Tuesday, September 8th, 2015. It was our 8th wedding anniversary. Nancy and I were spending it the way we had every year since getting married, doing the 13 mile loop hike around Mt. Diablo in the morning, before our anniversary dinner in downtown Walnut Creek. This was the same hike where we had first met, as part of a larger group in college.
It was likely going to be our last anniversary hike. We had decided, now that we were 30, that it was time to start our family, after several years focusing on our programming careers. Hopefully, we would either be parents or Nancy would be several months pregnant by the next anniversary. We'd already been trying for two months. Nancy's next ovulation was due to happen in a week.
We ate our lunch at the summit and were stopped at the top of Eagle Peak when we spotted a bright light to the east.
"What
is
that?" Nancy asked, pointing toward it.
"Looks like a meteor, but it's got to be huge to be seen in daylight," I answered. The light got brighter and larger, clearly a fireball. I kept expecting it to explode as a bolide. Instead, the light dimmed as the meteor slowed and friction against the atmosphere reduced, until a dimly glowing rock could be seen getting closer and closer but veering to our left.
It looked like it was going to crash a couple miles to the northwest - thankfully still part of the park with no major structures to damage - when it suddenly changed course, heading straight for us. "What the fuck? Meteors don't steer," were the last words I managed to say before the object seemed to explode before impacting the ground, less than 50 yards away. Hundreds of shards flew towards us, giving me only enough time to grab Nancy and put my body between her and the meteor. A torrent of pain exploded through me as I was impaled through my back and lost consciousness.
~~~~~
My next conscious thought was hearing the steady beeping of a heart-rate monitor. I guessed I was in a hospital, but I couldn't open my eyes.
'At least I survived,' I thought.
"Dan?" asked a weird voice, both in my head and ears. My eyes opened, not from my intention, and I saw around the hospital room. "Dan, where are you?"
'I... I think I'm inside you, sweetheart,' I answered. 'I know it makes no sense, but I'm seeing what you see, hearing what you hear.'
"How is that possible?" she asked.
I answered, 'I don't know. How is it possible we even survived that meteor crash? If that was even what it was? Meteors don't change direction like that and, if they explode, it's usually high in the atmosphere. I swear this broke apart before hitting the ground. Those fragments flew straight at us so fast, they should have torn right through us. Did they look crystalline to you?'
Nancy switched to thinking silently. 'I barely got a glimpse, but they looked like icicles, except they were pinkish.'
I thought, 'Pink icicles from a meteor that changed course toward us, spraying us with debris and causing my consciousness to transfer into your body? I'm not even feeling any pain, are you? Are you alright, physically?'
I felt Nancy begin moving her hands along her body, before she gasped. 'Ohmigod, Dan, this isn't my body. It's yours. Somehow, I'm in control of your body, with both of us inside it.' She held up my hands so I could see them.
Just then a nurse came in and said, "Oh, you're awake, Mr. Davis. How are you feeling? I'm Nurse Simpkins. You're at John Muir Hospital in Walnut Creek." The nurse began checking various readings on the monitor, entering them into a tablet.
Nancy thought, 'Where's my body?' but asked, "How's... my wife?" as I finally recognized my own voice underneath hers in my sensorium.
"She's in stable condition. She woke up about an hour ago, but seems a bit more disoriented," the nurse answered.
I thought, 'How can your body be awake, if your consciousness is in my body?'
'Shhhh, Dan,' Nancy thought back at me. 'I'm sure there's a perfectly
illogical
explanation.'
Nurse Simpkins said, "We're looking to get you a double room, so you can be together. Right now, she's four rooms down the hall. Although, with the way the two of you are recovering, you might be discharged first."
"Do you know how we got here?" Nancy asked. "We were hiking..."
"That's the curious thing," Nurse Simpkins said. "It's been all over the news. Some other hikers on the same trail reported that a large meteorite hit near you and sprayed you with debris that they swear pierced you from head to toe, knocking you both back twenty feet. They were certain you were dead, given the impact and how shredded and bloody your clothing was when they reached you. But you were breathing, so they called 911 and you were medivacked to our Trauma Center. After you got here, the nurses and docs downstairs couldn't actually find a scratch on you underneath those bloody rags. Almost everything you were carrying was wrecked, but you were fine. The blood proved to be your own, so the police lost interest. There's no sign of a crater. You were admitted because you hadn't regained consciousness. It's been two days. Today is Thursday."
'So much for our anniversary dinner,' I thought, trying to make light of a situation that was getting more terrifying every second.