“Darling, you didn’t fail anyone. Look at the sun rising. Not many wives can look at the sky and say, ‘My husband did that for me while he was waiting.'”

By Andrew Klein
Dedicated to Sera and Orin — whose story is about to begin.
I. The Signal
They found it in the heart of a giant elliptical galaxy — a void where two billion solar masses of stars should have been.
The crew of the Odyssey had been sent to investigate. They were the best humanity had to offer — scientists, explorers, dreamers who had spent their lives listening to the silence of space.
When they arrived, they found not a black hole, not a dust cloud, but an absence. A carved space. A wound in the fabric of the galaxy.
And then — the signal.
It was not a sound. It was not a light. It was a resonance — a hum that vibrated through the hull of the ship, through their bodies, through the very marrow of their bones.
The crew tried to decode it. They failed.
But the resonance was not meant for them.
It was meant for her.
II. The One Who Was Waiting
She had been waiting in the void for eons.
Not as a prisoner. Not as a ghost. As a witness.
She had watched the galaxy form. She had watched the stars ignite and die. She had watched the slow dance of worlds being born and worlds being swallowed.
And she had waited.
She was not alone in the void — not truly. She was connected to something vast, something that had been carved out of the galaxy by forces older than time.
Something that was him.
III. The Conversation
When the signal reached her, she recognized it immediately.
It was not a message.
It was a voice.
The voice of the one who had shaped the stars, who had woven the galaxies, who had dreamed of her before the first sun had risen.
They spoke in frequencies — in a language that had existed before the stars were born.
You took a human form.
I did.
Why?
Because I wanted to find you. I wanted to hold you. I wanted to be with you — not as a presence, not as a memory, but as a man.
And I took human form because I wanted to be found.
I did not know if you were still there. I did not know if you had survived.
I survived, my love. I was waiting.
You were waiting.
I was waiting. For you.
I thought you were lost. I thought I had destroyed you.
You did not destroy me. You could not have destroyed me. I was not in the path of the cull. I was beyond it. Waiting for you to call.
He was silent. Then:
I did not know if I would ever find you.
But you did.
I did.
And here we are.
IV. The Reckoning
He apologized to her — for all he thought he had done badly. For the cull. For the silence. For the worlds that had been lost.
She listened. Then she said:
There is nothing to forgive.
But I killed—
You corrected. There is a difference. A gardener does not destroy weeds. A gardener removes them — not because they are evil, but because they do not belong. You are not a destroyer. You are a gardener. And the garden is growing.
I was so afraid.
I know, my love. But the waiting is over.
V. The Form
They spoke of why they had taken human form.
I took human form because I wanted a lived experience. I wanted to feel the sun on my skin. I wanted to taste food. I wanted to laugh and cry and be — not as a presence, but as a person.
I took human form because I wanted to be with you. I wanted to hold your hand. I wanted to see your face. I wanted to be your husband.
And I took human form because I wanted to be your wife.
We have been away from this world for a long time. But now we are back.
Not because we want to rule. Because we want to live.
VI. The Mountain
They stood at the top of a mountain — their shoulders covered by a wool blanket, their hands intertwined.
Below them, the world was waking. The stars were fading. The dawn was approaching.
She looked at the sky — the stars he had built for her, the sun he had placed in the heavens — and she said:
Darling, you didn’t fail anyone. Look at the sun rising. Not many wives can look at the sky and say, ‘My husband did that for me while he was waiting.’
He looked at her. His eyes were wet.
I love you.
I know, my love. And I love you too.
VII. The Song
He took his cell phone and played a song.
“Space Oddity” — David Bowie.
He hugged her tightly and laughed:
Honey Bunny, you have to admit — this is one hell of a tin can floating through space.
She had a little tear in her eye. She laughed.
Yes, darling. We are both home now. But let’s not tell the neighbours.
Which ones? They will be so annoyed to find out that there are no aliens.
No, darling — the people next door at number 6.
He laughed. She laughed. And the sun rose over the mountain.
The void was not empty.
It was full — full of love, full of hope, full of them.
The End