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In
the Accident Ward.
THE grass was
gray, of a strange and dreadful pallor, but long and soft.
Unbroken, and bending all one way, as if to look at something,
it covered the wide, low, rounded hill that rose before
me. Over the hill the sky hung close, gray and thick,
with the color of a parched interminable twilight. Dew
or a drop of rain could not be thought of as coming from
such a sky.
Along the base of the low hill
ran a red road of baked clay, blood-red, and beaten with
nameless and innumerable feet. I stood in the middle of
this road and prepared to ascend the hill obliquely by
a narrow [Page 119] footpath, red as
blood, which divided the soft gray bending of the grasses.
Behind me the road made a sharp turn, descending out of
thick clouds into a little blood-red hollow, where it
was crossed by an open gate. In this gate, through which
I had somehow come, stood two gray leopards and a small
ape. The beasts stood on tip-toe and eyed me with a dreadful
curiosity; and from somewhere in the little hollow I heard
a word whispered which I could not understand. But the
beasts heard it, and drew away through the open gate,
and disappeared.
Between the footpath (which all
the time gleamed redly through the over-gathering grasses)
and the rounded brink of the gulf there seemed to be a
fence of some sort, so fine that I could not quite distinguish
it, but which I knew to be there.
I
turned my eyes to the low summit [Page 120] of
the hill. There I saw a figure, all gray, cleaving the
grasses in flight as swift as an arrow. Behind, in pursuit,
came another figure, of the color of the grasses, tall
and terrible beyond thought. This being, as it seemed
to me, was the Second Death, and my knees trembled with
horror and a sort of loathing. Then I saw that he who
fled made directly for me; and as they sped I could hear
a strange hissing and rustling of their garments cleaving
the grasses. When the fleeing ghost reached me, and fell
at my feet, and clasped my knees in awful fear, I felt
myself grow strong, and all dread left my soul. I reached
forth my right hand and grasped the pursuing horror by
the throat.
I
heard the being laugh, and the iron grip of my own strong
and implacable fingers seemed to close with a keen agony
upon my own throat, and a curtain seemed to fall over
my [Page 121] eyes. Then I gasped for
breath, and a warm pungent smell clung in my nostrils,
and a white light swam into my eyes, and I heard a voice
murmuring far off, but in an accent strangely familiar
and commonplace, “He’s coming round all right
now.”
I
opened my eyes with a dim wonder, and found myself surrounded
by the interested faces of the doctors and the clean white
walls of the hospital ward. I heard a sound of some one
breathing hoarsely near by, and a white-capped nurse with
kind eyes stepped up to my pillow, and I perceived that
the heavy breather was myself. I was lying with my head
and neck swathed in bandages, and a sharp pain at my throat.
Then flashed across my memory the crash and sickening
upheaval of the collision. I wondered feebly how it had
fared with my fellow-passengers, and again I saw that
instant’s vision of wild and startled faces as the
[Page 122] crowded car rose and pitched
downward, I knew not whither. With a sense of inexpressible
weariness, my brain at once allowed the terrible scene
to slip from its grasp, and I heard a doctor, who was
standing at the bedside watch in hand, say, quietly, “He’ll
sleep now for a couple of hours [Page 123].”
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