It was the middle of the night when the power went out. My body accustomed to an ambient electrical hum refused sleep. I got up, and you followed just like always. We walked to the top of the hill where we lived at the time We've moved four times since that night. We walked, your collar's gentle sonance conflicting with the silence. When we reached the peak we stood, our small world lit only by the moon. We beheld the great expanse of the shy quiet stars that usually hid behind the light pollution. The milky spill of a spiral galaxy, where we lay spinning on its periphery, backlit the countless trails of fire courtesy of the Perseids. And I thought there have been more nights without street lights than nights of human history. These flaming trails of ice and dust, these remnants of comets, would exist despite those of us lucky enough to bear witness that night the power went out.
To that time my dog and I watched the meteors alone in the middle of the night because all the lights were out.