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MARCH 20, 2004: SATURDAY - 6:18. Eva and her family had driven up to Axel
Point, which was swarming with hundreds of people. She watched in wonder at
the families whose rifts were finally healed when they discovered that the
end was near and she felt an immovable respect and admiration for the
humans uniting on this piece of Earth.
Strangers held strangers close together; infants comforted their
mothers; priests kissed their wives more than they did their Bibles. Had
humankind finally redeemed themselves from the atrocious acts they had
committed their entire existence? -Eva believed they had. For not only had
the criminal activity gone up, but those locked away in prison begged on
their knees for forgiveness from their victims and from the families of
their victims, and everyone cried.
Eva understood now. The world wasn't shedding tears because it was the
end; it was doing it because a deep humanity had finally filled the souls
of every living creature. They mourned only because it took them until the
point of death for them to realize that love was the way they should have
gone from beginning to end.
Eva watched in silence, her gaze sweeping from person to person. A
smile broke through her face, the first smile she had had in the longest
while.
"Eva!"
She darted around at the sound of her name being called out by a
familiar voice. Cyrus had pushed his way through the crowd and found her in
a tiny niche by herself. He gathered her up in his arms and squeezed her
until her heart almost exploded. He broke the embrace and kissed her
several times on her face and on her mouth.
"Cyrus, are you okay?" It seemed like a silly question to ask.
"I just love you so much," he whispered to her in between kisses. "I
love you, Eva."
"Well, I love you, too, Cyrus," she replied, beginning to put a little
distance between them so her lungs could gain some oxygen.
They locked gazes and she saw the same fear that had once been in her
own eyes mirrored into Cyrus. Cyrus afraid? I never would have thought . .
.
"Life sucks," he declared. The phrase was virtually his morning
mantra.
Eva touched his face tenderly, hoping to share with him the peace she
finally came to terms with in her soul. "Life could not be any more
beautiful than it is now," she said to him. "Look at all these people. Have
you ever felt so much love from these many people all at once? It's
overwhelming."
Cyrus was baffled. Only two days ago Eva had been weeping onto his
chest, murmuring that she didn't want to die, and now here she was,
preaching that life was at its highest point. Eva deciphered the puzzled
look on Cyrus's face and she offered him her hand. He glanced at it
tentatively.
"Aren't you going to come with me?" she asked with her huge brown eyes
illuminated by an inner light of some kind.
Cyrus erased all worries and took her hand. They intertwined their
fingers as they had done a hundred times in their lifetime together. She
started to lead the way, pushing her way politely through the crowd.
He followed, but asked, "Where are we going?"
Eva looked over her shoulder and smiled charmingly at him, assuring
him, "Trust me."
He decided to do as he was told. Cyrus clasped Eva's hand even tighter
as they passed through the thick throng of people; he didn't want to lose
her. Finally, they had reached Eva's desired destination. They were
standing on Axel Point, the very tip of the cliff that overlooked the
entire town, the very place where Joseph Tybalt sat when he caught the
first glimpse of Axel Meteor. It was really an astonishing view and from
this point, Eva could see the blazing meteor, which looked about the size
of the moon, edging closer every minute to its final destination.
"What's going on, Eva?" Cyrus asked.
Eva waited a beat before she turned to answer him. "The world is going
on," she said almost cheerfully. She nearly gasped when she saw an orange
butterfly flutter past her line of vision, and at the same time, her eyes
flew back to the meteor, which was so close now that she felt like she
could reach out and touch it. The heat from its flames was beginning to
sear the air around them.
"Are you feeling okay, babe?"
Her smile only widened. "Never been better, sweetie," she promised him
and squeezed his hand. He squeezed back.
The mouths of people closed and their eyes opened wider than they had ever
been opened before in all of history. They watched in awe as Axel Meteor
slammed into the Earth underneath their feet, singing everything dead or
alive. The impact was immeasurable; the pain, instant. Fire scorched the
Earth, burning it black. It danced with them, tickled their ears and
crawled up their legs.
The sky was sealed off by the height of the flames. Stone melted
immediately. Glass broke everywhere. The swings stopped swinging and the
monkey bars were incinerated. Pages of books crumbled and ink dried up. The
oceans were obliterated and the world felt the force two A-bombs combined.
The doors weren't closed; instead, they had been razed to the ground and
humans were finally delivered from an existence that both hurt them and
healed them. All sense of time was wiped out like footprints with the tide.
Yet, there was still a light that burned with an intensity that was unparalleled, even to the meteor.
Eva didn't remember ever letting go of Cyrus's hand. Just like in her dream she could feel his skin, even when she could feel no longer, just like how she could see everyone around her, even when she no longer had eyes to see with. It was right then, the moment before Eva's eyes closed forever, that she remembered today was the first day of spring.
"Peace shall follow us,
Wherever our path may lead.
What once was,
Don't let our regrets onto us bleed.
"I stand here,
With hope and love and life,
No hint, no drop of grief or fear.
Be with your family, your husband, your wife.
"Because when the sun goes down forever,
I will be with you.
Our love shall not be severed,
These words shall remain true.
"If dust and ashes and bone,
Litter the ground in our wake,
Then let our memories guide us home,
In life and death, we are safe."