<h2><SPAN name="Ch19" name="Ch19">Chapter 19</SPAN>: Found At Last.</h2>
<p>The next morning, early, Dick and Surajah set to work to perfect
their disguises. They had, before, appeared simply as two young
traders, well to do, and of a class above the ordinary peddling
merchant. They now fitted on the ample beards that had been made at
Tripataly. These were attached so firmly to their faces, by an
adhesive wax, that they could not be pulled off without the use of
a good deal of force. With the same stuff, small patches of hair
were fastened on, so as to hide the edge of the foundation of the
beard. Tufts of short grey hair were attached to their eyebrows; a
few grey lines were carefully drawn at the corner of the eyes, and
across the foreheads; and when this was done, they felt assured
that no one was likely to suspect the disguise.</p>
<p>Ibrahim, who had assisted in the operation, declared that he
should take them for men of sixty-five, and as, before beginning
it, both of them had darkened their faces several shades, they felt
confident that no one at the fort was likely to recognise them.
When Surajah had put on the padded undergarment, and converted
himself into a portly-looking old man, and Dick the great horn
spectacles, they indulged in a burst of laughter at their changed
appearance, while Ibrahim fairly shouted with amusement.</p>
<p>He was to stay behind in the wood, when they went on, for it
would but have added to the risk had he accompanied them, as,
unless also completely disguised, he would have been recognised by
the soldiers with whom he had talked, during his twenty-four hours'
stay inside the Tower walls. He was, in the evening, to proceed
along the road, to encamp in the last grove he came to, at a
distance of a quarter of a mile from the gates, and to remain there
until they returned.</p>
<p>Under his garments Dick had wound a thin, but very strong,
silken cord that he had purchased at Bangalore. It was four hundred
feet in length, and considerably increased his apparent bulk,
although he was still far from emulating the stoutness of Surajah.
The halters of the pack horses were attached to the cruppers of the
riding ponies, and after a final instruction to Ibrahim that if at
the end of four days they had not returned, he was to endeavour to
find out what had happened to them, and was then to carry the news
to Tripataly, they started for the fort. When they approached the
gate they were, as before, hailed by the sentry.</p>
<p>"We are merchants," Surajah said, "and we have with us a rich
assortment of goods of all descriptions--silks and trinkets for the
ladies of the governor's harem, and handkerchiefs, scarves, silver
ornaments, and things of all kinds suitable for the wives of those
of lower rank. We pray for permission to enter and exhibit our
wares, which have been collected by us in the cities where they
were manufactured, and which we can therefore sell at prices
hitherto unheard of."</p>
<p>"I will send word up to the governor," the officer said. "It is
a long time since we have been visited by traders, and maybe he
will grant you permission. You had best go back to the shade of
those trees. It will be a good hour before the answer comes."</p>
<p>"I think it likely they will let us in," Dick said, as they
moved away towards the trees. "It is but a short time since things
were sufficiently settled for traders to venture up here, and as
Savandroog lies altogether off the roads between large towns, it is
possible that none with such goods as we have have come this way,
since the garrison took over Savandroog from the British detachment
that occupied it."</p>
<p>In little over an hour there was a shout from the walls, and on
approaching the gate again, they were told that the governor had
given permission for them to enter.</p>
<p>"You are to be blindfolded," the officer said, as the gate
closed behind them. "No one may ascend the rock, unless he consents
to this. Your horses will be led, and beware that you do not
attempt to remove the bandages, until you have permission to do
so."</p>
<p>It took nearly an hour to mount the steep road, and when they
came to a standstill, and the sub-officer who had accompanied them
told them they could now remove their bandages, they found
themselves in front of a small building, close to the commander's
quarters. The packs were, by the order of the officer, taken off
the horses by the soldiers who had led them up, and carried into
the house. The horses were fastened in the shade to rings in the
wall, and on Surajah pointing out the packs containing goods he
wished to show to the ladies, two of the soldiers carried them
across to the governor's house. The old officer himself came to the
door.</p>
<p>"Enter, my friends," he said. "You are the first traders who
have come up here since we took over the fort, some six months ago,
