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Title: Time Enough at Last
Author: Lyn Venable
Release Date: June 1, 2010 [eBook #32633]
[Most recently updated: May 28, 2023]
Language: English
Produced by:
Greg Weeks and the Online Distributed
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TIME ENOUGH AT LAST ***
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
or 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.
hen 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.
enry 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.
he 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.
e 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——
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