Thirty Strange Stories by H. G. Wells (sci fi books to read TXT) đ
- Author: H. G. Wells
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But he was preoccupied. Three weeks and a day. He took unusually large bites of his bread and butter, and stared hard at the little pot of jam. He answered Minnieâs conversational advances distractedly. The shadow of Helter, Skelter, & Grab lay upon the tea-table. He was struggling with this new idea of failure, the tangible realisation, that was taking shape and substance, condensing, as it were, out of the misty uneasiness of many days. At present it was simply one concrete fact; there were thirty-nine pounds left in the bank, and that day three weeks Messrs. Helter, Skelter, & Grab, those enterprising outfitters of young men, would demand their eighty pounds.
After tea there was a customer or soâlittle purchases: some muslin and buckram, dress-protectors, tape, and a pair of Lisle hose. Then, knowing that Black Care was lurking in the dusky corners of the shop, he lit the three lamps early and set to refolding his cotton prints, the most vigorous and least meditative proceeding of which he could think. He could see Minnieâs shadow in the other room as she moved about the table. She was busy turning an old dress. He had a walk after supper, looked in at the Y. M. C. A., but found no one to talk to, and finally went to bed. Minnie was already there. And there, too, waiting for him, nudging him gently, until about midnight he was hopelessly awake, sat Black Care.
He had had one or two nights lately in that company, but this was much worse. First came Messrs. Helter, Skelter, & Grab, and their demand for eighty poundsâan enormous sum when your original capital was only a hundred and seventy. They camped, as it were, before him, sat down and beleaguered him. He clutched feebly at the circumambient darkness for expedients. Suppose he had a sale, sold things for almost anything? He tried to imagine a sale miraculously successful in some unexpected manner, and mildly profitable in spite of reductions below cost. Then Bandersnatch, Limited, 101, 102, 103, 105, 106, 107, Broadway, joined the siege, a long caterpillar of frontage, a battery of shop fronts, wherein things were sold at a farthing above cost. How could he fight such an establishment? Besides, what had he to sell? He began to review his resources. What taking line was there to bait the sale? Then straightway came those pieces of cretonne, yellow and black with a bluish-green flower; those discredited shirtings, prints without buoyancy, skirmishing haberdashery, some despairful four-button gloves by an inferior makerâa hopeless crew. And that was his force against Bandersnatch, Helter, Skelter, & Grab, and the pitiless world behind them. What ever had made him think a mortal would buy such things? Why had he bought this and neglected that? He suddenly realised the intensity of his hatred for Helter, Skelter, & Grabâs salesman. Then he drove towards an agony of self-reproach. He had spent too much on that cash desk. What real need was there of a desk? He saw his vanity of that desk in a lurid glow of self-discovery. And the lamps? Five pounds! Then suddenly, with what was almost physical pain, he remembered the rent.
He groaned and turned over. And there, dim in the darkness, was the hummock of Mrs. Winslowâs shoulders. That set him off in another direction. He became acutely sensible of Minnieâs want of feeling. Here he was, worried to death about business, and she sleeping like a little child. He regretted having married, with that infinite bitterness that only comes to the human heart in the small hours of the morning. That hummock of white seemed absolutely without helpfulness, a burden, a responsibility. What fools men were to marry! Minnieâs inert repose irritated him so much that he was almost provoked to wake her up and tell her that they were âRuined.â She would have to go back to her uncle; her uncle had always been against him; and as for his own future, Winslow was exceedingly uncertain. A shop assistant who has once set up for himself finds the utmost difficulty in getting into a situation again. He began to figure himself âcrib-huntingâ again, going from this wholesale house to that, writing innumerable letters. How he hated writing letters! âSir, referring to your advertisement in the âChristian World.ââ He beheld an infinite vista of discomfort and disappointment, endingâin a gulf.
He dressed, yawning, and went down to open the shop. He felt tired before the day began. As he carried the shutters in he kept asking himself what good he was doing. The end was inevitable, whether he bothered or not. The clear daylight smote into the place and showed how old, and rough, and splintered was the floor, how shabby the second-hand counter, how hopeless the whole enterprise. He had been dreaming these past six months of a bright little shop, of a happy couple, of a modest but comely profit flowing in. He had suddenly awakened from his dream. The braid that bound his decent black coatâit was a little looseâcaught against the catch of the shop-door, and was torn loose. This suddenly turned his wretchedness to wrath. He stood quivering for a moment, then, with a spiteful clutch, tore the braid looser, and went in to Minnie.
âHere,â he said, with infinite reproach, âlook here! You might look after a chap a bit.â
âI didnât see it was torn,â said Minnie.
