rested on his shoulders and something kicked him in the back of his calf.
Then he was on all fours in some mud that Fortune, in conjunction with the Folkestone corporation and in the pursuit of equally mysterious ends, had heaped together even lavishly for his reception.
He remained in that position for some seconds awaiting further developments and believing almost anything broken before his heart. Gathering at last that this temporary violence of things in general was over, and being perhaps assisted by a clutching hand, he arose, and found himself confronting a figure holding a bicycle and thrusting forward a dark face in anxious scrutiny.
"You aren't hurt, Matey?" gasped the figure.
"Was that you 'it me?" said Kipps.
"It's these handles, you know," said the figure with an air of being a fellow sufferer. "They're too low. And when I go to turn, if I don't remember, Bif!—and I'm in to something."
"Well—you give me a oner in the back—anyhow," said Kipps, taking stock of his damages.
"I was coming down hill, you know," explained the bicyclist. "These little Folkstone hills are a Fair Treat. It isn't as though I'd been on the level. I came rather a whop."
"You did that," said Kipps.
"I was back pedalling for all I was worth anyhow," said the bicyclist. "Not that I am worth much back pedalling."