and methinks you will do a brisk business if your wares are, as you
sent up to say, good and cheap."</p>
<p>The bales were taken into a room, the soldiers retired, and in a
minute the commander's wife, accompanied by three or four other
ladies, entered. Dick and Surajah, after salaaming profoundly to
the veiled figures, at once began to unpack their bales.</p>
<p>The assortment had been very judiciously made, and to women who
had, for more than six months, been deprived of the pleasure of
shopping, the display was irresistible. In their desire to examine
the goods, the ladies speedily lifted their veils, and, seating
themselves on cushions they had brought in with them, chattered
unrestrainedly; examining the quality of the silks which Surajah
and Dick, squatting behind their wares, handed for their
inspection; comparing the colours, asking each other's advice, and
endeavouring to beat down the terms Surajah named.</p>
<p>In the first place, he asked the prices marked on small labels
attached to each article, but suffered himself, after the proper
amount of reluctance, and protests that he should be a ruined man,
to abate his terms considerably, although the ladies were evidently
well satisfied that the goods were indeed bargains.</p>
<p>It was a long time before the ladies could make up their minds
which to choose, among the many silks exhibited for their
selections. When this had been settled, the pack containing
delicate muslins was opened, and the same scene gone through. It
was, altogether, four hours before the purchases were all made, and
even then the boxes of trinkets remained unopened, the governor's
wife saying:</p>
<p>"No, we will not look at them. We have ruined ourselves already.
Tomorrow, when our husbands know how much we have spent, you can
show the trinkets to them, and try your best to get them to buy.
These things we have been getting are our own affair. It is for
them to make us presents of ornaments, if they are disposed to.</p>
<p>"This evening you must come in again. The ladies from the other
fort will be here, then."</p>
<p>The purchases made were paid for, the bales again fastened up,
and carried across to their room. The governor met them as they
went out.</p>
<p>"I suppose you have been ruining us all?" he said good
humouredly. "Well, it is a dull life up here, and the ladies have
but few chances of spending money."</p>
<p>"We are to see the ladies from the other fort this evening, my
lord," Surajah said. "Have we your permission, in the meantime, to
go and sell in the soldiers' quarters? We have goods suited to the
needs of their wives also, as well as those for the ladies."</p>
<p>"Certainly. You can go about as you please up here. It is only
as to the approaches that we have to be careful. But wait in your
room for a short time. I will have food sent over to you."</p>
<p>In a few minutes a servant brought across a large dish of
pillau, and several cakes of sweetmeats, the latter being, as he
informed them, the special gift of the governor's wife. There was
no occasion for them to start, as they had intended, after their
meal, for the news of their coming had spread, and by the time they
had finished, a number of women were waiting outside. Until sunset
they were busily engaged in selling their goods--for the most part
bright cotton cloths, red silk handkerchiefs, and cheap silver
trinkets. Soldiers sauntered in and out. For these they had
provided a store of pipes, tobacco, tobacco boxes, knives, and
muslins for turbans; and as the news spread that these were to be
obtained, the number of soldiers increased, until the room was
quite crowded with them, as well as by many natives engaged in the
work of rebuilding the fortifications.</p>
<SPAN name="PicJ" />
<center>
<ANTIMG src="images/j.jpg" alt= "Dick and Surajah visit the fort disguised as merchants" /> </center>
<p>Surajah did the selling, while Dick's part of the work was
receiving the money and giving change. As he was stooping over a
tray in front of him, piled with copper, picking up the change for
silver coin, he heard a man ask Surajah for a pound of his best
tobacco and a pipe.</p>
<p>There was something in the accent that caused him to look up
sharply. As he did so, he started. The blood rushed to his head so
violently that a mist seemed to pass across his eyes, and his hand
shook so that he dropped the coins he was counting. Forgetful of
the dark stain on his face, he bent forward over the tray again to
conceal his emotion, forced himself to pick out the right change,
and then, handing it to its owner, again looked up.</p>
<p>The man who was standing before Surajah was broader and taller
than those around him. The sun had darkened his face, until its
shade approached those of his companions, and yet there was no
mistaking the fact that he was a European. A heavy moustache and
beard, streaked with grey, concealed the lower part of his face.
