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<h2> IV </h2>
<p>I WENT away hastily, down a cross-street, and at the first corner I saw
another tragedy. Two men of the working class had caught a man and a woman
with two children, and were robbing them. I knew the man by sight, though
I had never been introduced to him. He was a poet whose verses I had long
admired. Yet I did not go to his help, for at the moment I came upon the
scene there was a pistol shot, and I saw him sinking to the ground. The
woman screamed, and she was felled with a fist-blow by one of the brutes.
I cried out threateningly, whereupon they discharged their pistols at me
and I ran away around the corner. Here I was blocked by an advancing
conflagration. The buildings on both sides were burning, and the street
was filled with smoke and flame. From somewhere in that murk came a
woman's voice calling shrilly for help. But I did not go to her. A man's
heart turned to iron amid such scenes, and one heard all too many appeals
for help.</p>
<p>"Returning to the corner, I found the two robbers were gone. The poet and
his wife lay dead on the pavement. It was a shocking sight. The two
children had vanished—whither I could not tell. And I knew, now, why
it was that the fleeing persons I encountered slipped along so furtively
and with such white faces. In the midst of our civilization, down in our
slums and labor-ghettos, we had bred a race of barbarians, of savages; and
now, in the time of our calamity, they turned upon us like the wild beasts
they were and destroyed us. And they destroyed themselves as well.</p>
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<p>"They inflamed themselves with strong drink and committed a thousand
atrocities, quarreling and killing one another in the general madness. One
group of workingmen I saw, of the better sort, who had banded together,
and, with their women and children in their midst, the sick and aged in
litters and being carried, and with a number of horses pulling a
truck-load of provisions, they were fighting their way out of the city.
They made a fine spectacle as they came down the street through the
drifting smoke, though they nearly shot me when I first appeared in their
path. As they went by, one of their leaders shouted out to me in
apologetic explanation. He said they were killing the robbers and looters
on sight, and that they had thus banded together as the only-means by
which to escape the prowlers.</p>
<p>"It was here that I saw for the first time what I was soon to see so
often. One of the marching men had suddenly shown the unmistakable mark of
the plague. Immediately those about him drew away, and he, without a
remonstrance, stepped out of his place to let them pass on. A woman, most
probably his wife, attempted to follow him. She was leading a little boy
by the hand. But the husband commanded her sternly to go on, while others
laid hands on her and restrained her from following him. This I saw, and I
saw the man also, with his scarlet blaze of face, step into a doorway on
the opposite side of the street. I heard the report of his pistol, and saw
him sink lifeless to the ground.</p>
<p>"After being turned aside twice again by advancing fires, I succeeded in
getting through to the university. On the edge of the campus I came upon a
party of university folk who were going in the direction of the Chemistry
Building. They were all family men, and their families were with them,
including the nurses and the servants. Professor Badminton greeted me, I
had difficulty in recognizing him. Somewhere he had gone through flames,
and his beard was singed off. About his head was a bloody bandage, and his
clothes were filthy.</p>
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<p>"He told me he had prowlers, and that his brother had been killed the
previous night, in the defence of their dwelling.</p>
<p>"Midway across the campus, he pointed suddenly to Mrs. Swinton's face. The
unmistakable scarlet was there. Immediately all the other women set up a
screaming and began to run away from her. Her two children were with a
nurse, and these also ran with the women. But her husband, Doctor Swinton,
remained with her.</p>
<p>"'Go on, Smith,' he told me. 'Keep an eye on the children. As for me, I
shall stay with my wife. I know she is as already dead, but I can't leave
her. Afterwards, if I escape, I shall come to the Chemistry Building, and
do you watch for me and let me in.'</p>
<p>"I left him bending over his wife and soothing her last moments, while I
ran to overtake the party. We were the last to be admitted to the
Chemistry Building. After that, with our automatic rifles we maintained
our isolation. By our plans, we had arranged for a company of sixty to be
in this refuge. Instead, every one of the number originally planned had
added relatives and friends and whole families until there were over four
hundred souls. But the Chemistry Building was large, and, standing by
itself, was in no danger of being burned by the great fires that raged
everywhere in the city.</p>
<p>"A large quantity of provisions had been gathered, and a food committee
took charge of it, issuing rations daily to the various families and
groups that arranged themselves into messes. A number of committees were
appointed, and we developed a very efficient organization. I was on the
committee of defence, though for the first day no prowlers came near. We
could see them in the distance, however, and by the smoke of their fires
knew that several camps of them were occupying the far edge of the campus.
