The First
They chose him because he was steady. Not loud with courage, not reckless with ambition, but quiet enough to hear his own heartbeat. Before this day, the sky had always been a ceiling—blue by habit, black and salted with fire at night. Men had filled it with gods and fears and promises of heaven. As they strapped him into the narrow shell of metal and glass, no one truly knew what waited above. Would the sky thin into nothing? Would breath abandon him? Engineers spoke in numbers. Ministers spoke in prayers. He felt the engines press him back into his seat, felt the earth loosen its grip, and watched rivers lose their names and fields blur into color. The horizon curved, shy at first, then undeniable, and the world he had known all his life began to reveal itself as something whole. Then there was the quiet. Not the quiet of forests or sanctuaries, but an immense and living stillness. The earth floated beneath him—blue, white, tender—without borders, without arguments. He had expected t...