Dick dared not gaze on the man too earnestly, and could see no
likeness to the picture on the wall at Shadwell; but, allowing for
the effects of hardship and suffering, he judged him to be about
the age of his father.</p>
<p>The man was evidently on good terms with the soldiers, one or
two of whom were chaffing him on his purchase.</p>
<p>"Will nothing but the best tobacco satisfy you?" one
laughed.</p>
<p>"Nothing; and even that won't really satisfy me. This stuff is
good enough, when rolled up, for cigars, and it does well enough in
hookahs; but I would give all this pound for a couple of pipes of
pigtail, which is the tobacco we smoked at sea."</p>
<p>Again Dick's heart beat rapidly. This man must have been a
sailor. He could not restrain himself from speaking.</p>
<p>"Have you been a sailor, then?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Ay, I was a sailor, though it is many years ago, now, since I
saw the sea."</p>
<p>"We got some English tobacco at Madras," Dick said, not
hesitating for once at telling an untruth. "We sold most of it to
the Feringhee soldiers, on our way up, but I think I have got a
little of it still left somewhere in the pack. I am too busy to
look for it now, and we shall soon be going to show our goods to
the officers' wives; but if you can come here at nine o'clock, I
may have looked it out for you."</p>
<p>"I can't come at nine," the man said, "for at half-past eight I
am shut up for the night."</p>
<p>"Come at eight, then," Dick said. "If I am not back, come the
first thing in the morning, before we get busy."</p>
<p>"I will come, sure enough," the man said. "I would walk a
hundred miles, if they would let me, for half a pound of
pigtail."</p>
<p>"Get rid of them, Surajah," Dick whispered, as the man
shouldered his way through the crowd. "Make some excuse to send
them off."</p>
<p>"Now, my friends," Surajah said, "you see it is getting dusk. It
will soon be too dark to see what you are buying, and we have been
selling for eight hours, and need rest. At eight o'clock tomorrow
we will open our packs again, and everyone shall be served; but I
pray you excuse us going on any longer now. As you see, we are not
as young as we once were, and are both sorely weary."</p>
<p>As time was no object, and the work of purchasing would relieve
the tedium of the following day, the crowd good humouredly
dispersed. Surajah rose and closed the door after the last of them,
and then turned to Dick. He had, himself, been too busily engaged
in satisfying the demands of the customers to look up, and had not
noticed that one of them was a white man.</p>
<p>"What is it?" he asked, as he looked round. "Has the heat upset
you?"</p>
<p>Then, as his eye fell on Dick, his voice changed, and he hurried
towards him, exclaiming anxiously:</p>
<p>"What is it, Dick? What has happened?"</p>
<p>For Dick was leaning against a bale by the side of him, and had
hidden his face in his arms. Surajah saw that his whole frame was
shaking with emotion.</p>
<p>"My dear lord," Surajah said, as he knelt beside him and laid
his arm across his shoulder, "you frighten me. Has aught gone
wrong? Are you ill?"</p>
<p>Dick slightly shook his head, and, lifting one of his hands,
made a sign to Surajah that he could not, at present, speak. A
minute or two later, he raised his head.</p>
<p>"Did you not see him, Surajah?"</p>
<p>"See who, Dick?"</p>
<p>"The white man you last served."</p>
<p>"I did not notice any white man."</p>
<p>"It was the one you gave a pound of the best tobacco to. Did you
not hear me speak to him, afterwards?"</p>
<p>"No. I was so busy, and so fearfully hot with this padded thing,
it was as much as I could do to attend to what they said to me. A
white man, did you say? Oh, Dick!"</p>
<p>And as the idea struck him, he rose to his feet in his
excitement.</p>
<p>"Do you think--do you really think he can be your father?"</p>
<p>"I do think so, Surajah. Of course, I did not recognise his
face. Nine years must have changed him greatly, and he has a long
beard. But he is about the right age, and, I should say, about the
same figure; and he has certainly been a sailor, for he said, to
one of the soldiers, that he would give that pound of tobacco for a
couple of pipes of pigtail, which is the tobacco sailors smoke. I
told him that, perhaps, I might be able to find him some in my
packs, and asked him to come here at eight o'clock this evening. If
I was not in, then, he was to come the first thing tomorrow
