THE DUNGEON UNDER THE SEA
Ned, early the next morning, saw Santa
Anna with his brilliant escort ride away toward the
capital, while General Cos resumed his march to Vera
Cruz. Almonte did not reappear at all, and the
boy surmised that he was under orders to join the
dictator.
Ned continued on foot among the Tlascalans.
Cos offered him no kindness whatever, and his pride
would not let him ask for it. But when he looked
at his sore and bleeding feet he always thought of
the patient burro that he had lost. They marched
several more days, and the road dropped down into
the lowlands, into the tierra caliente. The air
grew thick and hot and Ned, already worn, felt an
almost overpowering languor. The vegetation became
that of the tropics. Then, passing through marshes
and sand dunes, they reached Vera Cruz, the chief
port of Mexico, a small, unhealthy city, forming a
semicircle about a mile in length about the bay.
Ned saw little of Vera Cruz, as they
reached it at nightfall, but the approach through
alternations of stagnant marsh and shifting sand affected
him most unpleasantly. Offensive odors assailed
him and he remembered that this was a stronghold of
cholera and yellow fever. He ate rough food with
the Tlascalans again, and then Cos sent for him.
“You have reached your home,”
said the General. “You will occupy the
largest and most expensive house in the place, and
my men will take you there at once. Do you not
thank me?”
“I do not,” replied Ned
defiantly. Yet he knew that he had much to dread.
“You are an ungrateful young
dog of a Texan,” said Cos, laughing maliciously,
“but I will confer my hospitality upon you, nevertheless.
You will go with these men and so I bid you farewell.”
Four barefooted soldiers took Ned
down through the dirty and evil-smelling streets of
the city. He wondered where they were going,
but he would not ask. They came presently to the
sea and Ned saw before him, about a half mile away,
a somber and massive pile rising upon a rocky islet.
He knew that it was the great and ancient Castle of
San Juan de Ulua. In the night, with only the
moon’s rays falling upon its walls, it looked
massive and forbidding beyond all description.
That cold shiver again appeared at the roots of the
boy’s hair. He knew now the meaning of
all this talk of Santa Anna and Cos about their hospitality.
He was to be buried in the gloomiest fortress of the
New World. It was a fate that might well make
one so young shudder many times. But he said
not a word in protest. He got silently into a
boat with the soldiers, and they were rowed to the
rocky islet on which stood the huge castle.
Not much time was wasted on Ned.
He was taken before the governor, his name and age
were registered, and then two of the prison guards,
one going before and the other behind, led him down
a narrow and steep stairway. It reminded him
of his descent into the pyramid, but here the air
seemed damper. They went down many steps and came
into a narrow corridor upon which a number of iron
doors opened. The guards unlocked one of the
doors, pushed Ned in, relocked the door on him, and
went away.
Ned staggered from the rude thrust,
but, recovering himself stood erect, and tried to
accustom his eyes to the half darkness. He stood
in a small, square room with walls of hard cement
or plaster. The roof of the same material was
high, and in the center of it was a round hole, through
which came all the air that entered the cell.
In a corner was a rude pallet of blankets spread upon
grass. There was no window. The place was
hideous and lonely beyond the telling. He had
not felt this way in the pyramid.
Ned now had suffered more than any
boy could stand. He threw himself upon the blanket,
and only pride kept him from shedding tears. But
he was nevertheless relaxed completely, and his body
shook as if in a chill. He lay there a long time.
Now and then, he looked up at the walls of his prison,
but always their sodden gray looked more hideous than
ever. He listened but heard nothing. The
stillness was absolute and deadly. It oppressed
him. He longed to hear anything that would break
it; anything that would bring him into touch with human
life and that would drive away the awful feeling of
being shut up forever.
The air in the dungeon felt damp to
Ned. He was glad of it, because damp meant a
touch of freshness, but by and by it became chilly,
too. The bed was of two blankets, and, lying
on one and drawing the other over him, he sought sleep.
He fell after a while into a troubled slumber which
was half stupor, and from which he awakened at intervals.
At the third awakening he heard a noise. Although
his other faculties were deadened partially by mental
and physical exhaustion, his hearing was uncommonly
acute, concentrating in itself the strength lost by
the rest. The sound was peculiar, half a swish
and half a roll, and although not loud it remained
steady. Ned listened a long time, and then, all
at once, he recognized its cause.
