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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. AN ESCAPE. </h2>
<p>A few days after this—on the 23rd of December—Maurice Frere
was alarmed by a piece of startling intelligence. The notorious Dawes had
escaped from gaol!</p>
<p>Captain Frere had inspected the prison that very afternoon, and it had
seemed to him that the hammers had never fallen so briskly, nor the chains
clanked so gaily, as on the occasion of his visit. "Thinking of their
Christmas holiday, the dogs!" he had said to the patrolling warder.
"Thinking about their Christmas pudding, the luxurious scoundrels!" and
the convict nearest him had laughed appreciatively, as convicts and
schoolboys do laugh at the jests of the man in authority. All seemed
contentment. Moreover, he had—by way of a pleasant stroke of wit—tormented
Rufus Dawes with his ill-fortune. "The schooner sails to-morrow, my man,"
he had said; "you'll spend your Christmas at the mines." And congratulated
himself upon the fact that Rufus Dawes merely touched his cap, and went on
with his stone-cracking in silence. Certainly double irons and hard labour
were fine things to break a man's spirit. So that, when in the afternoon
of that same day he heard the astounding news that Rufus Dawes had freed
himself from his fetters, climbed the gaol wall in broad daylight, run the
gauntlet of Macquarie Street, and was now supposed to be safely hidden in
the mountains, he was dumbfounded.</p>
<p>"How the deuce did he do it, Jenkins?" he asked, as soon as he reached the
yard.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm blessed if I rightly know, your honour," says Jenkins. "He was
over the wall before you could say 'knife'. Scott fired and missed him,
and then I heard the sentry's musket, but he missed him, too."</p>
<p>"Missed him!" cries Frere. "Pretty fellows you are, all of you! I suppose
you couldn't hit a haystack at twenty yards? Why, the man wasn't three
feet from the end of your carbine!"</p>
<p>The unlucky Scott, standing in melancholy attitude by the empty irons,
muttered something about the sun having been in his eyes. "I don't know
how it was, sir. I ought to have hit him, for certain. I think I did touch
him, too, as he went up the wall."</p>
<p>A stranger to the customs of the place might have imagined that he was
listening to a conversation about a pigeon match.</p>
<p>"Tell me all about it," says Frere, with an angry curse. "I was just
turning, your honour, when I hears Scott sing out 'Hullo!' and when I
turned round, I saw Dawes's irons on the ground, and him a-scrambling up
the heap o' stones yonder. The two men on my right jumped up, and I
thought it was a made-up thing among 'em, so I covered 'em with my
carbine, according to instructions, and called out that I'd shoot the
first that stepped out. Then I heard Scott's piece, and the men gave a
shout like. When I looked round, he was gone."</p>
<p>"Nobody else moved?"</p>
<p>"No, sir. I was confused at first, and thought they were all in it, but
Parton and Haines they runs in and gets between me and the wall, and then
Mr. Short he come, and we examined their irons."</p>
<p>"All right?"</p>
<p>"All right, your honour; and they all swore they knowed nothing of it. I
know Dawes's irons was all right when he went to dinner."</p>
<p>Frere stopped and examined the empty fetters. "All right be hanged," he
said. "If you don't know your duty better than this, the sooner you go
somewhere else the better, my man. Look here!"</p>
<p>The two ankle fetters were severed. One had been evidently filed through,
and the other broken transversely. The latter was bent, as from a violent
blow.</p>
<p>"Don't know where he got the file from," said Warder Short.</p>
<p>"Know! Of course you don't know. You men never do know anything until the
mischief's done. You want me here for a month or so. I'd teach you your
duty! Don't know—with things like this lying about? I wonder the
whole yard isn't loose and dining with the Governor."</p>
<p>"This" was a fragment of delft pottery which Frere's quick eye had
detected among the broken metal.</p>
<p>"I'd cut the biggest iron you've got with this; and so would he and plenty
more, I'll go bail. You ought to have lived with me at Sarah Island, Mr.
Short. Don't know!"</p>
<p>"Well, Captain Frere, it's an accident," says Short, "and can't be helped
now."</p>
<p>"An accident!" roared Frere. "What business have you with accidents? How,
in the devil's name, you let the man get over the wall, I don't know."</p>
<p>"He ran up that stone heap," says Scott, "and seemed to me to jump at the
roof of the shed. I fired at him, and he swung his legs over the top of
the wall and dropped."</p>
<p>Frere measured the distance from his eye, and an irrepressible feeling of
admiration, rising out of his own skill in athletics, took possession of
him for an instant.</p>
<p>"By the Lord Harry, but it's a big jump!" he said; and then the
instinctive fear with which the consciousness of the hideous wrong he had
done the now escaped convict inspired him, made him add: "A desperate
villain like that wouldn't stick at a murder if you pressed him hard.
Which way did he go?"</p>
<p>"Right up Macquarie Street, and then made for the mountain. There were few
people about, but Mr. Mays, of the Star Hotel, tried to stop him, and was
knocked head over heels. He says the fellow runs like a deer."</p>
<p>"We'll have the reward out if we don't get him to-night," says Frere,
turning away; "and you'd better put on an extra warder. This sort of game
is catching." And he strode away to the Barracks.</p>
<p>From right to left, from east to west, through the prison city flew the
signal of alarm, and the patrol, clattering out along the road to New
Norfolk, made hot haste to strike the trail of the fugitive. But night
came and found him yet at large, and the patrol returning, weary and
disheartened, protested that he must be lying hid in some gorge of the
purple mountain that overshadowed the town, and would have to be starved
into submission. Meanwhile the usual message ran through the island, and
so admirable were the arrangements which Arthur the reformer had
initiated, that, before noon of the next day, not a signal station on the
coast but knew that No. 8942, etc., etc., prisoner for life, was illegally
at large. This intelligence, further aided by a paragraph in the Gazette
anent the "Daring Escape", noised abroad, the world cared little that the
Mary Jane, Government schooner, had sailed for Port Arthur without Rufus
Dawes.</p>
<p>But two or three persons cared a good deal. Major Vickers, for one, was
indignant that his boasted security of bolts and bars should have been so
easily defied, and in proportion to his indignation was the grief of
Messieurs Jenkins, Scott, and Co., suspended from office, and threatened
with absolute dismissal. Mr. Meekin was terribly frightened at the fact
that so dangerous a monster should be roaming at large within reach of his
own saintly person. Sylvia had shown symptoms of nervous terror, none the
less injurious because carefully repressed; and Captain Maurice Frere was
a prey to the most cruel anxiety. He had ridden off at a hand-gallop
within ten minutes after he had reached the Barracks, and had spent the
few hours of remaining daylight in scouring the country along the road to
the North. At dawn the next day he was away to the mountain, and with a
black-tracker at his heels, explored as much of that wilderness of gully
and chasm as nature permitted to him. He had offered to double the reward,
and had examined a number of suspicious persons. It was known that he had
been inspecting the prison a few hours before the escape took place, and
his efforts were therefore attributed to zeal, not unmixed with chagrin.
"Our dear friend feels his reputation at stake," the future chaplain of
Port Arthur said to Sylvia at the Christmas dinner. "He is so proud of his
knowledge of these unhappy men that he dislikes to be outwitted by any of
them."</p>
<p>Notwithstanding all this, however, Dawes had disappeared. The fat landlord
of the Star Hotel was the last person who saw him, and the flying yellow
figure seemed to have been as completely swallowed up by the warm summer's
afternoon as if it had run headlong into the blackest night that ever hung
above the earth.</p>
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