We were too busy looking out the window at the stars.
We had left at midnight, past my usual bedtime, and I fell asleep about an hour later. When I woke up we were still driving. The moon looked bigger. Dad said I had slept for about five hours and it was morning now. We ate breakfast, and then Noma took out a mystery novel, settled in one corner of the seat with her feet up on the ice chest, and read by the light of the moon. I wished I had thought to
bring a book. I had nothing to do but look out the window, and although a spread of stars is an amazing thing, it was pretty much all the same. A long trip does get dull.
âAre we there yet, Dad?â I said.
âOh stop it,â he said. âNot for a while.â
âWhatâs the moon like? Is it hot? Should I have brought my shorts?â
âI suppose itâs hot in the sun and cold in the shade. But itâs nothing like you ever learned about in school. I can tell you that.â
âI never learned anything about it in school,â I said.
âThatâs not a surprise,â he said. âI donât know what they teach you there. How to stick your brain in a blender. If it was up to me. . . .â
I sensed another lecture on imagination coming at me, and I tried to head it off. âTell me about the moon, Dad.â
â The moon?â he said. âThereâs things the government doesnât want anyone to know. I saw some of the moon files when I was working for Spork. About forty years ago, when NASA was trying to land people on the moon, the first thing they did was to send an unmanned lander. Not too many people know about that lander. It came down picture perfect, and sat on its eight feet, and started filming. But it didnât
last more than two minutes. A tentacle whipped out from behind a rock, smacked into the camera lens, and Bam! Crack! Static. Nothing more. That was it. They never got any more photos from that lander. They never found it again.â
âCome on, Dad,â I said. âThere wasnât any tentacle on the moon.â
âHow do you know?â he said. âYou never believe me, and then I turn out to be right. Iâm telling you Jem, it was a tentacle.â
â What color was it?â
âYouâre testing me,â Dad said. âThe photos were black and white, so I donât know what color it was. But weâd better be careful up there. Weâd better be ready to take off quick, if we see anything we donât understand. And we better not get too near any big rocks if we donât know whatâs hiding behind them.â
âDad,â I said, âevery animal I know of that has a tentacle lives in the ocean. So how many oceans are on the moon?â
âClever,â Dad said. âBut data trumps cleverness. I saw the film, and I saw the tentacle. I hope we donât get smacked by that thing, but if we do, youâll see it for yourself.â
After lunch, Noma and I played hangman and tictac-toe on the back of the moon map. She beat me almost every time. She wanted to draw out a chessboard
and use little scraps of paper for the pieces, but I got the idea that she would beat me at that too, so I said I was tired, and took a nap. When I woke up, it was time for dinner and we handed out the cold chicken and raw potatoes.
After dinner, Dad tied down the controls, which he said was Leonardoâs version of cruise control, and stretched out on the reclining chair. âEverybody get a good sleep,â he said. â We should get there tomorrow morning.â
When I opened my eyes, I panicked. We must have slept a long time without any regular daylight to wake us. Nobody had thought to set an alarm clock, and now the moon was gigantic, looming in front of us. âDad!â I shouted. âWake up! Weâre gonna crash!â
âHuh?â he said, sitting up suddenly. âI wonât! You canât make me, Spork! I
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