Four Minute Delay
Colonel James Black sat down across from the ship's physician,
hands folded in his lap. "Captain asked me to chat with you." It
was a bland statement, delivered in a monotone voice. Major
Jessica Stone sighed, "Let's be honest. She asked you three days
ago. Today she ordered you to stop avoiding me, so you finally
made this appointment." "I haven't been avoiding you." Now he
sounded irritated. "I told her that, too." At least irritation
was an emotion. "Colonel, the ship's longest axis is less than
four hundred and forty meters, and there are only eight of us on
it. It's obvious when any one of the crew is avoiding the other
seven. The rest of us are worried about you. Not only are you
our friend, but you are the chief engineer. Our lives depend on
you, until we get all the way to Mars and then back to Earth."
"I'm fine." His voice was flat again, and his face blank. "There
are ten million kilometers of hard vacuum between us and-."
"More than thirty three million." His correction was flat and
automatic. "Okay, Thirty three million. You keep talking about
getting out and walking home." "That was just a joke." He
shifted uncomfortably in his chair. "Well, jokes." "Do you
regret having signed up for this?" She watched his face as she
went on. "Is it the cramped conditions? The danger? The
isolation?" She stopped, watching his eyes flick back and forth.
After a long silence he looked at her, "I knew it would be
tough, being at the forefront. Boldly going, as it were."
Jessica settled in her chair as Black stared at the back wall
towards distant Earth. "Don't get me wrong, I'm glad to be out
here, one of an elite crew. I've never had a problem with being
inside. In fact, I'm vaguely nervous about open spaces, unless
I'm in a plane." He patted the nearest wall like a person
stroking a faithful pet. "It is tough being isolated from my
family, and all my friends back home." "Well, for the next few
years this is home, and you have friends here." She replied. He
stared at the wall, expressionless. She shifted in her seat.
"Hey, we aren't really out of contact. We have a permanent laser
link." "Well yes, but it only goes at the speed of light." She
shrugged. "So it takes nearly two minutes to travel the thirty
million kilometers? Do you notice?" "That is one hundred and
twelve seconds each way. Plus, it gets a little longer every
day, every hour, every... You can't avoid noticing when talking
to people back there. Three minutes and forty four seconds go by
between me speaking and seeing them react and answer. Talking to
anyone just makes me more aware that they are so very far away,
getting further, every minute." Jessica smiled. "Have you
stopped emailing your family and friends?" "Yes." He frowned.
"Why?" "That is my question. It usually takes at least half an
hour to get a reply to an email. If it takes another four or
five minutes, is anyone going to notice?" "Well..." He looked
confused. "But, I..." "Personally, I've actually made some
friends since we left. I found some email lists on topics that
always interested me but which I never had time for. Now I have
time to spare, and so do you." "Well, email lists aren't
friends, are they?" "No." Jessica nodded. "But I've found people
on those lists I get on with, and so I've emailed them off-list.
Started what could be long friendships, by the time we return to
Earth." "They're just pretending to be your friends because
you're famous." Jessica stared at Colonel Black. Did he look
fearful? Did he worry his friends weren't real and true? "You
don't have... I try to avoid telling them where I am. So far
none of them know I'm even on the UN Exploration Ship to Mars."
She stared at the back wall. "Talking to them, about ordinary
things, gives me another piece of normality. We need chunks of
ordinary life during this crazy trip down a three hundred
million kilometer rabbit hole." Colonel Black stared at her a
moment, then smiled. Jessica tried to think when she'd last seen
that rather unappealing grin. "Well, I used to be interested in
Japanese history. Never had the time to really study it. Until
now, I guess." Still smiling, he stood up. "But first, I should
send my sister an email." He gave her a curt nod and dashed out
of the office.