The Orbiting Orchard
High above the sleeping blue curve of Earth, Silas prunes the peach trees.
The silence of the station is absolute, save for the hum of the atmospheric scrubbers and the gentle snip, snip of his shears. He catches a severed leaf before it can drift toward the microgravity ventilation shaft. It is green, veined with gold, a tiny terrestrial ghost hovering in the sterile white corridor of Sector 4.
Down below, white storms spiral over dark oceans. Continents glow with the electric veins of sprawling cities. Up here, it is just Silas and the soil.
He rubs the leaf between his thumb and forefinger, releasing the sharp, peppery scent of chlorophyll. For a moment, he is a boy again, standing in his grandfather’s orchard in the heavy gravity of an August afternoon. He remembers the drone of cicadas, the crushing weight of the summer heat, the warm juice of a bruised peach running down his chin.
Here, the peaches grow perfectly round, untethered by the downward drag of the earth. They are flawless, beautiful, and entirely tasteless.
Silas places the leaf into the composting chute. He reaches out and gently taps a ripe fruit, watching it bob on its thin branch like a tethered planet. He wonders how long it takes for a seed to forget where it came from.
He turns off the solar-mimic lamps, and the greenhouse plunges into the cold, silver glow of starlight. Tomorrow, he will harvest. Tonight, he simply floats beside the glass, a lonely gardener orbiting a world he can no longer touch.