Drunkenness was rife, and often we heard them singing ribald songs or
insanely shouting. While the world crashed to ruin about them and all the
air was filled with the smoke of its burning, these low creatures gave
rein to their bestiality and fought and drank and died. And after all,
what did it matter? Everybody died anyway, the good and the bad, the
efficients and the weaklings, those that loved to live and those that
scorned to live. They passed. Everything passed.</p>
<p>"When twenty-four hours had gone by and no signs of the plague were
apparent, we congratulated ourselves and set about digging a well. You
have seen the great iron pipes which in those days carried water to all
the city-dwellers. We feared that the fires in the city would burst the
pipes and empty the reservoirs. So we tore up the cement floor of the
central court of the Chemistry Building and dug a well. There were many
young men, undergraduates, with us, and we worked night and day on the
well. And our fears were confirmed. Three hours before we reached water,
the pipes went dry.</p>
<p>"A second twenty-four hours passed, and still the plague did not appear
among us. We thought we were saved. But we did not know what I afterwards
decided to be true, namely, that the period of the incubation of the
plague germs in a human's body was a matter of a number of days. It slew
so swiftly when once it manifested itself, that we were led to believe
that the period of incubation was equally swift. So, when two days had
left us unscathed, we were elated with the idea that we were free of the
contagion.</p>
<p>"But the third day disillusioned us. I can never forget the night
preceding it. I had charge of the night guards from eight to twelve, and
from the roof of the building I watched the passing of all man's glorious
works. So terrible were the local conflagrations that all the sky was
lighted up. One could read the finest print in the red glare. All the
world seemed wrapped in flames. San Francisco spouted smoke and fire from
a score of vast conflagrations that were like so many active volcanoes.
Oakland, San Leandro, Haywards—all were burning; and to the
northward, clear to Point Richmond, other fires were at work. It was an
awe-inspiring spectacle. Civilization, my grandsons, civilization was
passing in a sheet of flame and a breath of death. At ten o'clock that
night, the great powder magazines at Point Pinole exploded in rapid
succession. So terrific were the concussions that the strong building
rocked as in an earthquake, while every pane of glass was broken. It was
then that I left the roof and went down the long corridors, from room to
room, quieting the alarmed women and telling them what had happened.</p>
<p>"An hour later, at a window on the ground floor, I heard pandemonium break
out in the camps of the prowlers. There were cries and screams, and shots
from many pistols. As we afterward conjectured, this fight had been
precipitated by an attempt on the part of those that were well to drive
out those that were sick. At any rate, a number of the plague-stricken
prowlers escaped across the campus and drifted against our doors. We
warned them back, but they cursed us and discharged a fusillade from their
pistols. Professor Merryweather, at one of the windows, was instantly
killed, the bullet striking him squarely between the eyes. We opened fire
in turn, and all the prowlers fled away with the exception of three. One
was a woman. The plague was on them and they were reckless. Like foul
fiends, there in the red glare from the skies, with faces blazing, they
continued to curse us and fire at us. One of the men I shot with my own
hand. After that the other man and the woman, still cursing us, lay down
under our windows, where we were compelled to watch them die of the
plague.</p>
<p>"The situation was critical. The explosions of the powder magazines had
broken all the windows of the Chemistry Building, so that we were exposed
to the germs from the corpses. The sanitary committee was called upon to
act, and it responded nobly. Two men were required to go out and remove
the corpses, and this meant the probable sacrifice of their own lives,
for, having performed the task, they were not to be permitted to reenter
the building. One of the professors, who was a bachelor, and one of the
undergraduates volunteered. They bade good-bye to us and went forth. They
were heroes. They gave up their lives that four hundred others might live.
