The dust rose and choked
me; it was sickening, foetid, awful; but my climb was, I felt, for
life or death, and I struggled on. The seconds seemed hours; but
the few moments I had in starting, combined with my youth and
strength, gave me a great advantage, and, though several forms
struggled after me in deadly silence which was more dreadful than
any sound, I easily reached the top. Since then I have climbed the
cone of Vesuvius, and as I struggled up that dreary steep amid the
sulphurous fumes the memory of that awful night at Montrouge came
back to me so vividly that I almost grew faint.
The mound was one of the tallest in the region of dust, and as I
struggled to the top, panting for breath and with my heart beating
like a sledge-hammer, I saw away to my left the dull red gleam of
the sky, and nearer still the flashing of lights. Thank God! I knew
where I was now and where lay the road to Paris!
For two or three seconds I paused and looked back. My pursuers
were still well behind me, but struggling up resolutely, and in
deadly silence. Beyond, the shanty was a wreck-a mass of timber and
moving forms. I could see it well, for flames were already bursting
out; the rags and straw had evidently caught fire from the lantern.
Still silence there! Not a sound! These old wretches could die
game, anyhow.
I had no time for more than a passing glance, for as I cast an
eye round the mound preparatory to making my descent I saw several
dark forms rushing round on either side to cut me off on my way. It
was now a race for life. They were trying to head me on my way to
Paris, and with the instinct of the moment I dashed down to the
right-hand side. I was just in time, for, though I came as it
seemed to me down the steep in a few steps, the wary old men who
were watching me turned back, and one, as I rushed by into the
opening between the two mounds in front, almost struck me a blow
with that terrible butcher's axe. There could surely not be two
such weapons about!
Then began a really horrible chase. I easily ran ahead of the
old men, and even when some younger ones and a few women joined in
the hunt I easily distanced them. But I did not know the way, and I
could not even guide myself by the light in the sky, for I was
running away from it. I had heard that, unless of conscious
purpose, hunted men turn always to the left, and so I found it now;
and so, I suppose, knew also my pursuers, who were more animals
than men, and with cunning or instinct had found out such secrets
for themselves: for on finishing a quick spurt, after which I
intended to take a moment's breathing space, I suddenly saw ahead
of me two or three forms swiftly passing behind a mound to the
right.
I was in the spider's web now indeed! But with the thought of
this new danger came the resource of the hunted, and so I darted
down the next turning to the right. I continued in this direction
for some hundred yards, and then, making a turn to the left again,
felt certain that I had, at any rate, avoided the danger of being
surrounded.
But not of pursuit, for on came the rabble after me, steady,
dogged, relentless, and still in grim silence.
In the greater darkness the mounds seemed now to be somewhat
smaller than before, although-for the night was closing-they looked
bigger in proportion. I was now well ahead of my pursuers, so I
made a dart up the mound in front.
Oh joy of joys! I was close to the edge of this inferno of
dustheaps. Away behind me the red light of Paris in the sky, and
towering up behind rose the heights of Montmartre-a dim light, with
here and there brilliant points like stars.
Restored to vigour in a moment, I ran over the few remaining
mounds of decreasing size, and found myself on the level land
beyond. Even then, however, the prospect was not inviting. All
before me was dark and dismal, and I had evidently come on one of
those dank, low-lying waste places which are found here and there
in the neighbourhood of great cities. Places of waste and
desolation, where the space is required for the ultimate
agglomeration of all that is noxious, and the ground is so poor as
to create no desire of occupancy even in the lowest squatter. With
eyes accustomed to the gloom of the evening, and away now from the
shadows of those dreadful dust-heaps, I could see much more easily
than I could a little while ago. It might have been, of course,
that the glare in the sky of the lights of Paris, though the city
was some miles away, was reflected here. Howsoever it was, I saw
well enough to take bearings for certainly some little distance
around me.
In front was a bleak, flat waste that seemed almost dead level,
with here and there the dark shimmering of stagnant pools.
Seemingly far off on the right, amid a small cluster of scattered
lights, rose a dark mass of Fort Montrouge, and away to the left in
the dim distance, pointed with stray gleams from cottage windows,
the lights in the sky showed the locality of Bicetre. A moment's
thought decided me to take to the right and try to reach Montrouge.
There at least would be some sort of safety, and I might possibly
long before come on some of the cross roads which I knew.
Somewhere, not far off, must lie the strategic road made to connect
the outlying chain of forts circling the city.
Then I looked back. Coming over the mounds, and outlined black
against the glare of the Parisian horizon, I saw several moving
figures, and still a way to the right several more deploying out
between me and my destination. They evidently meant to cut me off
in this direction, and so my choice became constricted; it lay now
between going straight ahead or turning to the left. Stooping to
the ground, so as to get the advantage of the horizon as a line of
sight, I looked carefully in this direction, but could detect no
sign of my enemies. I argued that as they had not guarded or were
not trying to guard that point, there was evidently danger to me
there already. So I made up my mind to go straight on before
me.
It was not an inviting prospect, and as I went on the reality
grew worse. The ground became soft and oozy, and now and again gave
way beneath me in a sickening kind of way.
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