âYou never do,â said Winslow, with gross injustice, âuntil things are too late.â
Minnie looked suddenly at his face. âIâll sew it now, Sid, if you like.â
âLetâs have breakfast first,â said Winslow, âand do things at their proper time.â
He was preoccupied at breakfast, and Minnie watched him anxiously. His only remark was to declare his egg a bad one. It wasnât; it was a little flavouryâbeing one of those at fifteen a shillingâbut quite nice. He pushed it away from him, and then, having eaten a slice of bread and butter, admitted himself in the wrong by resuming the egg.
âSid!â said Minnie, as he stood up to go into the shop again, âyouâre not well.â
âIâm well enough.â He looked at her as though he hated her.
âThen thereâs something else the matter. You arenât angry with me, Sid, are you?âabout that braid. Do tell me whatâs the matter. You were just like this at tea yesterday, and at supper-time. It wasnât the braid then.â
âAnd Iâm likely to be.â
She looked interrogation. âOh! what is the matter?â she said.
It was too good a chance to miss, and he brought the evil news out with dramatic force. âMatter!â he said. âI done my best, and here we are. Thatâs the matter! If I canât pay Helter, Skelter, & Grab eighty pounds, this day three weeksââ Pause. âWe shall be sold Up! Sold Up! Thatâs the matter, Min! Sold Up!â
âOh, Sid!â began Minnie.
He slammed the door. For the moment he felt relieved of at least half his misery. He began dusting boxes that did not require dusting, and then re-blocked a cretonne already faultlessly blocked. He was in a state of grim wretchedness,âa martyr under the harrow of fate. At any rate, it should not be said he failed for want of industry. And how he had planned and contrived and worked! All to this end! He felt horrible doubts. Providence and Bandersnatchâsurely they were incompatible! Perhaps he was being âtriedâ? That sent him off upon a new tack, a very comforting one. That martyr pose, the gold-in-the-furnace attitude, lasted all the morning.
At dinnerââpotato pieââhe looked up suddenly, and saw Minnie regarding him. Pale she looked, and a little red about the eyes. Something caught him suddenly with a queer effect upon his throat. All his thoughts seemed to wheel round into quite a new direction.
He pushed back his plate, and stared at her blankly. Then he got up, went round the table to herâshe staring at him. He dropped on his knees beside her without a word. âOh, Minnie!â he said, and suddenly she knew it was peace, and put her arms about him, as he began to sob and weep.
He cried like a little boy, slobbering on her shoulder that he was a knave to have married her and brought her to this, that he hadnât the wits to be trusted with a penny, that it was all his fault, that he âhad hoped soââending in a howl. And she, crying gently herself, patting his shoulders, said, âSsh!â softly to his noisy weeping, and so soothed the outbreak. Then suddenly the crazy little bell upon the shop-door began, and Winslow had to jump to his feet, and be a man again.
After that scene they âtalked it overâ at tea, at supper, in bed, at every possible interval in between, solemnlyâquite inconclusivelyâwith set faces and eyes for the most part staring in front of themâand yet with a certain mutual comfort. âWhat to do I donât know,â was Winslowâs main proposition. Minnie tried to take a cheerful view of serviceâwith a probable baby. But she found she needed all her courage. And her uncle would help her again, perhaps, just at the critical time. It didnât do for folks to be too proud. Besides, âsomething might happen,â a favourite formula with her.
One hopeful line was to anticipate a sudden afflux of customers. âPerhaps,â said Minnie, âyou might get together fifty. They know you well enough to trust you a bit.â They debated that point. Once the possibility of Helter, Skelter, & Grab giving credit was admitted, it was pleasant to begin sweating the acceptable minimum. For some half hour over tea the second day after Winslowâs discoveries they were quite cheerful again, laughing even at their terrific fears. Even twenty pounds, to go on with, might be considered enough. Then in some mysterious way the pleasant prospect of Messrs. Helter, Skelter, & Grab tempering the wind to the shorn retailer vanishedâvanished absolutely, and Winslow found himself again in the pit of despair.
He began looking about at the furniture, and wondering idly what it would fetch. The chiffonier was good, anyhow, and there were Minnieâs old plates that her mother used to have. Then he began to think of desperate expedients for putting off the evil day. He had heard somewhere of Bills of Saleâthere was to his ears something comfortingly substantial in the phrase. Then why not âGo to the Money Lenders?â
One cheering thing happened on Thursday afternoon; a little girl came in with a pattern of âprintâ and he was able to match it. He had not been able to match anything out of his meagre stock before. He went in and told Minnie. The incident is mentioned lest the reader should imagine it was uniform despair with him.
The next morning, and the next, after the discovery, Winslow opened shop late. When one has been awake most of the night, and has no hope, what is the good of getting up punctually? But as he went into the dark shop on Friday a strange event happened. He saw something lying on the floor, something lit by the bright light that came under the ill-fitting doorâa black oblong. He stooped and picked up an envelope with a deep mourning edge. It was addressed to his wife. Clearly a death in her familyâperhaps her uncle. He knew the man too well
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