If we stop learning moon names at Callisto and Ganymede, where are the other sixty-three whoop, there goes gravity If Themisto stubbed his toe, how could we teach everyone else to cringe? We are growing, Elara, we are learning how to reach higher with the hands we’ve got, how to be tiny dots full of not-quite fire in a world so much bigger than desire. The best advice you gave me, Elara, was when you silently tied back your hair and rolled up your sleeves, cleared your throat and decided It’s not the fire after all, it’s the light. And I might have burned out by now if you hadn’t just rolled up your sleeves like that, not flaming or fuming or running or burning but steady, ready for the rest of forever. You are fire and water at once, Elara. You take my hand and we walk calmly upward, one step for me and one for you makes two for womankind. Stepping over the black hole of expectations and into the revelations of well-lit night. You and me, Elara, now we’re ready.