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A Terrible Death-Trap.

One of our readers who is a police constable (says an English paper) sends us an account of a terrible accident which he witnessed some years ago at a sea-coast holiday resort in the south. Along tbe sea] front there is a row of houses with French windows on the second iloor. The windows are in pairs, each one belonging to a room with a balcony. At the time one of the houses were occupied by a lady and gentleman, their son, and a young lady who was staying with them. The local surveyor had been round some time before, and had passed one balcony as safe and sound —that was the one in front of the lefthand pair of windows—but he had condemned the other as unsafe, and the, workmen had come and taken it clown. Now it happened that the room it belonged to wanted papering, and the lady and the gentleman decided to take this opportunity of getting it done. The upholsters' men came, and went to work, and on leaving at night they thing the two French windows wide open, as the weather was line and settled, and the fresh air would do the room good. The Inst man away had been told to lock the- door, to make all safe, but instead of doing so, he had forgotten, and simply shut it to, went-downstairs, and out of the house—home. It so happened that I was on duty that night, and there being a lovely moon I was .standing, looking up at the gap where that balcony had been, and thinking what an eyesore it was on the row of nice-looking houses, when I saw the young lady come out of one of the left-hand windows, and lean over the rails of the "good" balcony. She' stood there a minute or two, looking to sea., and then the young gentleman walked oui too and they began talking. I'.y and i>y, he leant forward as if to kiss her, but she gave a little, teasing sort of laugh, dodged him, and slipped back through the window, him after her ; and 1 could hear them laughing and running round the room. Out she came again, ran along the balcony, and in through the other window, with him close behind, 1 didn't see no more of them for the moment, and turned to a couple of men who were lookimg on enjoying tin; fun, and we agreed that he'd caught her at last. In another instant, though, my heart came up into my mouth, for 1 saw a light Hash suddenly into the other room, and the young lady came, laughing with glee, the young gent after her, and both running straight for the balcony that wasn't there; ! " Stop, miss, or you'll be killed !" we all three shouted, but she was too' excited to hear us, and came straight through the room, and out of the window just as the young fellow overtook her, and grabbed the end of her sash!

Over she went, shrieking, poor girl! and hung, dangling, and then as we shouted " Thank Hod, he's got her! Hold on. sir. for a minute !" the bow of the sash untied, there was another dreadful scream, and gasping sort of sound, and she came, head first, thirty feet on the hard pavement. Stone dead she was when we picked lu-r up and carried her inside and then J rushed upstairs, for by the silence there 1 knew something was wrong. AVe found the young gentleman in a swoon, lying half in and half out of the window, with the end of that pale hlue sash still clutched in his hands ; and when he came round again it was as the three of us could do to keep him from throwing himself out after her. '['hey were to have heen married that autumn, and timt was the end of it.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAST18961123.2.20

Bibliographic details

Hastings Standard, Issue 178, 23 November 1896, Page 4

Word Count
654

A Terrible Death-Trap. Hastings Standard, Issue 178, 23 November 1896, Page 4

A Terrible Death-Trap. Hastings Standard, Issue 178, 23 November 1896, Page 4

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