• Science Fiction Romance

    The Night We Learned The Stars Would Not Wait

    I let go of your hand before the airlock sealed and the warmth vanished so suddenly that my palm kept its shape as if your fingers were still there. The hangar was flooded with blue work light and the low steady roar of engines preparing for departure. Cold metal pressed through the thin soles of my boots and crept up my legs. The scent of coolant and recycled air coated my tongue. You stood on the other side of the threshold helmet tucked under your arm eyes searching my face for something I could not give. Around us technicians moved with practiced urgency pretending not to notice the stillness between…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Day Your Name Became Static In My Mouth

    I said your name into the receiver after the jump and heard only static where your voice should have answered and my fingers tightened around the edge of the console until the cold metal bit back. The transit chamber was still trembling from the residual energy of translation. Soft white light pulsed along the walls like a slow uncertain heartbeat. The air smelled sharp and metallic and carried the faint taste of ozone that always followed a long range jump. I stayed strapped into my seat longer than protocol required listening to the empty channel because some part of me believed silence was temporary if I waited correctly. Across the…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Morning The Signal Stopped Saying Us

    I knew we were finished when the signal went silent between one pulse and the next and your hand tightened around mine as if your body had understood before your mind did. The listening deck was dark except for the slow breathing glow of the arrays and the pale spill of a distant sun filtered through layered glass. The air felt cool and dry against my skin and carried the faint smell of dust warmed by circuitry. Our chairs faced the wide window but neither of us was looking out anymore. The absence had weight. It pressed against my ears until I could hear my own heartbeat and the quiet…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Hour Your Shadow Stayed On The Wall

    I knew you were not coming back when the door slid shut and your shadow remained on the wall a moment longer than your footsteps did. The corridor lights were set to night cycle low and amber and the metal beneath my bare feet held the cold of space no matter how long the heaters worked. I stood there watching the faint outline where you had been as if the station itself was reluctant to let you go. The air smelled of recycled oxygen and the sharp tang of sterilizer. I waited for the sound of your breathing behind me the soft hitch you made when you were thinking. The…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Silence That Learned The Shape Of You

    I knew you were gone when the room stayed quiet after I said your name and the wall of stars outside the viewport did not change the way it always did when you answered. The observatory was dim lit only by instrument panels and the distant glow of the nebula drifting past us like a slow wound in space. The air smelled faintly of ozone and recycled water. My fingers hovered above the console still warm from where yours had rested moments before. I waited for the familiar hum of your chair shifting or the soft sound you made when you leaned closer to read a display. Nothing came. The…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Quiet Where Your Name Could Not Follow

    I heard your breath catch over the comm just as the capsule doors began to close and by the time I said your name the sound had already thinned into static. The launch chamber glowed with a pale blue that made everyone look unfinished. Vapor curled along the floor cold against my ankles and the smell of sterilized metal clung to my clothes. You stood inside the capsule framed by curved glass one hand lifted not quite touching the surface as if you were unsure whether the barrier was real. The countdown lights pulsed softly steady and patient. I pressed my palm to the glass knowing the heat would never…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Light That Waited After You Turned Away

    I felt your fingers loosen from mine at the observation window while the pulse light dimmed and the reflection of our faces slid apart on the glass. The room smelled of warm circuitry and dust that never quite settled in orbit. Outside the window the star flared and softened in its long rhythm as if breathing for us. You kept your eyes on that light instead of on me. I counted the seconds between each pulse the way I always did when I was afraid to speak. When the count slipped I knew something had already ended even though neither of us had said a word. Footsteps echoed somewhere behind…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Evening We Forgot Which Gravity Was Ours

    I watched your boots lift from the platform as the gravity field disengaged and knew before the alarm sounded that you were already somewhere I could not follow. The hangar lights flickered from white to amber and the air smelled of hot metal and coolant. My hands were still on the console where I had been pretending to monitor readings that no longer mattered. You rotated slowly suspended between magnets and intention and your hair drifted around your face like it had learned a new rule. Someone shouted your name. It might have been me. The sound was swallowed by the rising hum of emergency systems. They stabilized you within…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Moment Your Voice Became Background Noise

    The last thing you said to me arrived half a second late through the helmet speakers and by the time your voice reached my ears the airlock door was already sealing between us. The corridor outside the shuttle bay was too bright and too clean and my reflection in the glass looked like someone leaving on purpose. The vibration of the engines traveled up through the soles of my boots and into my bones. I kept my hand raised even after the door went opaque as if you might still see the gesture through metal and protocol. When the pressure equalized the silence hit harder than the sound ever had.…

  • Science Fiction Romance

    The Day We Learned To Breathe Different Air

    I let go of your hand in the docking corridor while the station lights dimmed for cycle shift and the warmth of your glove slipped away as if it had never learned my shape. The corridor smelled of recycled metal and faint citrus cleaner and the floor hummed with the quiet vibration of a thousand lives moving elsewhere. You did not look back when our fingers separated. I told myself that was mercy. My chest tightened anyway as if the air had changed composition without warning. I stood there longer than I should have listening to my own breathing until it sounded unfamiliar and wrong. Someone brushed past me carrying…