morning; but of course I shall be in at eight. You must make some
excuse to the ladies. Say that there are some goods you wish to
show them, in one of the other packs, and ask me to go and look for
it."</p>
<p>"Oh, Dick, only to think that, after all our searching, we seem
to have come on him at last! It is almost too good to be true."</p>
<p>Great as was Surajah's confidence in Dick, he had never quite
shared his faith that he would find his father alive, and his
non-success while with the army, and since, had completely
extinguished any hopes he had entertained. His surprise, therefore,
equalled his delight at finding that, after all, it seemed probable
that their search was likely to be crowned with success.</p>
<p>"Of course we will manage it," he said. "I will put aside that
narrow Benares cloth-of-gold work for trimmings, and you can be as
long as you like looking for it. They will be too busy examining
the other things to give it a thought, after you have gone
out."</p>
<p>"I can be back at half-past eight," Dick said, "for the man told
me he was locked up at that hour. If it had not been for that, I
should have arranged for him to come a little later. But, of
course, I shall have opportunities for talking to him tomorrow.</p>
<p>"There is someone at the door."</p>
<p>Surajah opened it, and a soldier entered with their evening
meal, and a request that they would go across to the governor's as
soon as they had finished it, as the ladies had already assembled
there. They hurried through their food, and then went across. There
was quite a large gathering, for not only had the wives of the
officers in the other fort come over, but all those who had been
there in the morning were again present, several of them prepared
to make further purchases. Trade was as actively carried on as it
had been before.</p>
<p>When he judged it to be nearly eight o'clock, Dick nudged
Surajah, who said, a minute afterwards:</p>
<p>"We have forgotten the Benares cloth-of-gold. I am sure that
will please the ladies for waist bands, or for trimmings. It must
have got into the other bales, by mistake."</p>
<p>"I will go and fetch it," Dick said, and, rising, left the
room.</p>
<p>A figure was standing at the door, when he reached the
house.</p>
<p>"I was afraid you had forgotten me," the man said. "It is not
quite eight o'clock yet, but as I found that you were both out, I
began to be afraid that you might be detained until after I had to
go; and you don't know how I long for a pipe of that tobacco. The
very thought of it seems to bring old days back again."</p>
<p>By this time they had entered the house, and Dick shut the door
behind him. He had left a light burning, when they went out. Dick
was so agitated that he felt unable to speak, but gazed earnestly
in the man's face.</p>
<p>"What is it, old chap?" the latter said, surprised at the close
scrutiny. "Is anything wrong with you?"</p>
<p>Dick took off his spectacles, rather to gain time than to see
more clearly, for a plain glass had been substituted for the
lenses.</p>
<p>"I want to ask you a question," he said. "Is your name
Holland?"</p>
<p>The man started.</p>
<p>"My name is Jack Holland," he said, "sure enough; though how you
come to know it beats me altogether, for I am always called Jack,
and except the governor, I don't think there is a man here knows my
other name."</p>
<p>"You were captain of the Hooghley, wrecked on the Malabar coast,
nine years ago," Dick said, this time speaking in English.</p>
<p>After an exclamation of startled surprise, the man stared at him
in an astonishment too great for words.</p>
<p>"Are you English?" he said slowly, at last. "Yes, I was in
command of the Hooghley. Who, in God's name, are you?"</p>
<p>Dick took his two hands.</p>
<p>"Father," he said, "I am your son, Dick."</p>
<p>The sailor gazed at him with a stupefied air.</p>
<p>"Are you mad, or am I?" he said hoarsely.</p>
<p>"Neither of us, Father. I am disguised as an old man, but really
I am little more than eighteen. I have been searching for you for
more than two years, and, thank God, I have found you at last;"
and, bursting into tears, Dick would have thrown his arms round his
father's neck, but the latter pushed him off with one hand, and
held him at arm's distance, while his other hand plucked at his own
throat, as if to loosen something that was choking him.</p>
<p>"It can't be true," he muttered to himself. "I am dreaming this.
