Before The Dawn -2019- May 2026

In a field outside Glastonbury, a fox crosses the A361. No cars. No headlights. The fox stops mid-stride, one paw raised, ears swiveling toward the east. Something is different. The usual pre-dawn chorus—the tentative robin, the clearing thrush—has not begun. The fox waits. Then moves on, silent as a rumor.

At the Bronx Zoo, the snow leopard paces her enclosure for the 347th time. Keepers won’t arrive for two hours. In the reptile house, a python uncoils slowly, tongue tasting the air for vibrations that aren’t there. The animals don’t know about 2019. They don’t know about the coming fire, the coming cough, the coming quiet. But something in the marrow of them knows that the old contract between light and dark is being renegotiated. before the dawn -2019-

They did not know. None of them knew. That’s the thing about the dawn: it always arrives like a promise, even when it’s not. In a field outside Glastonbury, a fox crosses the A361

In a basement in Melbourne, a record spins on a turntable—Low’s Double Negative , all fractured static and ghost hymns. The needle nears the locked groove. A woman named Priya hand-sews a patch onto a denim jacket: a small silver fern, for a New Zealand she left ten years ago. The news on her silent TV shows footage of Hong Kong protesters with umbrellas raised against nothing and everything. She turns the volume off. Some mornings, the world is too much to hear. The fox stops mid-stride, one paw raised, ears

We remember 2019 now as the edge of a cliff in a fog. The fall was coming, but the view was still beautiful. This piece is for the hour before—for the foxes, the coders, the short-order cooks, and all the quiet ones who held the world together in the dark, just before the dawn broke different.

On a fire escape in Brooklyn, a sound engineer named Mara balances a coffee cup on the rusted railing. Below, a lone garbage truck reverses with its mournful beep-beep-beep. The air is cool, but not cold—late October, the kind of cool that smells of wet asphalt and distant woodsmoke. She scrolls through her phone. A meme about impeachment. A friend’s engagement photo. A tweet about rising seas. She likes none of them. Instead, she watches a single plane cross the sky, its red eye blinking toward JFK. Everyone going somewhere , she thinks. Everyone except the ones still awake .

It begins not as a color, but as a subtraction of dark. The eastern horizon softens from black to bruise-purple to the pale gray of a dead phone screen. In Tokyo, a salaryman sleeps on a train, head lolling, briefcase clutched like a life raft. In Cape Town, a mother breastfeeds in the dark, watching her baby’s eyelids flutter with dreams of nothing yet. In a town called Paradise, California, the rebuilt sign still smells of ash from last year’s fire. In a hospital in Wuhan, a night nurse checks her watch. One more hour . She doesn’t know the name that will soon stick in throats worldwide.