He was under the sea, and it was the
rolling of the waves over his head that he heard.
He was in one of the famous submarine dungeons of the
Castle of San Juan de Ulua. This was the hospitality
of Cos and Santa Anna, and it was a hospitality that
would hold him fast. Never would he take any
word of warning to the Texans. Buried under the
sea! He shivered all over and a cold sweat broke
out upon him.
He lay a long time until some of the
terror passed. Then he sat up, and looked at
the round hole in the cement ceiling. It was about
eight inches in diameter and a considerable stream
of fresh air entered there. But the pipe or other
channel through which it came must turn to one side,
as the sea was directly over his head. He could
not reach the hole, and even could he have reached
it, he was too large to pass through it. He had
merely looked at it in a kind of vague curiosity.
Feeling that every attempt to solve
anything would be hopeless, he fell asleep again,
and when he awoke a man with a lantern was standing
beside him. It was a soldier with his food, the
ordinary Mexican fare, and water. Another soldier
with a musket stood at the door. There was no
possible chance of a dash for liberty. Ned ate
and drank hungrily, and asked the soldier questions,
but the man replied only in monosyllables or not at
all. The boy desisted and finished in silence
the meal which might be either breakfast, dinner or
supper for all he knew. Then the soldier took
the tin dishes, withdrew with his comrade, and the
door was locked again.
Ned was left to silence and solitude.
But he felt that he must now move about, have action
of some kind. He threw himself against the door
in an effort to shake it, but it did not move a jot.
Then he remembered that he had seen cell doors in
a row, and that other prisoners might be on either
side of him. He kicked the heavy cement walls,
but they were not conductors of sound and no answer
came.
He grew tired after a while, but the
physical exertion had done him good. The languid
blood flowed in a better tide in his veins and his
mind became more keen. There must be some way
out of this. Youth could not give up hope.
It was incredible, impossible that he should remain
always here, shut off from that wonderful free world
outside. The roll of the sea over his head made
reply.
After a while he began to walk around
his cell, around and around and around, until his
head grew dizzy, and he staggered. Then he would
reverse and go around and around and around the other
way. He kept this up until he could scarcely
stand. He lay down and tried to sleep again.
But he must have slept a long time before, and sleep
would not come. He lay there on the blankets,
staring at the walls and not seeing them, until the
soldiers came again with his food. Ned ate and
drank in silence. He was resolved not to ask
a question, and, when the soldiers departed, not a
single word had been spoken.
The next day Ned had fever, the day
after that he was worse, and on the third day he became
unconscious. Then he passed through a time, the
length of which he could not guess, but it was a most
singular period. It was crowded with all sorts
of strange and shifting scenes, some colored brilliantly,
and vivid, others vague and fleeting as moonlight
through a cloud. It was wonderful, too, that he
should live again through things that he had lived
already. He was back with Mr. Austin. He
saw the kind and generous face quite plainly and recognized
his voice. He saw Benito and Juana, Popocatepetl
and Ixtaccihuatl; he was on the pyramid and in it,
and he saw the silver cone of Orizaba. Then he
shifted suddenly back to Texas and the wild border,
the Comanche and the buffalo.
His life now appeared to have no order.
Time turned backward. Scenes occurred out of
their sequence. Often they would appear for a
second or third time. It was the most marvelous
jumble that ever ran through any kaleidoscope.
His brain by and by grew dizzy with the swift interplay
of action and color. Then everything floated
away and blackness and silence came. Nor could
he guess how long this period endured, but when he
came out of it he felt an extraordinary weakness and
a lassitude that was of both mind and body.
His eyes were only half open and he
did not care to open them more. He took no interest
in anything. But he became slowly conscious that
he had emerged from somewhere out of a vast darkness,
and that he had returned to his life in the dungeon
under the sea.
His eyes opened fully by automatic
process rather than by will, and the heavy dark of
the dungeon was grateful then, because they, too, like
all the rest of him, were very weak. Yet a little
light came in as usual with the fresh air from above,
and by and by he lifted one hand and looked at it.
It was a strange hand, very white, very thin, with
the blue veins standing out from the back.
It was almost the hand of a skeleton.