I shall wake presently, and you will be gone."</p>
<p>"It is quite true, Father. Mother is down at Tripataly, waiting
for me to bring you to her."</p>
<p>With a hoarse cry the sailor reeled, and would have fallen, had
not Dick caught him and allowed him to sink gradually to the
ground; where he lay, half supported by one of the bales. Dick ran
to one of the saddlebags, where he carried a flask of brandy in
case of emergencies, poured some into a cup, and held it to his
father's lips. The sailor gasped.</p>
<p>"It is brandy," he said suddenly. "I can't have dreamt
that."</p>
<p>Then he broke into a violent sobbing. Dick knelt by his side,
and took his hand.</p>
<p>"It is assuredly no dream, Father," he said gently. "I am really
your son, Dick. I am here with a trusty friend, and now we have
found you, you may be sure that we will, in some way, manage your
escape. There is no time, now, to tell you all that has happened.
That I can do, afterwards. All that is important for you to know,
is, that Mother is quite well. She has never given up hope, and has
always insisted that you were alive, for she said that she should
surely have known, if you had died. So she taught me her language,
until I could speak like a native; and two years and a half ago,
she came out here with me.</p>
<p>"I accompanied the army, with my uncle's troop, and searched
every hill fort they took, for you. Since they went back, I have
been up in Mysore with my friend Surajah, and, thank God, at last
we have found you!"</p>
<p>"Thank God, indeed, my boy. I do thank Him, not only that you
have found me, but that your mother, whom I had never hoped to see
again, is alive and well; and also, that He has given me so good a
son."</p>
<p>"And now, Father, about your escape. In the first place, have
you given your parole not to try to get away?"</p>
<p>Captain Holland was himself now.</p>
<p>"No lad, no. At the fort, where I was for six years, there was
no possibility of escape; and as I was a long time, before I began
to speak the language, even if I had got away I could never have
made my way through the country. Then the governor--it was the same
we have here--took me with him to Kistnagherry. I was the only
white captive who went there with him. At Kistnagherry there were
five or six others, but when Tippoo heard that an English army was
coming up the ghauts, an order came that they were to be killed.
