Spaces:
Sleeping
Sleeping
| Transcriber's Note: | |
| This etext was produced from IF Worlds of Science Fiction January 1953. | |
| Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright | |
| on this publication was renewed. | |
| _The atomic bomb meant, to most people, the end. To Henry Bemis it | |
| meant something far different--a thing to appreciate and enjoy._ | |
| Time Enough At Last | |
| By Lynn Venable | |
| For a long time, Henry Bemis had had an ambition. To read a book. Not | |
| just the title or the preface, or a page somewhere in the middle. He | |
| wanted to read the whole thing, all the way through from beginning to | |
| end. A simple ambition perhaps, but in the cluttered life of Henry | |
| Bemis, an impossibility. | |
| Henry had no time of his own. There was his wife, Agnes who owned that | |
| part of it that his employer, Mr. Carsville, did not buy. Henry was | |
| allowed enough to get to and from work--that in itself being quite a | |
| concession on Agnes' part. | |
| Also, nature had conspired against Henry by handing him with a pair of | |
| hopelessly myopic eyes. Poor Henry literally couldn't see his hand in | |
| front of his face. For a while, when he was very young, his parents | |
| had thought him an idiot. When they realized it was his eyes, they got | |
| glasses for him. He was never quite able to catch up. There was never | |
| enough time. It looked as though Henry's ambition would never be | |
| realized. Then something happened which changed all that. | |
| Henry was down in the vault of the Eastside Bank & Trust when it | |
| happened. He had stolen a few moments from the duties of his teller's | |
| cage to try to read a few pages of the magazine he had bought that | |
| morning. He'd made an excuse to Mr. Carsville about needing bills in | |
| large denominations for a certain customer, and then, safe inside the | |
| dim recesses of the vault he had pulled from inside his coat the | |
| pocket size magazine. | |
| He had just started a picture article cheerfully entitled "The New | |
| Weapons and What They'll Do To YOU", when all the noise in the world | |
| crashed in upon his ear-drums. It seemed to be inside of him and | |
| outside of him all at once. Then the concrete floor was rising up at | |
| him and the ceiling came slanting down toward him, and for a fleeting | |
| second Henry thought of a story he had started to read once called | |
| "The Pit and The Pendulum". He regretted in that insane moment that he | |
| had never had time to finish that story to see how it came out. Then | |
| all was darkness and quiet and unconsciousness. | |
| * * * * * | |
| When Henry came to, he knew that something was desperately wrong with | |
| the Eastside Bank & Trust. The heavy steel door of the vault was | |
| buckled and twisted and the floor tilted up at a dizzy angle, while | |
| the ceiling dipped crazily toward it. Henry gingerly got to his feet, | |
| moving arms and legs experimentally. Assured that nothing was broken, | |
| he tenderly raised a hand to his eyes. His precious glasses were | |
| intact, thank God! He would never have been able to find his way out | |
| of the shattered vault without them. | |
| He made a mental note to write Dr. Torrance to have a spare pair made | |
| and mailed to him. Blasted nuisance not having his prescription on | |
| file locally, but Henry trusted no-one but Dr. Torrance to grind those | |
| thick lenses into his own complicated prescription. Henry removed the | |
| heavy glasses from his face. Instantly the room dissolved into a | |
| neutral blur. Henry saw a pink splash that he knew was his hand, and a | |
| white blob come up to meet the pink as he withdrew his pocket | |
| handkerchief and carefully dusted the lenses. As he replaced the | |
| glasses, they slipped down on the bridge of his nose a little. He had | |
| been meaning to have them tightened for some time. | |
| He suddenly realized, without the realization actually entering his | |
| conscious thoughts, that something momentous had happened, something | |
| worse than the boiler blowing up, something worse than a gas main | |
| exploding, something worse than anything that had ever happened | |
| before. He felt that way because it was so quiet. There was no whine | |
| of sirens, no shouting, no running, just an ominous and all pervading | |
| silence. | |
| * * * * * | |
| Henry walked across the slanting floor. Slipping and stumbling on the | |
| uneven surface, he made his way to the elevator. The car lay crumpled | |
| at the foot of the shaft like a discarded accordian. There was | |
| something inside of it that Henry could not look at, something that | |
| had once been a person, or perhaps several people, it was impossible | |
| to tell now. | |
| Feeling sick, Henry staggered toward the stairway. The steps were | |
| still there, but so jumbled and piled back upon one another that it | |