He did not know it. Certainly it did not belong
to him. He looked at it wondering, and then he
did a strange thing. It was his left hand that
he was holding before him. He put his right hand
upon it, drew that hand slowly over the fingers, then
the palm and along the wrist until he reached his shoulder.
It was his hand after all. His languid curiosity
satisfied he let the hand drop back by his body.
It fell like a stone. After a while he touched
his head, and found that his hair was cut closely.
It seemed thin, too.
He realized that he had been ill,
and very ill indeed he must have been to be so weak.
He wondered a little how long it had been since he
first lapsed into unconsciousness, and then the wonder
ceased. Whether the time had been long or short
it did not matter. But he shut his eyes and listened
for the last thing that he remembered. He heard
it presently, that low roll of the sea. He was
quite sure of one thing. He was in the same submarine
dungeon of the famous Castle of San Juan de Ulua.
His door was opened, and a man, not
a soldier, came in with soup in a tin basin.
He uttered a low exclamation, when he saw that Ned
was conscious, but he made no explanations. Nor
did Ned ask him anything. But he ate the soup
with a good appetite, and felt very much stronger.
His mind, too, began to wake up. He knew that
he was going to get well, but it occurred to him that
it might be better for him to conceal his returning
strength. With a relaxed watch he would have more
chance to escape.
The soup had a soothing effect, and
his mind shared with his body in the improvement.
It was obvious that they had not intended for him to
die or they would not have taken care of him in his
illness. The shaven head was proof. But
he saw nothing that he could do. He must wait
upon the action of his jailers. Having come to
this conclusion he lay upon his pallet, and let vague
thoughts float through his head as they would.
About three hours after they had brought
him his soup he heard a scratching at the keyhole
of his door. He was not too languid to be surprised.
He did not think it likely that any of his jailers
would come back so soon, and heretofore the key had
always turned in the lock without noise.
Ned sat up. The scratching continued
for a few moments, and the door swung open. A
tall, thin figure of a man entered, the door closed
behind him, and with some further scratching he locked
it. Then the man turned and stared at Ned.
Ned stared with equal intentness at him.
The figure that he saw was thin and
six feet four; the face that he saw was thin and long.
The face was also bleached to an indescribable dead
white, the effect of which was heightened by the thick
and fiery red hair that crowned a head, broad and
shaped finely. His hair even in the dark seemed
to be vital, the most vital part of him. Ned fancied
that his eyes were blue, although in the dimness he
could not tell. But he knew that this was no
Mexican. A member of his own race stood before
him.
“Well,” said Ned.
“Well?” replied the man in a singularly
soft and pleasant voice.
“Who are you and what do you want?”
“To the first I am Obed White;
to the second I want to talk to you, and I would append
as a general observation that I am harmless. Evil
to him that would evil do.”
“The quotation is wrong,”
said Ned, smiling faintly. “It is ’evil
to him who evil thinks.’”
“Perhaps, but I have improved
upon it. I add, for your further information,
that I am your nearest neighbor. I occupy the
magnificent concrete parlor next door to you, where
I live a life of undisturbed ease, but I have concluded
at last to visit you, and here I am. How I came
I will explain later. But I am glad I am with
you. One crowded hour of glorious company is
worth a hundred years in a solitary cell. I may
have got that a little wrong, too, but it sounds well.”
He sat down in Turkish fashion on
the floor, folding a pair of extremely long legs beneath
him, and regarded Ned with a slow, quizzical smile.
For the life of him the boy could not keep from smiling
back. With the nearer view he could see now that
the eyes were blue and honest.
“You may think I’m a Mexican,”
continued the man in his mellow, pleasant voice, “but
I’m not. I’m a Texan—by
the way of Maine. As I told you, I live in the
next tomb, the one on the right. I’m a watch,
clock and tool maker by trade and a bookworm by taste.
Because of the former I’ve come into your cell,
and because of the latter I use the ornate language
that you hear. But of both those subjects more
further on. Meanwhile, I suppose it’s you
who have been yelling in here at the top of your voice
and disturbing a row of dungeons accustomed to peace
and quiet.”
“It was probably I, but I don’t
remember anything about it.”
