Reaching the Moon should be the pinnacle of human achievement. In this haunting tale, it becomes a crucible that strips away every illusion about glory, ambition, and legacy. Alone on an alien world, a driven explorer confronts the consequences of a lifetime spent chasing recognition at any cost. The silence of space amplifies every thought, every fear, and every choice that led him there.
The story unfolds with mounting psychological tension rather than spectacle. This is not a triumphalist vision of spaceflight, but a deeply human reckoning with pride, obsession, and the need to be remembered. As the line between victory and ruin blurs, the Moon becomes a mirror—reflecting not heroism, but the darker impulses that can drive history forward.
Alfred Coppel was known for bringing emotional realism and moral weight to speculative fiction. His stories often explored the inner lives of flawed individuals placed in extraordinary circumstances, and this work stands as one of his most unsettling achievements. With spare prose and relentless focus, Coppel delivers a story that lingers long after the final words fade into silence.























