
This is episode forty of the novel, From Here To 1137 AD. If you would like to purchase From Here To 1137 AD, it is available on Amazon in Kindle format or paperback.
Goodbye Debbie, Hello Space
For the next two days, Tom spent a lot of time with Debbie. However, he used the rest of his time preparing the farm and Gene for his voyage. Gene continued to believe Tom was merely taking an extended trip somewhere on Earth.
The day of departure arrived.
A cold fog hung low over the frozen farm fields. Tom and Debbie stood in the lane near the shrouded pod.
“Well, Tom, this is it for a while,” Debbie said.
“Study hard,” Tom said. “I want to see that you made the dean’s list.”
“It will be hard,” Debbie said. “I’ll worry.”
“And I’ll worry about you. Remember, farm work is far more dangerous than what I’m going to do.”
“I wish I knew more so I could worry less,” Debbie said.
“I’m going to a planet very much like Earth. It’s almost a thousand years behind us. They haven’t even invented the printing press. Where I’m going to, rifles won’t appear for maybe another two hundred years. The vertical windmill has not yet come of age.”
“There are things like knives, swords, lances, clubs, and just plain old physical brutality,” Debbie said.
“I have a suit,” Tom said. “It is invisible and micro-thin. Nothing that we have today can penetrate it. A man could knock me over the head with a lead pipe, and I wouldn’t feel it.”
“Are you saying that to make me feel better?” Debbie said.
“No, it’s true. Don’t worry. I love you.”
“And I love you.”
They embraced and kissed.
Tom looked into Debbie’s eyes. “There is nothing in this universe that can keep me from not returning to you. I’m holding everything in the universe in my arms at this moment.”
“I’ll think of you every moment,” Debbie’s eyes became moist.
Tom smiled assuringly. “Goodbye and see you soon.”
Debbie wiped a tear from her cheek. “Don’t pick up any hitchhikers.”
They stepped away holding hands. Their hands dropped, and they parted.
Tom watched Debbie walk away, down the farm lane until she faded into the cold morning fog.
‘I don’t know who will be the loneliest,’ Tom thought.
Tom entered the pod. He wondered if he should take a moment for some sort of reflection. “I have plenty of time and space to wonder.”
“Brain,” Tom said, “how far away will we be traveling?”
“1,748 kiloparsecs,” Brain said.
“Can you tell me that in miles?”
“It would be best to tell you in days; how many days it will take,” Brain said.
“Have it your way.”
“Five days,” Brain said.
“That’s fine, but it still doesn’t satisfy my curiosity.”
“Okay,” Brain said, “if Earth were the size of a golf ball, you would have to travel forty trillion miles.”
Tom fell into the captain’s chair. He squinted as if trying to unravel a complicated concept.
“Do you have a reply?” Brain asked.
“I’m almost afraid I asked to begin with.”
“It is understood,” Brain said. “Even those from the planet where I was created are left with the same perplexities as you have now.”
“What about you?”
“As a machine, I can’t imagine,” Brain said. “I’m limited to only what I know and can calculate.”
“Can you at least give me an idea of how we can travel that far in a comparatively short span of time?”
“Certainly,” Brain said. “Once we break the speed of light, which is the most difficult maneuver to achieve, a realm of existence is entered into. It is called the Superluminal Zone or SL Zone. The conventional laws of physics do not apply there. I am referring to laws such as Newton’s Laws of Physics. Once in that zone, propulsion as it is understood in your realm does not exist. It is a zone where time and distance are compressed. However, objects are not. Thus, you and this pod, or anything brought to it, can operate. However, it is the ability to calculate what occurs outside the Zone is the only way to use it effectively. Light does not exist in this realm. Is that enough, or do you need more?”
“How far am I traveling in rods?” Tom chuckled and added. “Just kidding.”
“I have it, if you like,” Brain said.
“How far am I from the Earth now?”
“At least 10 million miles,” Brain said. “It is difficult to calculate because in the time it took to ask, you could have traveled hundreds of thousands of light-years.”
“Just get me there safely,” Tom said. “And I won’t ask anymore questions that I can’t grasp.”
“No offense, Brain,”but I should have brought somebody with me. I have the feeling these next five days are going to be boring. It will be like living underground.”
“You may want to study as much as you can absorb about 12th-century England. It appears to be a fascinating time in history. Regarding your own sensitivities and preferences, it may prove to be a challenge. Knowledge, a willingness to adapt, and compliance cannot be underestimated.”
“You sound experienced.”
“I have offered advice on many such experiences,” Brain said. “You will find a wealth of intriguing reading that is ready for you on your tablet.”
“I know, get busy.”
The rest of the day was filled with reading. Tom occasionally stopped and pondered how he might fit into the rural life of 12th-century England.