| was more like climbing the side of a mountain than mounting a | |
| stairway. It was quiet in the huge chamber that had been the lobby of | |
| the bank. It looked strangely cheerful with the sunlight shining | |
| through the girders where the ceiling had fallen. The dappled sunlight | |
| glinted across the silent lobby, and everywhere there were huddled | |
| lumps of unpleasantness that made Henry sick as he tried not to look | |
| at them. | |
| "Mr. Carsville," he called. It was very quiet. Something had to be | |
| done, of course. This was terrible, right in the middle of a Monday, | |
| too. Mr. Carsville would know what to do. He called again, more | |
| loudly, and his voice cracked hoarsely, "Mr. Carrrrsville!" And then | |
| he saw an arm and shoulder extending out from under a huge fallen | |
| block of marble ceiling. In the buttonhole was the white carnation Mr. | |
| Carsville had worn to work that morning, and on the third finger of | |
| that hand was a massive signet ring, also belonging to Mr. Carsville. | |
| Numbly, Henry realized that the rest of Mr. Carsville was under that | |
| block of marble. | |
| Henry felt a pang of real sorrow. Mr. Carsville was gone, and so was | |
| the rest of the staff--Mr. Wilkinson and Mr. Emory and Mr. Prithard, | |
| and the same with Pete and Ralph and Jenkins and Hunter and Pat the | |
| guard and Willie the doorman. There was no one to say what was to be | |
| done about the Eastside Bank & Trust except Henry Bemis, and Henry | |
| wasn't worried about the bank, there was something he wanted to do. | |
| He climbed carefully over piles of fallen masonry. Once he stepped | |
| down into something that crunched and squashed beneath his feet and he | |
| set his teeth on edge to keep from retching. The street was not much | |
| different from the inside, bright sunlight and so much concrete to | |
| crawl over, but the unpleasantness was much, much worse. Everywhere | |
| there were strange, motionless lumps that Henry could not look at. | |
| Suddenly, he remembered Agnes. He should be trying to get to Agnes, | |
| shouldn't he? He remembered a poster he had seen that said, "In event | |
| of emergency do not use the telephone, your loved ones are as safe as | |
| you." He wondered about Agnes. He looked at the smashed automobiles, | |
| some with their four wheels pointing skyward like the stiffened legs | |
| of dead animals. He couldn't get to Agnes now anyway, if she was safe, | |
| then, she was safe, otherwise ... of course, Henry knew Agnes wasn't | |
| safe. He had a feeling that there wasn't anyone safe for a long, long | |
| way, maybe not in the whole state or the whole country, or the whole | |
| world. No, that was a thought Henry didn't want to think, he forced it | |
| from his mind and turned his thoughts back to Agnes. | |
| * * * * * | |
| She had been a pretty good wife, now that it was all said and done. It | |
| wasn't exactly her fault if people didn't have time to read nowadays. | |
| It was just that there was the house, and the bank, and the yard. | |
| There were the Jones' for bridge and the Graysons' for canasta and | |
| charades with the Bryants. And the television, the television Agnes | |
| loved to watch, but would never watch alone. He never had time to read | |
| even a newspaper. He started thinking about last night, that business | |
| about the newspaper. | |
| Henry had settled into his chair, quietly, afraid that a creaking | |
| spring might call to Agnes' attention the fact that he was momentarily | |
| unoccupied. He had unfolded the newspaper slowly and carefully, the | |
| sharp crackle of the paper would have been a clarion call to Agnes. He | |
| had glanced at the headlines of the first page. "Collapse Of | |
| Conference Imminent." He didn't have time to read the article. He | |
| turned to the second page. "Solon Predicts War Only Days Away." He | |
| flipped through the pages faster, reading brief snatches here and | |
| there, afraid to spend too much time on any one item. On a back page | |
| was a brief article entitled, "Prehistoric Artifacts Unearthed In | |
| Yucatan". Henry smiled to himself and carefully folded the sheet of | |
| paper into fourths. That would be interesting, he would read all of | |
| it. Then it came, Agnes' voice. "Henrrreee!" And then she was upon | |
| him. She lightly flicked the paper out of his hands and into the | |
| fireplace. He saw the flames lick up and curl possessively around the | |
| unread article. Agnes continued, "Henry, tonight is the Jones' bridge | |
| night. They'll be here in thirty minutes and I'm not dressed yet, and | |
| here you are ... _reading_." She had emphasized the last word as | |
| though it were an unclean act. "Hurry and shave, you know how smooth | |
| Jasper Jones' chin always looks, and then straighten up this room." | |
