THE WORK OF FIFTEEN DAYS
For some time I stood tottering on
the mound regardless of my safety. Within that
noisome den from which I had emerged I had thought
with a narrow intensity only of our immediate security.
I had not realised what had been happening to the
world, had not anticipated this startling vision of
unfamiliar things. I had expected to see Sheen
in ruins—I found about me the landscape,
weird and lurid, of another planet.
For that moment I touched an emotion
beyond the common range of men, yet one that the poor
brutes we dominate know only too well. I felt
as a rabbit might feel returning to his burrow and
suddenly confronted by the work of a dozen busy navvies
digging the foundations of a house. I felt the
first inkling of a thing that presently grew quite
clear in my mind, that oppressed me for many days,
a sense of dethronement, a persuasion that I was no
longer a master, but an animal among the animals,
under the Martian heel. With us it would be
as with them, to lurk and watch, to run and hide; the
fear and empire of man had passed away.
But so soon as this strangeness had
been realised it passed, and my dominant motive became
the hunger of my long and dismal fast. In the
direction away from the pit I saw, beyond a red-covered
wall, a patch of garden ground unburied. This
gave me a hint, and I went knee-deep, and sometimes
neck-deep, in the red weed. The density of the
weed gave me a reassuring sense of hiding. The
wall was some six feet high, and when I attempted
to clamber it I found I could not lift my feet to
the crest. So I went along by the side of it,
and came to a corner and a rockwork that enabled me
to get to the top, and tumble into the garden I coveted.
Here I found some young onions, a couple of gladiolus
bulbs, and a quantity of immature carrots, all of which
I secured, and, scrambling over a ruined wall, went
on my way through scarlet and crimson trees towards
Kew—it was like walking through an avenue
of gigantic blood drops—possessed with two
ideas: to get more food, and to limp, as soon
and as far as my strength permitted, out of this accursed
unearthly region of the pit.
Some way farther, in a grassy place,
was a group of mushrooms which also I devoured, and
then I came upon a brown sheet of flowing shallow
water, where meadows used to be. These fragments
of nourishment served only to whet my hunger.
At first I was surprised at this flood in a hot,
dry summer, but afterwards I discovered that it was
caused by the tropical exuberance of the red weed.
Directly this extraordinary growth encountered water
it straightway became gigantic and of unparalleled
fecundity. Its seeds were simply poured down
into the water of the Wey and Thames, and its swiftly
growing and Titanic water fronds speedily choked both
those rivers.
At Putney, as I afterwards saw, the
bridge was almost lost in a tangle of this weed, and
at Richmond, too, the Thames water poured in a broad
and shallow stream across the meadows of Hampton and
Twickenham. As the water spread the weed followed
them, until the ruined villas of the Thames valley
were for a time lost in this red swamp, whose margin
I explored, and much of the desolation the Martians
had caused was concealed.
In the end the red weed succumbed
almost as quickly as it had spread. A cankering
disease, due, it is believed, to the action of certain
bacteria, presently seized upon it. Now by the
action of natural selection, all terrestrial plants
have acquired a resisting power against bacterial
diseases—they never succumb without a severe
struggle, but the red weed rotted like a thing already
dead. The fronds became bleached, and then shrivelled
and brittle. They broke off at the least touch,
and the waters that had stimulated their early growth
carried their last vestiges out to sea.
My first act on coming to this water
was, of course, to slake my thirst. I drank
a great deal of it and, moved by an impulse, gnawed
some fronds of red weed; but they were watery, and
had a sickly, metallic taste. I found the water
was sufficiently shallow for me to wade securely,
although the red weed impeded my feet a little; but
the flood evidently got deeper towards the river,
and I turned back to Mortlake. I managed to
make out the road by means of occasional ruins of
its villas and fences and lamps, and so presently I
got out of this spate and made my way to the hill
going up towards Roehampton and came out on Putney
Common.
Here the scenery changed from the
strange and unfamiliar to the wreckage of the familiar:
patches of ground exhibited the devastation of a cyclone,
and in a few score yards I would come upon perfectly
undisturbed spaces, houses with their blinds trimly
drawn and doors closed, as if they had been left for
a day by the owners, or as if their inhabitants slept
within. The red weed was less abundant; the
tall trees along the lane were free from the red creeper.
I hunted for food among the trees, finding nothing,
and I also raided a couple of silent houses, but they
had already been broken into and ransacked. I
rested for the remainder of the daylight in a shrubbery,
being, in my enfeebled condition, too fatigued to
push on.
All this time I saw no human beings,
and no signs of the Martians. I encountered a
couple of hungry-looking dogs, but both hurried circuitously
away from the advances I made them. Near Roehampton
I had seen two human skeletons—not bodies,
but skeletons, picked clean—and in the
wood by me I found the crushed and scattered bones
of several cats and rabbits and the skull of a sheep.
But though I gnawed parts of these in my mouth, there
was nothing to be got from them.
After sunset I struggled on along
the road towards Putney, where I think the Heat-Ray
must have been used for some reason. And in the
garden beyond Roehampton I got a quantity of immature
potatoes, sufficient to stay my hunger. From
this garden one looked down upon Putney and the river.
The aspect of the place in the dusk was singularly
desolate: blackened trees, blackened, desolate
ruins, and down the hill the sheets of the flooded
river, red-tinged with the weed. And over all—silence.
It filled me with indescribable terror to think how
swiftly that desolating change had come.
For a time I believed that mankind
had been swept out of existence, and that I stood
there alone, the last man left alive. Hard by
the top of Putney Hill I came upon another skeleton,
with the arms dislocated and removed several yards
from the rest of the body. As I proceeded I
became more and more convinced that the extermination
of mankind was, save for such stragglers as myself,
already accomplished in this part of the world.
The Martians, I thought, had gone on and left the
country desolated, seeking food elsewhere. Perhaps
even now they were destroying Berlin or Paris, or
it might be they had gone northward.