CHAPTER XXXIII.
YOUNG JACK AND HIS COMRADE HARRY GIRDWOOD--DEAD OR ALIVE--THERIDDLE UNRAVELLED--THE PLAN IN CYPHER--A RELIC OF THEPAST--EUREKA!--THE CYPHER UNRAVELLED.
Now for young Jack.
Once more let us see the bold young Harkaway and Harry, his bravecomrade.
Too long have we been absent from them.
Too long have we been forced by the exigencies of our history to leave,not only the Harkaway family and party generally, under the cruelimpression that the two boys had been foully murdered, but the readerlikewise.
They lived.
Aye, it was every word true that Theodora had said.
Sebastian was not a wit less truthful.
When he opened the door of the cell in the tower, he fully expected tofind the two boys there.
Where were they?
By what jugglery had they contrived to get out of such a formidablefortress as that place?
This the present chapter is to relate.
To give it clearly, however briefly, we must go back to the day oftheir entrance into their gloomy prison home.
Jack and Harry were alone.
"This is a rum go, Jack," said Harry Girdwood. "What do you think ofit?"
"Precious dull, old boy," grumbled young Harkaway.
"Better than a grave on the mountain side."
"It is just that," said young Jack. "But it wouldn't be quite so goodif this sort of thing was meant to be permanent."
"Growler, growler," said Harry Girdwood. "Why, I call these famousdiggings, after that hole they meant us to rest in while the worms mademeat of us. Besides, we must get away."
"How?"
"Escape."
Young Jack looked up at the word, and his heart beat a little quicker.
But he said nothing.
Frowning walls on every side.
The cell was fully eighteen feet high, and the window was close up bythe ceiling.
"If we want to get out of this," said young Jack, "we must beginoperations from this moment."
"Good."
"Do you know, Harry, what is to be the first step?"
"No."
"To get at that window."
"But it is about eighteen feet high."
"Well, we must reach it," said young Jack.
Both boys were expert gymnasts.
The greasiest of greasy poles were vanquished by either with thegreatest of ease.
In the stormiest weather they could mount into the topmost parts of therigging on board ship.
And the consequence was that the morning after their entrance intotheir prison found young Jack perched up at the window, looking down athis comrade and fellow-prisoner, and giving graphic descriptions of allhe saw there.
"What's on the other side, Jack?"
"The sea, the open sea, old fellow," cried Jack.
"And below?"
"The sea, again, old fellow."
"To the right?"
"The sea, the sea--the open sea, old fellow. Water, water, everywhere,and not a drop to drink. At least it would be an awful _drop_ toget at it."
"Can you see any thing to the right?"
"Water only."
"Is that all?"
"Yes--hallo!"
Some thing fell.
A roll of some thing white and soft dropped at Harry Girdwood's feet,and he hastened to pick it up.
Some thing white, we said.
Well, it had once been white, but now it had got very considerablydiscoloured with age and dust, which seemed to indicate that it hadbeen a long while up on the shelf in its hiding place.
Yes, its hiding place.
They opened the bundle, and found it to be composed of three slips ofcotton, upon which were written, in red ink, curious things which theycould not make much of.
Upon one of these pieces of cotton were certain cabalistic signs, suchas figures, algebraical marks, and geometrical figures.
Upon another was traced a plan of some building.
A third was a sectional view, drawn roughly, but upon architecturalprinciples, and marked with initial letters of reference.
"This is a rum go," said Harry Girdwood, laughing.
Young Jack had dropped from his perch and joined his fellow-prisoner on_terra firma,_ and together they poured over these singular rags.
Now young Harkaway soon lost patience, and speaking contemptuously oftheir find, he proposed pitching it through the grated window into thesea.
"Not I," said Harry; "there's some thing here which it will amuse me topuzzle out."
"If you like to kill time that way, Harry," answered young Jack,laughing, "no harm; there's plenty of time to kill in this dreadfuldungeon."
And puzzle over this precious treasure Harry did.
The cloth upon which were the cabalistic signs was headed with certainwords, which were all but illegible, and this he managed to construe.
"Simple cypher, left in hopes that it may yet serve some unfortunateEnglishman to escape from the tender mercies of this hole."
Below this were the following figures and signs--
3. 15. 21. 14. 20.--6. 15. 21. 18.--19. 20. 15. 14. 5. 19.--21.16.--6. 18. 15. 13.--7. 18. 15. 21. 14. 4.--20. 23.15.--6. 15. 21. 18.--19. 9. 4. 5.--15. 6.--3. 8. 9.
Neath)13. 14. 5. 25.-- > C.--23. Press) it.
8. 1. 20.--9. 19-- revealed.
Now when Harry Girdwood had got through the above puzzle once or twice,he was in a regular fog. The only result was to get himself heartilylaughed at by his fellow-prisoner.
So Harry Girdwood kept what he knew of the matter to himself.
Upon that same day towards sundown, when Sebastian came round to bringtheir food, Harry Girdwood said--
"We are not the first Englishmen who have been here, my friend."
Sebastian gave him a sharp glance, as he answered--
"How do you know that?"
"There is no mystery in it," replied Harry Girdwood; "I saw some wordswritten in pencil upon the wall."
"Where?"
The eagerness of his manner aroused the curiosity of both the boys.
"Somewhere here," replied Harry, pretending to seek for the marks uponthe wall.
But of course he found nothing.
"It is strange," he said, still looking about; "for I made sure it washereabouts somewhere. I saw some words which made me sure that it wasoccupied by an Englishman once."
"You are right," replied Sebastian; "quite right. An Englishman namedTerence Dougherty--"
"That Englishman was Irish," said young Jack.
"Possibly; but he was a priest. He was confined here for a long while.So long that he went mad."
"Mad, did you say?"
"Yes, and raving at last; his madness appeared to have so much methodin it that it quite deceived our head doctor."
"How did he deceive the head doctor?"
"By his apparent sanity. He was mad as a March hare, and he used torave about having discovered the way out of the prison."
The two boys pricked up their ears at this speech.
"What was more natural?" said Sebastian. "A prisoner is always thinkinghow he can get away."
"Of course."
"And yet," said Sebastian, "the old priest was sure he had discoveredthe way to elude our vigilance when he chose to put his plan intoexecution; and his dying words startled us."
"How?"
"He said to the doctor within twenty minutes of drawing his lastbreath--'Doctor, you think I am mad. Not a bit of it, and I tell youthat I have given my life to the study of prison breaking--getting outof this particular cell--and, doctor, I should have got out if thegreat commander death had not ordered me off by another route. As itis, I leave my work for the benefit of the first Briton who shall fallinto your claws and drop into my cell, and then--mark me well--he'llprofit by my work, unless he be a greater fool than you have taken meto be, and get away."
&
nbsp; "He was very mad," said young Harkaway.
"Very."
Harry Girdwood said nothing.
* * * * *
They were alone.
Young Jack was full of deep and serious thought.
Harry Girdwood arose suddenly from his puzzle.
"Eureka!" he cried; "I have discovered it."
"What?" demanded the startled Jack.
"The cypher. It is alphabetical. Listen here."
Young Jack approached.
"It is clear as daylight," said Harry; "these figures correspond withthe letters of the alphabet."
_"'Count four stones up from ground. Two from side of chimney. Pressunderneath. See what is revealed under it.'"_
"Hurrah!" cried young Jack.
"Hurrah!" yelled Harry Girdwood; "but stop. Let us see if there is anything in it, for we may yet escape."