[Kilgorman by Talbot Baines Reed]@TWC D-Link book
Kilgorman

CHAPTER NINETEEN
8/17

Others retired in batches to chambers, for the use of which they had clubbed together in bands of twenty or thirty.

The rest of us, comprising all the poorer prisoners, were huddled into great foul, straw-strewn rooms to sleep and pass the night as best we might.
Rough countryman as I have been, the thought of those nights in the Conciergerie turns my stomach even now.

The low ceiling and small windows made the atmosphere, laden as it was with dirt of all sorts, choking and intolerable.

The heat, even on a winter night, was oppressive.

The noise, the groaning, the wrangling, the fighting, the pilfering, were distracting.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books