Under the Perseids
8:47 p.m. The parking lot of the community center was nearly full when Marcus arrived, his sedan sliding into one of the last spots between a minivan and someone's ancient Buick. He sat for a moment, engine ticking as it cooled, wondering what exactly had possessed him to sign up for this. A stargazing event. For seniors. He was sixty-two, which he supposed qualified him, though he didn't feel senior. He felt invisible, which was different. Felt like someone had turned down his volume gradually over the years until he'd become background noise in his own life. The email had arrived two weeks ago from the city's recreation department—"Summer Stargazing: Perseid Meteor Shower Viewing Party." He'd deleted it twice before finally clicking the registration link at eleven o'clock on a Wednesday night, half a bottle of wine in, thinking about how long it had been since he'd looked up at anything. Now he was here, clutching a folding chair and a thermos of...