(O.O.C.: I guess I'll start it off, ok?)
Anne was taking a walk through the large wheat field behind her house. Out here, you could walk for miles and go out into the fields so far that you couldn't see which way you came from. In the sea of beige, Anne kicked at stones she found at her feet and occasionally glanced up at the two moons to see what time it is.
"Almost past the line," she said to herself. "The line" was the thin, cloudy band that divided the evening sky. Normally, it wasn't visible until very late in the evening, but the sun was hitting it at just the right angle this time of year. When both moons passed through the line, it meant that it was time to come home for dinner. At least, that's what her mother had always told her.
Anne often wondered to herself what could be up so high in the sky as the line and the moons. The schools had strict rules about asking such questions. She dared not inquire about how high the sky was, for fear of being reprimanded or even punished.
Her father had given her a sense of wonder about the sky by telling her legends about grand cities that floated so high in the sky that they had to bring their own air with them. Stories, just stories, she thought to herself. She didn't want to accidentally slip when in school.
"Could people have ever actually lived up there?" she muttered to herself. The legends her father had shared with her before he disappeared stayed in her mind since she was a little girl. There were stories about the cities, the people, and even ideas that humans came from the sky, but such stories were illegal.
As the shadows grew longer and the moons passed through the line in the sky, Anne turned around and walked home.