But the governor is a kind-hearted old fellow, and as I had become
almost a chum of his, he chose to consider that the order did not
apply to me, but only to those he had found at Kistnagherry--for I
fancy my existence had been forgotten altogether.</p>
<p>"I had great hopes that the British would take the place. I
think that is the only time I have hoped, since I was made
prisoner; but the old man is a good soldier, and beat them off.</p>
<p>"When peace was made, Kistnagherry was, as you know, given up,
and the governor was ordered to evacuate the place, and to come
here. He brought me with him, making me dye my face before I
started, so that in my native dress it would not be noticed, in any
town we passed through, that I was a white. For had this been done,
the news might have come to Tippoo's ears, and there would have
been an end of me.</p>
<p>"Except that I am locked up at night, I am not treated as a
prisoner; but the governor, who has a strong sense of duty, has a
certain watch kept over me. He has a real friendship for me, and
would do all in his power to save my life, short of disobedience to
an actual order. But his view is that I have been confided to his
care, and that if, at any moment, the Sultan should write to demand
me of him, he would be bound to produce me."</p>
<p>"Well, Father, it must be nearly half-past eight. I will go with
you, and see where you are confined--that is the first step. We
will both, tonight, think over the best way of attempting your
escape; and in the morning, when your guard is removed, if you will
come straight here we will talk it over.</p>
<p>"I am afraid you will have to wait for your pigtail till we get
to Madras."</p>
<p>Captain Holland laughed.</p>
<p>"I can afford to wait for that, now. God bless you, my boy! I
have never looked for such happiness as this again. But, as you
say, it is time for me to be off. I have never been late yet, and
if it were reported to the governor that I was so tonight, he might
think that there was something in the wind."</p>
<p>Dick walked with his father across the fort.</p>
<p>"That is the house, in the corner," the captain said, pointing
to one before which a group of soldiers were standing. "Don't come
any farther."</p>
<p>Dick stood looking after him, and heard a voice say:</p>
<p>"You are late, Jack. I was beginning to wonder what had become
of you."</p>
<p>"I don't think it is past the hour, yet," Captain Holland
replied. "I have been with those traders. They told me, this
afternoon, they might be able to find me some English tobacco in
their pack; but they have been too busy to look for it. I hope they
will light on it, tomorrow. If they do, I will give you half a
pipeful. I won't give you more, for it is strong enough to blow
your head off, after this tasteless stuff you smoke here."</p>
<p>Then Dick hurried off to the house, snatched up the stuff he was
supposed to be looking for, and joined Surajah at the
governor's.</p>
<p>It was another hour before the ladies had completed their
purchases. Dick, on entering, had given a little nod to Surajah, to
let him know that it was really his father whom he had discovered,
and had then tried to keep his attention upon his work as a
salesman; and Surajah, as he handed him the goods, had given a
furtive squeeze to his hand in token of his sympathy.</p>
<p>"So it is really your father?" he said, as, carrying their
greatly diminished pack, they walked across to their house.</p>
<p>"It is, indeed. You may imagine his surprise and joy, when I
told him who I was. Now we have got to talk over the best plan of
getting him out."</p>
<p>When the door was shut, and they had seated themselves on two of
the bales, Dick first repeated all that his father had told him,
and then, for a long time, they discussed the best plan of
attempting an escape. Both agreed, at once, that it would be next
to impossible to get him down the road and out of the gate. In the
first place, they would have to leave by daylight; and even could a
disguise be contrived that would deceive the sentries and guard at
the gate, all of whom were well acquainted with Captain Holland's
figure and appearance, it was certain that, as but two had come up
the rock, a third would not be allowed to leave, unless he had a
special order from the governor.</p>
<p>They agreed, therefore, that the escape must be made over the
precipice. That this was a matter of great difficulty was evident
from the fact that the captain had made no attempt to get away in
that manner. Still, there was hope that, with the assistance of the
silk rope Dick had brought with them, it might be managed.</p>
<p>There was, too, the initial difficulty of getting out from the
fort to be faced.</p>
<p>"We can do nothing, till we have had a long talk with my
father," Dick said. "I have no doubt that he has thought all these
things over, and has, long before this, made up his mind as to the
point at which a descent would be easiest. As at present we know
little, except by the casual examination we made last time, we can
decide on nothing by ourselves."</p>
<p>"I hope it won't be a long way to let oneself down," Surajah
said, "for I am quite sure I could not hold on, by that thin rope,
for any distance."</p>
<p>"Nor could I, Surajah, if I had to trust only to my hands. My
father, as a sailor, will be able to put us up to the best way to
do it. But at any rate, he might let you down first; and I think
that by twisting the rope two or three times round my body, and
then holding it between my knees and feet, I might manage. But I
dare say my father will hit on some better plan than that.</p>