After they had performed their work, they stood for a moment, at a
distance, looking at us wistfully. Then they waved their hands in farewell
and went away slowly across the campus toward the burning city.</p>
<p>"And yet it was all useless. The next morning the first one of us was
smitten with the plague—a little nurse-girl in the family of
Professor Stout. It was no time for weak-kneed, sentimental policies. On
the chance that she might be the only one, we thrust her forth from the
building and commanded her to be gone.</p>
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<p>"She went away slowly across the campus, wringing her hands and crying
pitifully. We felt like brutes, but what were we to do? There were four
hundred of us, and individuals had to be sacrificed.</p>
<p>"In one of the laboratories three families had domiciled themselves, and
that afternoon we found among them no less than four corpses and seven
cases of the plague in all its different stages.</p>
<p>"Then it was that the horror began. Leaving the dead lie, we forced the
living ones to segregate themselves in another room. The plague began to
break out among the rest of us, and as fast as the symptoms appeared, we
sent the stricken ones to these segregated rooms. We compelled them to
walk there by themselves, so as to avoid laying hands on them. It was
heartrending. But still the plague raged among us, and room after room was
filled with the dead and dying. And so we who were yet clean retreated to
the next floor and to the next, before this sea of the dead, that, room by
room and floor by floor, inundated the building.</p>
<p>"The place became a charnel house, and in the middle of the night the
survivors fled forth, taking nothing with them except arms and ammunition
and a heavy store of tinned foods. We camped on the opposite side of the
campus from the prowlers, and, while some stood guard, others of us
volunteered to scout into the city in quest of horses, motor cars, carts,
and wagons, or anything that would carry our provisions and enable us to
emulate the banded workingmen I had seen fighting their way out to the
open country.</p>
<p>"I was one of these scouts; and Doctor Hoyle, remembering that his motor
car had been left behind in his home garage, told me to look for it. We
scouted in pairs, and Dombey, a young undergraduate, accompanied me. We
had to cross half a mile of the residence portion of the city to get to
Doctor Hoyle's home. Here the buildings stood apart, in the midst of trees
and grassy lawns, and here the fires had played freaks, burning whole
blocks, skipping blocks and often skipping a single house in a block. And
here, too, the prowlers were still at their work. We carried our automatic
pistols openly in our hands, and looked desperate enough, forsooth, to
keep them from attacking us. But at Doctor Hoyle's house the thing
happened. Untouched by fire, even as we came to it the smoke of flames
burst forth.</p>
<p>"The miscreant who had set fire to it staggered down the steps and out
along the driveway. Sticking out of his coat pockets were bottles of
whiskey, and he was very drunk. My first impulse was to shoot him, and I
have never ceased regretting that I did not. Staggering and maundering to
himself, with bloodshot eyes, and a raw and bleeding slash down one side
of his bewhiskered face, he was altogether the most nauseating specimen of
degradation and filth I had ever encountered. I did not shoot him, and he
leaned against a tree on the lawn to let us go by. It was the most
absolute, wanton act. Just as we were opposite him, he suddenly drew a
pistol and shot Dombey through the head. The next instant I shot him. But
it was too late. Dombey expired without a groan, immediately. I doubt if
he even knew what had happened to him.</p>
<p>"Leaving the two corpses, I hurried on past the burning house to the
garage, and there found Doctor Hoyle's motor car. The tanks were filled
with gasoline, and it was ready for use. And it was in this car that I
threaded the streets of the ruined city and came back to the survivors on
the campus. The other scouts returned, but none had been so fortunate.
