Journalist: Then, on the ninth day, we saw the Martians eating. Inside the hood
of their new machine they were draining the fresh, living blood of men and
women and injecting it into their own veins.
Parson: It’s a sign! I’ve been given a sign! They must be cast out and I have
been chosen to do it! I must confront them now!
Journalist: No, parson, no!
Parson: Those machines are just demons in another form! I shall destroy them
with my prayers! I shall burn them with my Holy Cross! I shall —
Journalist: The curious eye of a Martian appeared at the window-slit,
and a menacing claw explored the room. I dragged the parson down to the coal
cellar. I heard the Martian fumbling at the latch. In the darkness I could see
the claw touching things, walls, coal, wood — and then it touch my boot!
I almost shouted! For a time it was still and then, with a click,
it gripped something. The parson! With slow, deliberate movements,
his unconscious body was dragged away… and there was nothing I could do to prevent it.
Journalist: I crept to the blocked window-slit and peered through the creeper.
The Martians, and all their machinery, had gone! Trembling, I dug my way out
and clambered to the top of the mound. Not a Martian in sight! The day seemed
dazzling bright after my imprisonment and the sky a glowing blue.
Red Weed covered every scrap of ground but a gentle breeze kept it swaying,
and oh! the sweetness of the air!
Journalist: Again, I was on my way to London, through towns and villages that
were blackened ruins, totally silent, desolated, deserted. Man’s empire had
passed away, taken swiftly and without error by these creatures who were
composed entirely of brain. Unhampered by the complex systems which make up man,
they made and used different bodies according to their needs. They never tired,
never slept, and never suffered, having long since eliminated from their
planet the bacteria which cause all fevers and other morbidities.