The stars began to go out on a Tuesday in November, 1888.
Dr. Alistair Finch did not notice at first. He was a man of routine, and his routine was the Greenwich Observatory: rise at six, breakfast at seven, observe from nine until the fog rolled in off the Thames, dine at seven, sleep at ten. The stars were not his primary concern. That was the work of the astrophysicists at Cambridge, the men who measured spectral lines and debated the chemical...
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