"In spite of all these diseases, and of all the new ones that continued  to arise, there were more and more men in the world. This was because it  was easy to get food. The easier it was to get food, the more men  there were; the more men there were, the more thickly were they packed  together on the earth; and the more thickly they were packed, the more  new kinds of germs became diseases. There were warnings. Soldervetzsky,  as early as 1929, told the bacteriologists that they had no guaranty  against some new disease, a thousand times more deadly than any they  knew, arising and killing by the hundreds of millions and even by the  billion. You see, the micro-organic world remained a mystery to the end.  They knew there was such a world, and that from time to time armies of  new germs emerged from it to kill men.
"And that was all they knew about it. For all they knew, in that  invisible micro-organic world there might be as many different kinds of  germs as there are grains of sand on this beach. And also, in that same  invisible world it might well be that new kinds of germs came to be.  It might be there that life originated—the 'abysmal fecundity,'  Soldervetzsky called it, applying the words of other men who had written  before him...."
It was at this point that Hare-Lip rose to his feet, an expression of  huge contempt on his face.
"Granser," he announced, "you make me sick with your gabble. Why don't  you tell about the Red Death? If you ain't going to, say so, an' we'll  start back for camp."
The old man looked at him and silently began to cry. The weak tears of  age rolled down his cheeks and all the feebleness of his eighty-seven  years showed in his grief-stricken countenance.
"Sit down," Edwin counselled soothingly. "Granser's all right. He's just  gettin' to the Scarlet Death, ain't you, Granser? He's just goin' to  tell us about it right now. Sit down, Hare-Lip. Go ahead, Granser."
The old man wiped the tears away on his grimy knuckles and took up the  tale in a tremulous, piping voice that soon strengthened as he got the  swing of the narrative.
"It was in the summer of 2013 that the Plague came. I was twenty-seven  years old, and well do I remember it. Wireless despatches—"
Hare-Lip spat loudly his disgust, and Granser hastened to make amends.
"We talked through the air in those days, thousands and thousands of  miles. And the word came of a strange disease that had broken out in  New York. There were seventeen millions of people living then in that  noblest city of America. Nobody thought anything about the news. It was  only a small thing. There had been only a few deaths. It seemed, though,  that they had died very quickly, and that one of the first signs of  the disease was the turning red of the face and all the body. Within  twenty-four hours came the report of the first case in Chicago. And on  the same day, it was made public that London, the greatest city in the  world, next to Chicago, had been secretly fighting the plague for two  weeks and censoring the news despatches—that is, not permitting the  word to go forth to the rest of the world that London had the plague. [left-side]