She wasn't Ms Frizzle, nor her students Arnold and Dorothy Ann,
but to get past their names, we can call them as such. It was mid-May when
Arnold rushed in with arms out to here: "the biggest black hole," he practically
bragged, as if he'd designed it himself.
"What do you mean?" mumbled
one of the boys, none of the girls paying him heed.
"TON 618," Arnold said,
"forty-three times as wide as—"
"Your face?" someone jibed, and then
Dorothy Ann lent her ears, gauging when jokes go too far.
“Tell us some more.”
Ms Frizzle abandoned her 8am plan, at least for a while.
“TON 618,” he went on,
“is forty-three times as wide as our solar system, which means
it could suck us up whole like the tiniest tic tac, and—”
“Wait. What are you talking
about?” Dorothy Ann qualmed, “a monster in space?”
“More like your face,”
the heckler couldn’t resist.
But Arnold was hardly deterred. “More than
a monster—a mega-machine that eats up an earth every second!”
At risk
of allowing a boy to mansplain the thing, Ms Frizzle held back as her pupils
leaned in. The physics were matters of trust, even for people her age; what science
says about forces that are light years away, well… require the maths well beyond
any grade this building will teach. Yet hers was a vaster campus of mind.
“Imagine this vacuum,” she added when Arnold had finished… and questions
were swallowed for fear of being eaten alive. “Its mouth is much wider than forty-three
bunnies of dust.”
“Bunnies?” a girl who had gerbils at home raised an eye.
“Pieces of fluff,” Ms Frizzle adjusted. “And turning the hoover on, but keeping it here—
right under this desk—would it eat all the dust in the room?”
Everyone wondered
aloud, and someone suggested the cleaner could work only by having exhaust;
dust would go in, but the bag would go out, eventually full. Or else the hoover
explodes!
“Nobody knows,” Arnold wanted the floor again.
“No,”
Dorothy Ann quite agreed, “no one here will ever go through it, except in some
Netflixy nightmare.”
While not the last word, the lesson today began to begin.
Daniel Martin Vold Lamken (2022)

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