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Crier's War by Nina Varela
Crier's War by Nina Varela







It’s you, the wash of starlight, the old paradox: if the Universe were static, I could stand anywhere in this world and I swear my line of sight would end on you. Some nights I lie awake, thinking of this, and it makes me unspeakably sad. Some nights I can think of nothing else, and nothing more terrifying. The nature of the Universe is that everything inside it becomes lonelier and lonelier and lonelier. Celestial bodies floating in a black sea, carried by a current older than life. Expanding outward-pushing, pulling, as you told me. The paradox doesn’t account for the fact that the Universe, like all things, was born and has been growing ever since. The problem is the assumption that the Universe is static, unmoving that every star has always occupied the same space in our sky. By this logic, the night sky shouldn’t be dark at all it should be a blinding wash of starlight.

Crier Crier

By this logic, you could stand anywhere in this world and look up at the night sky and your line of sight would inevitably end on a star. We believe the Universe birthed an infinite number of stars.









Crier's War by Nina Varela