door there danced a red-haired, thin dead perso
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The man on crutches shouted in his ear : “I shall report it to his Eminence!
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Grandfather, grandmother, and every one had told me that they alwaysstarved people in hospitals, so I looked upon my life as finished. A womanwith glasses, also in a shroud, came to me, and wrote something on a slatehanging at the head of the bed. The chalk broke and fell all over me. “What is your name?”
“I have no name.”
“But you must have one.”
“No.”
“Now, don’t be silly, or you will be whipped.”
I could well believe that they would whip me ; that was why I would notanswer her. She made a hissing sound like a cat, and went out noiselessly,also like a cat. Two lamps were lit. The yellow globes hung down from the ceiling liketwo eyes, hanging and winking, dazzled, and trying to get closer together. Some one in the corner said: “How can I play without a hand?”
“Ah, of course; they have cut off your hand.”
I came to the conc
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I would have written a letter to grandmother, telling her to come andsteal me from the hospital while I was still alive, but I could not write; myhands could not be used at all. I would try to find a way of getting out of theplace. The silence of the night became more intense every moment, as if it weregoing to last forever. Softly putting my feet to the floor, I went to the doubledoor, half of which was open. In the corridor, under the lamp, on a woodenbench with a back to it, appeared a gray, bristling head surrounded bysmoke, looking at me with dark, hollow eyes. I had no time to hide myself. “Who is that wandering about ? Come here!”
The voice was not formidable; it was soft. I went to him. I sa
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He blew a lot of smoke at my chest and face, and, putting his warmhands on my neck, drew me to him. “Are you