small replica of one of the lovely Colonial chandeliers in Independence Hall at Philadelphia, and when I
bought the house I would not allow it to be taken down, nor even be wired for electric bulbs. My bed is
at the end of the room, and when I turn upon my left side I can see the windows outlined by faint
reflections. The same reflections are caught by the prisms so that the chandelier becomes a nebulously
glimmering tiny cloud. It is restful, sleep-inducing. There is an ancient pear tree in the garden, the last
survivor of an orchard which in spring, in New York's halcyon days, lifted to the sun its flowered arms.
The chandelier is just beyond the foot of the bed. The switch which controls my lights is at the head of my
bed. At the side of the room is an old fireplace, its sides of carved marble and with a wide mantel at the
top. To visualize fully what follows, it is necessary to keep this arrangement in mind.
By the time I had undressed, Braile, evidently assured of my docility, had closed the door and gone back
into the study. I took the knotted cord, the witch's ladder, and threw it contemptuously on the table. I
suppose there was something of bravado in the action; perhaps, if I had not felt so sure of McCann, I
would have pursued my original intention of burning it. I mixed myself a sedative, turned off the lights and
lay down to sleep. The sedative took quick effect.
I sank deep and deeper into a sea of sleep deeper…and deeper…
I awoke.
I looked around me…how had I come to this strange place? I was standing within a shallow circular pit,
grass lined. The rim of the pit came only to my knees. The pit was in the center of a circular, level
meadow, perhaps a quarter of a mile in diameter. This, too, was covered with grass; strange grass,
purple flowered. Around the grassy circle drooped unfamiliar trees…trees scaled with emeralds green
and scarlet…trees with pendulous branches covered with fernlike leaves and threaded with slender vines
that were like serpents. The trees circled the meadow, watchful, alert…watching me…waiting for me to
move…
No, it was not the trees that were watching! There were things hidden among the trees,
lurking…malignant things…evil things…and it was they who were watching me, waiting for me to move!
But how had I gotten here? I looked down at my legs, stretched my arms…I was clad in the blue
pajamas in which I had gone to bed…gone to my bed in my New York house…in my house in New
York…how had I come here? I did not seem to be dreaming…
Now I saw that three paths led out of the shallow pit. They passed over the edge, and stretched, each in
a different direction, toward the woods. And suddenly I knew that I must take one of these paths, and
that it was vitally important that I pick the right one…that only one could be traversed safely…that the
other two would lead me into the power of those lurking things.
The pit began to contract. I felt its bottom lifting beneath my feet. The pit was thrusting me out! I leaped
upon the path at my right, and began to walk slowly along it. Then involuntarily I began to run, faster and
faster along it, toward the woods. As I drew nearer I saw that the path pierced the woods straight as an
arrow flight, and that it was about three feet wide and bordered closely by the trees, and that it vanished
in the dim green distance. Faster and faster I ran. Now I had entered the woods, and the unseen things
were gathering among the trees that bordered the path, thronging the borders, rushing silently from all the
wood. What those things were, what they would do to me if they caught me I did not know…I only knew
that nothing that I could imagine of agony could equal what I would experience if they did catch me.
On and on I raced through the wood, each step a nightmare. I felt hands stretching out to clutch
me…heard shrill whisperings…Sweating, trembling, I broke out of the wood and raced over a vast plain
that stretched, treeless, to the distant horizon. The plain was trackless, pathless, and covered with brown
and withered grass. It was like, it came to me, the blasted heath of Macbeth's three witches. No
matter…it was better than the haunted wood. I paused and looked back at the trees. I felt from them the
gaze of myriads of the evil eyes.
I turned my back, and began to walk over the withered plain. I looked up at the sky. The sky was misty
green. High up in it two cloudy orbs began to glow…black suns…no, they were not suns…they were
eyes…The eyes of the doll-maker! They stared down at me from the misty green sky…Over the horizon
of that strange world two gigantic hands began to lift…began to creep toward me…to catch me and hurl
me back into the wood…white hands with long fingers…and each of the long white fingers a living thing.
The hands of the doll-maker!
Closer came the eyes, and closer writhed the hands. From the sky came peal upon peal of laughter…The
laughter of the doll-maker!
That laughter still ringing in my ears, I awakened-or seemed to awaken. I was in my room sitting bolt