Short Fiction Stanley G. Weinbaum (read 50 shades of grey TXT) š
- Author: Stanley G. Weinbaum
Book online Ā«Short Fiction Stanley G. Weinbaum (read 50 shades of grey TXT) šĀ». Author Stanley G. Weinbaum
The girl smiled. āAre you the individual responsible for the delay in starting?ā
I admitted it. āI seem to be chronically late. Even watches lose time as soon as I wear them.ā
She laughed. āYour responsibilities canāt be very heavy.ā
Well, they werenāt of course, though itās surprising how many clubs, caddies, and chorus girls have depended on me at various times for appreciable portions of their incomes. But somehow I didnāt feel like mentioning those things to the silvery-eyed girl.
We talked. Her name, it developed, was Joanna Caldwell, and she was going as far as Paris. She was an artist, or hoped to be one day, and of course there is no place in the world that can supply both training and inspiration like Paris. So it was there she was bound for a year of study, and despite her demurely humorous lips and laughing eyes, I could see that the business was of vast importance to her. I gathered that she had worked hard for the year in Paris, had scraped and saved for three years as fashion illustrator for some womanās magazine, though she couldnāt have been many months over twenty-one. Her painting meant a great deal to her, and I could understand it. Iād felt that way about polo once.
So you see, we were sympathetic spirits from the beginning. I knew that she liked me, and it was obvious that she didnāt connect Dixon Wells with the N. J. Wells Corporation. And as for meā āwell, after that first glance into her cool silver eyes, I simply didnāt care to look anywhere else. The hours seemed to drip away like minutes while I watched her.
You know how those things go. Suddenly I was calling her Joanna and she was calling me Dick, and it seemed as if weād been doing just that all our lives. Iād decided to stop over in Paris on my way back from Moscow, and Iād secured her promise to let me see her. She was different, I tell you; she was nothing like the calculating Whimsy White, and still less like the dancing, simpering, giddy youngsters one meets around at social affairs. She was just Joanna, cool and humorous, yet sympathetic and serious, and as pretty as a Majolica figurine.
We could scarcely realize it when the steward passed along to take orders for luncheon. Four hours out? It seemed like forty minutes. And we had a pleasant feeling of intimacy in the discovery that both of us liked lobster salad and detested oysters. It was another bond; I told her whimsically that it was an omen, nor did she object to considering it so.
Afterwards we walked along the narrow aisle to the glassed-in observation room up forward. It was almost too crowded for entry, but we didnāt mind that at all, as it forced us to sit very close together. We stayed long after both of us had begun to notice the stuffiness of the air.
It was just after we had returned to our seats that the catastrophe occurred. There was no warning save a sudden lurch, the result, I suppose, of the pilotās futile last-minute attempt to swerveā ājust that and then a grinding crash and a terrible sensation of spinning, and after that a chorus of shrieks that were like the sounds of battle.
It was battle. Five hundred people were picking themselves up from the floor, were trampling each other, milling around, being cast helplessly down as the great rocket-plane, its left wing but a broken stub, circled downward toward the Atlantic.
The shouts of officers sounded and a loudspeaker blared. āBe calm,ā it kept repeating, and then, āThere has been a collision. We have contacted a surface ship. There is no dangerā āThere is no dangerā āā
I struggled up from the debris of shattered seats. Joanna was gone; just as I found her crumpled between the rows, the ship struck the water with a jar that set everything crashing again. The speaker blared, āPut on the cork belts under the seats. The lifebelts are under the seats.ā
I dragged a belt loose and snapped it around Joanna, then donned one myself. The crowd was surging forward now, and the tail end of the ship began to drop. There was water behind us, sloshing in the darkness as the lights went out. An officer came sliding by, stooped, and fastened a belt about an unconscious woman ahead of us. āYou all right?ā he yelled, and passed on without waiting for an answer.
The speaker must have been cut on to a battery circuit. āAnd get as far away as possible,ā it ordered suddenly. āJump from the forward port and get as far away as possible. A ship is standing by. You will be picked up. Jump from theā āā It went dead again.
I got Joanna untangled from the wreckage. She was pale; her silvery eyes were closed. I started dragging her slowly and painfully toward the forward port, and the slant of the floor increased until it was like the slide of a ski-jump. The officer passed again. āCan you handle her?ā he asked, and again dashed away.
I was getting there. The crowd around the port looked smaller, or was it simply huddling closer? Then suddenly, a wail of fear and despair went up, and there was a roar of water. The observation room walls had given. I saw the green surge of waves, and a billowing deluge rushed down upon us. I had been late again.
That was all. I raised shocked and frightened eyes from the subjunctivisor to face van Manderpootz, who was scribbling on the edge of the table.
āWell?ā he asked.
I
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