Professor Fairmead had found a Shetland pony, but the poor creature, tied
in a stable and abandoned for days, was so weak from want of food and
water that it could carry no burden at all. Some of the men were for
turning it loose, but I insisted that we should lead it along with us, so
that, if we got out of food, we would have it to eat.</p>
<p>"There were forty-seven of us when we started, many being women and
children. The President of the Faculty, an old man to begin with, and now
hopelessly broken by the awful happenings of the past week, rode in the
motor car with several young children and the aged mother of Professor
Fairmead. Wathope, a young professor of English, who had a grievous
bullet-wound in his leg, drove the car. The rest of us walked, Professor
Fairmead leading the pony.</p>
<p>"It was what should have been a bright summer day, but the smoke from the
burning world filled the sky, through which the sun shone murkily, a dull
and lifeless orb, blood-red and ominous. But we had grown accustomed to
that blood-red sun. With the smoke it was different. It bit into our
nostrils and eyes, and there was not one of us whose eyes were not
bloodshot. We directed our course to the southeast through the endless
miles of suburban residences, travelling along where the first swells of
low hills rose from the flat of the central city. It was by this way,
only, that we could expect to gain the country.</p>
<p>"Our progress was painfully slow. The women and children could not walk
fast. They did not dream of walking, my grandsons, in the way all people
walk to-day. In truth, none of us knew how to walk. It was not until after
the plague that I learned really to walk. So it was that the pace of the
slowest was the pace of all, for we dared not separate on account of the
prowlers. There were not so many now of these human beasts of prey. The
plague had already well diminished their numbers, but enough still lived
to be a constant menace to us. Many of the beautiful residences were
untouched by fire, yet smoking ruins were everywhere. The prowlers, too,
seemed to have got over their insensate desire to burn, and it was more
rarely that we saw houses freshly on fire.</p>
<p>"Several of us scouted among the private garages in search of motor cars
and gasoline. But in this we were unsuccessful. The first great flights
from the cities had swept all such utilities away. Calgan, a fine young
man, was lost in this work. He was shot by prowlers while crossing a lawn.
Yet this was our only casualty, though, once, a drunken brute deliberately
opened fire on all of us. Luckily, he fired wildly, and we shot him before
he had done any hurt.</p>
<p>"At Fruitvale, still in the heart of the magnificent residence section of
the city, the plague again smote us. Professor Fair-mead was the victim.
Making signs to us that his mother was not to know, he turned aside into
the grounds of a beautiful mansion. He sat down forlornly on the steps of
the front veranda, and I, having lingered, waved him a last farewell. That
night, several miles beyond Fruitvale and still in the city, we made camp.
And that night we shifted camp twice to get away from our dead. In the
morning there were thirty of us. I shall never forget the President of the
Faculty. During the morning's march his wife, who was walking, betrayed
the fatal symptoms, and when she drew aside to let us go on, he insisted
on leaving the motor car and remaining with her. There was quite a
discussion about this, but in the end we gave in. It was just as well, for
we knew not which ones of us, if any, might ultimately escape.</p>
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<p>"That night, the second of our march, we camped beyond Haywards in the
first stretches of country. And in the morning there were eleven of us
that lived. Also, during the night, Wathope, the professor with the
wounded leg, deserted us in the motor car. He took with him his sister and
his mother and most of our tinned provisions. It was that day, in the
afternoon, while resting by the wayside, that I saw the last airship I
shall ever see. The smoke was much thinner here in the country, and I
first sighted the ship drifting and veering helplessly at an elevation of
two thousand feet. What had happened I could not conjecture, but even as
we looked we saw her bow dip down lower and lower. Then the bulkheads of
the various gas-chambers must have burst, for, quite perpendicular, she
fell like a plummet to the earth.</p>
<p>"And from that day to this I have not seen another airship. Often and
often, during the next few years, I scanned the sky for them, hoping
against hope that somewhere in the world civilization had survived. But it
was not to be. What happened with us in California must have happened with
everybody everywhere.</p>
<p>"Another day, and at Niles there were three of us. Beyond Niles, in the
middle of the highway, we found Wathope. The motor car had broken down,
and there, on the rugs which they had spread on the ground, lay the bodies
of his sister, his mother, and himself.</p>
<p>"Wearied by the unusual exercise of continual walking, that night I slept
heavily. In the morning I was alone in the world. Canfield and Parsons, my
last companions, were dead of the plague. Of the four hundred that sought
shelter in the Chemistry Building, and of the forty-seven that began the
march, I alone remained—I and the Shetland pony. Why this should be
so there is no explaining. I did not catch the plague, that is all. I was
immune. I was merely the one lucky man in a million—just as every
survivor was one in a million, or, rather, in several millions, for the
proportion was at least that."</p>
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