| She glanced regretfully toward the fireplace. "Oh dear, that paper, | |
| the television schedule ... oh well, after the Jones leave there won't | |
| be time for anything but the late-late movie and.... Don't just sit | |
| there, Henry, hurrreeee!" | |
| Henry was hurrying now, but hurrying too much. He cut his leg on a | |
| twisted piece of metal that had once been an automobile fender. He | |
| thought about things like lock-jaw and gangrene and his hand trembled | |
| as he tied his pocket-handkerchief around the wound. In his mind, he | |
| saw the fire again, licking across the face of last night's newspaper. | |
| He thought that now he would have time to read all the newspapers he | |
| wanted to, only now there wouldn't be any more. That heap of rubble | |
| across the street had been the Gazette Building. It was terrible to | |
| think there would never be another up to date newspaper. Agnes would | |
| have been very upset, no television schedule. But then, of course, no | |
| television. He wanted to laugh but he didn't. That wouldn't have been | |
| fitting, not at all. | |
| He could see the building he was looking for now, but the silhouette | |
| was strangely changed. The great circular dome was now a ragged | |
| semi-circle, half of it gone, and one of the great wings of the | |
| building had fallen in upon itself. A sudden panic gripped Henry | |
| Bemis. What if they were all ruined, destroyed, every one of them? | |
| What if there wasn't a single one left? Tears of helplessness welled | |
| in his eyes as he painfully fought his way over and through the | |
| twisted fragments of the city. | |
| * * * * * | |
| He thought of the building when it had been whole. He remembered the | |
| many nights he had paused outside its wide and welcoming doors. He | |
| thought of the warm nights when the doors had been thrown open and he | |
| could see the people inside, see them sitting at the plain wooden | |
| tables with the stacks of books beside them. He used to think then, | |
| what a wonderful thing a public library was, a place where anybody, | |
| anybody at all could go in and read. | |
| He had been tempted to enter many times. He had watched the people | |
| through the open doors, the man in greasy work clothes who sat near | |
| the door, night after night, laboriously studying, a technical journal | |
| perhaps, difficult for him, but promising a brighter future. There had | |
| been an aged, scholarly gentleman who sat on the other side of the | |
| door, leisurely paging, moving his lips a little as he did so, a man | |
| having little time left, but rich in time because he could do with it | |
| as he chose. | |
| Henry had never gone in. He had started up the steps once, got almost | |
| to the door, but then he remembered Agnes, her questions and shouting, | |
| and he had turned away. | |
| He was going in now though, almost crawling, his breath coming in | |
| stabbing gasps, his hands torn and bleeding. His trouser leg was | |
| sticky red where the wound in his leg had soaked through the | |
| handkerchief. It was throbbing badly but Henry didn't care. He had | |
| reached his destination. | |
| Part of the inscription was still there, over the now doorless | |
| entrance. P-U-B--C L-I-B-R---. The rest had been torn away. The place | |
| was in shambles. The shelves were overturned, broken, smashed, tilted, | |
| their precious contents spilled in disorder upon the floor. A lot of | |
| the books, Henry noted gleefully, were still intact, still whole, | |
| still readable. He was literally knee deep in them, he wallowed in | |
| books. He picked one up. The title was "Collected Works of William | |
| Shakespeare." Yes, he must read that, sometime. He laid it aside | |
| carefully. He picked up another. Spinoza. He tossed it away, seized | |
| another, and another, and still another. Which to read first ... there | |
| were so many. | |
| He had been conducting himself a little like a starving man in a | |
| delicatessen--grabbing a little of this and a little of that in a | |
| frenzy of enjoyment. | |
| But now he steadied away. From the pile about him, he selected one | |
| volume, sat comfortably down on an overturned shelf, and opened the | |
| book. | |
| Henry Bemis smiled. | |
| There was the rumble of complaining stone. Minute in comparison with | |
| the epic complaints following the fall of the bomb. This one occurred | |
| under one corner of the shelf upon which Henry sat. The shelf moved; | |
| threw him off balance. The glasses slipped from his nose and fell with | |
| a tinkle. | |
| He bent down, clawing blindly and found, finally, their smashed | |
| remains. A minor, indirect destruction stemming from the sudden, | |
| wholesale smashing of a city. But the only one that greatly interested | |
| Henry Bemis. | |
| He stared down at the blurred page before him. | |
| He began to cry. | |
| THE END | |