents. He was there with his three young daughters and his wife’s father, Stanley. Woodrow’s wife, their mother, had died three weeks earlier. This fact was not spoken aloud. Instead, it lived in the way Stanley lit his pipe with shaking hands, and in the way Woodrow’s eldest daughter, twelve-year-old Andromeda, refused to take off her sunglasses, even at night. Woodrow knelt beside her

He laughed. It was a dry, broken sound. "I've been pretending for so long, I don't remember the real lines."