Part 22 (1/2)

”Stop!” I said, my brain reeling. ”Tell me one thing at a time.”

”Humph!” he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed. ”I see, you must have been asleep a long time. Go on then and ask questions. Only, if you don't mind, just as few as possible, and please don't get interested or excited.”

Oddly enough the first question that sprang to my lips was-

”What are those clothes made of?”

”Asbestos,” answered the man. ”They last hundreds of years. We have one suit each, and there are billions of them piled up, if anybody wants a new one.”

”Thank you,” I answered. ”Now tell me where I am?”

”You are in a museum. The figures in the cases are specimens like yourself. But here,” he said, ”if you want really to find out about what is evidently a new epoch to you, get off your platform and come out on Broadway and sit on a bench.”

I got down.

As we pa.s.sed through the dim and dust-covered buildings I looked curiously at the figures in the cases.

”By Jove!” I said looking at one figure in blue clothes with a belt and baton, ”that's a policeman!”

”Really,” said my new acquaintance, ”is that what a policeman was? I've often wondered. What used they to be used for?”

”Used for?” I repeated in perplexity. ”Why, they stood at the corner of the street.”

”Ah, yes, I see,” he said, ”so as to shoot at the people. You must excuse my ignorance,” he continued, ”as to some of your social customs in the past. When I took my education I was operated upon for social history, but the stuff they used was very inferior.”

I didn't in the least understand what the man meant, but had no time to question him, for at that moment we came out upon the street, and I stood riveted in astonishment.

Broadway! Was it possible? The change was absolutely appalling! In place of the roaring thoroughfare that I had known, this silent, moss-grown desolation. Great buildings fallen into ruin through the sheer stress of centuries of wind and weather, the sides of them coated over with a growth of fungus and moss! The place was soundless. Not a vehicle moved. There were no wires overhead-no sound of life or movement except, here and there, there pa.s.sed slowly to and fro human figures dressed in the same asbestos clothes as my acquaintance, with the same hairless faces, and the same look of infinite age upon them.

Good heavens! And was this the era of the Conquest that I had hoped to see! I had always taken for granted, I do not know why, that humanity was destined to move forward. This picture of what seemed desolation on the ruins of our civilisation rendered me almost speechless.

There were little benches placed here and there on the street. We sat down.

”Improved, isn't it,” said man in asbestos, ”since the days when you remember it?”

He seemed to speak quite proudly.

I gasped out a question.

”Where are the street cars and the motors?”

”Oh, done away with long ago,” he said; ”how awful they must have been.

The noise of them!” and his asbestos clothes rustled with a shudder.

”But how do you get about?”

”We don't,” he answered. ”Why should we? It's just the same being here as being anywhere else.” He looked at me with an infinity of dreariness in his face.

A thousand questions surged into my mind at once. I asked one of the simplest.