<p>"And now we will lie down. I am so stiff that I can hardly
stand, from squatting for so many hours behind those things of
ours. I thought that I had got pretty well accustomed to it, but I
never calculated on having to do it from ten in the morning until
ten at night, with only two half-hours off."</p>
<p>Dick, however, had little sleep that night. He was too excited
over the glorious success he had obtained to be capable of closing
an eye, and it was not until day was breaking that he fell into a
doze.</p>
<p>An hour later, he started to his feet at a knock at the door. He
was wide awake in a moment, and on running to it, his father
entered.</p>
<p>"You look older today than you did yesterday," the latter said,
as he held his hand and gazed into Dick's face. "I fancy that
neither of us has had any sleep to speak of. As for myself, I have
not closed an eye."</p>
<p>"Nor did I, Father, until day began to break. Now please, let us
talk over our plan of escape first, for we may be interrupted at
any moment."</p>
<p>"Right you are, lad. Does your friend here speak English? For I
have never got to be a good hand at their lingo. I want to thank
him, too, but as you say, time is precious, and we must postpone
that."</p>
<p>"He understands it, Father, and can talk it pretty fairly. We
have been constantly together for nearly two years.</p>
<p>"Now, in the first place, is there any place where we can get
down from the top here, with the aid of a rope?"</p>
<p>"It would be a pretty tough job, anyhow, but at the farthest end
of the rock is a place where it goes sharp down, as if cut with a
knife. That would be the best place to try. I take it to be about
two hundred feet deep. Beyond, the ground seems to slope regularly
away. If I could have got a rope I should have tried it, but they
are pretty scarce commodities up here--in fact, I have never seen a
piece twenty feet long since we came. What sort of rope have you
got?"</p>
<p>Dick opened the front of his garment, and showed the rope round
his body. Captain Holland gave a low whistle of dismay.</p>
<p>"I should not like to trust a child with that thing, Dick, much
less a grown man. It is no thicker than a flag halliard."</p>
<p>"It is thin, Father, but there is no fear as to its strength. I
tested every yard of it, and found it would bear six hundred
weight."</p>
<p>"Well, that is ample; but how is one to hold on to a cord like
that?"</p>
<p>"That is just what we want you to tell us, Father. There must be
some way of managing it, if one could but hit upon it."</p>
<p>"Yes, that is so, lad," the sailor said thoughtfully. "I will
think it over. Anyhow, I think I could lower you both down, and by
knotting it I might get hold enough to come down after you; but
even the knots would be precious small."</p>
<p>"One might get over that, Father, by fastening a short stick
across, every five or six feet; or every two or three feet, if you
like."</p>
<p>"Good, Dick. That would prevent one's coming down with a run,
certainly, and by keeping it between one's legs, one could always
get a rest. Yes, that will do, lad, if I can think of nothing
better. There are a lot of spears stowed away, in the room
adjoining mine. If we were to cut them up into six-inch lengths,
with one of a foot long to each ten, for sitting on, they would be
just the thing."</p>
<p>"That is capital, Father. I had a lot of practice in rope
climbing, before I came out, and I am sure that I could manage with
the help that would give. I don't think Surajah could, but we could
let him down first, easily. Now, as to your prison."</p>
<p>"There are bars to the windows," the captain said, "and a sentry
is always on duty outside. The only way would be to escape at the
rear. I have often thought it over, but it was of no use breaking
out there, if I could not get any farther. The wall is built of
loose stone, without mortar. You see, it would have been a big job
to bring up either mortar or bricks from down below, so most of the
buildings are entirely of stone. The wall is two feet thick, but
there would be no great difficulty in getting out the stones, and
making a hole big enough to crawl through. I could not do it in my
room, because they always look round to see that everything is safe
before they lock me up; and it would take so long to do it
noiselessly that half the night would be wasted, before I could get
out. But the magazine, where the spears are kept, communicates with
my room, and I could slip in there in the daytime, when no one was
looking, get behind the spears, which are piled against the wall,
and work hidden by them. No one would be likely to go into my room
during the day, and if he did, he would not expect to find me
there, as I am generally about the place. In that way, I could get
out enough stones to render it an easy job to finish it, after I
was locked up. A spear head is as good a thing, to help me prize
them out, as one could wish for."</p>
<p>"Very well, Father. Then we had better settle that you shall get
out in that way. Now, shall we go round on the outside, and help
you?"</p>
<p>"No; I don't say but that your help would make it easier to get
the stones out, without making a noise. Still, your going round
might be noticed."</p>
<p>"Well then, Father, shall we seize and gag the sentry? We have
done such a thing before, successfully."</p>
<p>"No, that wouldn't do, Dick. The guard house is hard by, and the
slightest noise would destroy us all. Besides, as they have not
many sentries posted up here, they relieve guard every hour, so
that the thing would be discovered in no time.</p>
<p>"No; when I get out I will creep along noiselessly by the wall.
