The Damned eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 118 pages of information about The Damned.

The Damned eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 118 pages of information about The Damned.

It was a journey that seemed timeless.  I have no idea how fast or slow I went, but I remember that I deliberately examined articles on each side of me, peering with particular closeness into the recesses of wall and window.  I passed the first baize doors, and the passage beyond them widened out to hold shelves of books; there were sofas and small reading-tables against the wall.

It narrowed again presently, as I entered the second stretch.  The windows here were higher and smaller, and marble statuettes of classical subject lined the walls, watching me like figures of the dead.  Their white and shining faces saw me, yet made no sign.  I passed next between the second baize doors.  They, too, had been fastened back with hooks against the wall.  Thus all doors were open—­had been recently opened.

And so, at length, I found myself in the final widening of the corridor which formed an antechamber to the music-room itself.  It had been used formerly to hold the overflow of meetings.  No door separated it from the great hall beyond, but heavy curtains hung usually to close it off, and these curtains were invariably drawn.  They now stood wide.  And here—­I can merely state the impression that came upon me—­I knew myself at last surrounded.  The throng that pressed behind me, also surged in front:  facing me in the big room, and waiting for my entry, stood a multitude; on either side of me, in the very air above my head, the vast assemblage paused upon my coming.  The pause, however, was momentary, for instantly the deep, tumultuous movement was resumed that yet was silent as a cavern underground.  I felt the agony that was in it, the passionate striving, the awful struggle to escape.  The semi-darkness held beseeching faces that fought to press themselves upon my vision, yearning yet hopeless eyes, lips scorched and dry, mouths that opened to implore but found no craved delivery in actual words, and a fury of misery and hate that made the life in me stop dead, frozen by the horror of vain pity.  That intolerable, vain Hope was everywhere.

And the multitude, it came to me, was not a single multitude, but many; for, as soon as one huge division pressed too close upon the edge of escape, it was dragged back by another and prevented.  The wild host was divided against itself.  Here dwelt the Shadow I had “imagined” weeks ago, and in it struggled armies of lost souls as in the depths of some bottomless pit whence there is no escape.  The layers mingled, fighting against themselves in endless torture.  It was in this great Shadow I had clairvoyantly seen Mabel, but about its fearful mouth, I now was certain, hovered another figure of darkness, a figure who sought to keep it in existence, since to her thought were due those lampless depths of woe without escape....  Towards me the multitudes now surged.

It was a sound and a movement that brought me back into myself.  The great dock at the farther end of the room just then struck the hour of three.  That was the sound.  And the movement—?  I was aware that a figure was passing across the distant center of the floor.  Instantly I dropped back into the arena of my little human terror.  My hand again clutched stupidly at the pistol butt.  I drew back into the folds of the heavy curtain.  And the figure advanced.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Damned from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.