There are houses in the yard almost all along, and though the
sentry would not be likely to see me, in the shade of the wall, I
will take care to cross the open spaces when his back is turned. I
will then come straight here for you, and we will make for the wall
behind the governor's house. There is no sentry on that side, for
that steep ravine covers it from attack there. However, there are
six or eight feet of level ground between the foot of the wall and
the edge of the ravine. The walls are twenty feet in height. With
fifty feet of that rope I will make a ladder, and will get hold of
a piece of iron to make a grapnel of. How much time can you give
me?"</p>
<p>"I should think we could stay here today and tomorrow, without
seeming to be dawdling without reason. Do you think you could get
ready by tomorrow night, Father?"</p>
<p>"Yes, that will give me plenty of time. Let me see. There is the
short ladder to make. That won't take me over an hour. There are a
hundred bits to cut for the long ladder, putting them about two
feet apart. That will be a longish job, for the spear shafts are of
very tough wood. However, I have a saw, and some oil, which will
prevent it making a noise, and can make fairly quick work of it. I
have several tools, too. I very often do carpentering jobs of all
sorts--that is what first made the governor take to me. I can get
all that part of the work done today. Tonight I will do the
knotting. Of course, I shall make it a goodish bit over two hundred
feet long, for it may turn out that I have not judged the depth
right, and that the cliff is higher than I thought it was.</p>
<p>"I don't think sawing up the spear shafts will take more than an
hour or two, so I shall be able to show myself about the place as
usual. I will go over and take a good look at the rock again, and
stick a spear head into the ground, at the point where it seems to
me that it goes down straightest, and where there is the least
chance of the rope getting rubbed against a sharp edge. I sha'n't
begin at the wall until tomorrow, for I don't suppose I shall be
able to get out the first few stones without making a bit of a
noise, and it would not do to work at night.</p>
<p>"Now, lad, I think we can consider that as all settled, and I
won't come near you again, unless there is some change of plan. I
shall be here tomorrow evening, I hope it will be by ten
o'clock--that must depend upon how long it takes me to get down the
outside layer of stone.</p>
<p>"If you should hear a sudden row, make at once for the wall
behind the governor's house, and wait there for me to join you. You
see, some of the stones may come down with a run, and if they do I
shall give the rest a shove, and be out like a shot. I shall hear
which side the sentry is running round the house, and shall belt
the other way. Of course, he will see the stones and give the
alarm; but in the darkness, I have not much doubt of being able to
slip away, and I will then make my way straight to the wall. Of
course, I shall have the ladders tied up into bundles, and shall
take care not to leave them behind me."</p>
<p>"All right, Father. We will be ready tomorrow evening. We shall
wait quietly for you until you come, unless we hear a sudden alarm.
If we do, we will go round behind the governor's house, and wait
there for your coming."</p>
<p>"That is it, my lad. Now I will be going. I am glad that no one
has come in while I have been here."</p>
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