“It’s not likely that
you would, as I see you’ve had some one of the
seven hundred fevers that are customary along this
coast. Yours must have been of the shouting kind,
as I heard you clean through the wall, and, once when
I was listening at the keyhole, you made a noise like
the yell of a charging army.”
“You don’t mean to say
that you’ve been listening at the keyhole of
my cell.”
“It’s exactly what I mean.
You wouldn’t come to see your neighbor so he
decided to come to see you. Good communications
correct evil manners. See this?”
He held up a steel pronged instrument
about six inches long.
“This was once a fork, a fork
for eating, large and crude, I grant you, but a fork.
It took me more than a month to steal it, that is I
had to wait for a time when I was sure that the soldier
who brought my food was so lazy or so stupid that
he would not miss it. I waited another week as
an additional precaution, and after that my task was
easy. If the best watch, clock and instrument
maker in the State of Maine couldn’t pick any
lock with a fork it was time for him to lie on his
back and die. I picked the lock of my own door
in a minute the first time by dead reckoning, but
it took me a full two minutes to open yours, although
I’ll relock it in half that time when I go out.
Where there’s a will there will soon be an open
door.”
He flourished the fork, the two prongs
of which now curved at the end, and grinned broadly.
He had a look of health despite the dead whiteness
of his face, which Ned now knew was caused by prison
pallor. Ned liked him. He liked him for
many reasons. He liked him because his eyes were
kindly. He liked him because he was one of his
own race. He liked him because he was a fellow
prisoner, and he liked him above all because this
was the first human companionship that he had had in
a time that seemed ages.
Obed meanwhile was examining him with
scrutinizing eyes. He had heard the voice of
fever, but he did not expect to find in the “tomb”
next to his own a mere boy.
“How does it happen,”
he asked, “that one as young as you is a prisoner
here in a dungeon with the castle of San Juan de Ulua
and the sea on top of him?”
Obed White had the mellowest and most
soothing voice that Ned had ever heard. Now it
was like that of a father speaking to the sick son
whom he loved, and the boy trusted him absolutely.
“I was sent here,” he
replied, “by Santa Anna and his brother-in-law,
Cos, because I knew too much, or rather suspected too
much. I was held at the capital with Mr. Austin.
We were not treated badly. Santa Anna himself
would come to see us and talk of the great good that
he was going to do for Texas, but I could not believe
him. I was sure instead that he was gathering
his forces to crush the Texans. So, I escaped,
meaning to go to Texas with a message of warning.”
“A wise boy and a brave one,”
said Obed White with admiration. “You suspected
but you kept your counsel. Still waters run slowly,
but they run.”
Ned told all his story, neglecting
scarcely a detail. The feeling that came of human
companionship was so strong and his trust was so great
that he did not wish to conceal anything.
“You’ve endured about
as much as ought to come to one boy,” said Obed
White, “and you’ve gone through all this
alone. What you need is a partner. Two heads
can do what one can’t. Well, I’m your
partner. As I’m the older, I suppose I
ought to be the senior partner. Do you hereby
subscribe to the articles of agreement forming the
firm of White & Fulton, submarine engineers, tunnel
diggers, jail breakers, or whatever form of occupation
will enable us to escape from the castle of San Juan
de Ulua?”
“Gladly,” said Ned, and
he held out a thin, white hand. Obed White seized
it, but he remembered not to grasp it too firmly.
This boy had been ill a long time, and he was white
and very weak. The heart of the man overflowed
with pity.
“Good-night, Ned,” he
said. “I mustn’t stay too long, but
I’ll come again lots of times, and you and I
will talk business then. The firm of White &
Fulton will soon begin work of the most important kind.
Now you watch me unlock that door. They say that
pride goeth before a fall, but in this case it is
going right through an open door.”
Obviously he was proud of his skill
as he had a full right to be. He inserted the
hooked prongs of the fork in the great keyhole, twisted
them about a little, and then the lock turned in its
groove.
“Good-by, Ned,” said Obed
again. “It’s time I was back in my
own tomb which is just like yours. I hate to
lock in a good friend like you, but it must be done.”
He disappeared in the hall, the door
swung shut and Ned heard the lock slide in the groove
again. He was alone once more. The light
that had seemed to illuminate his dungeon went with
the man, but he left hope behind. Ned would not
be alone in the spirit as long as he knew that Obed
White was in the cell next to his.
He lay a while, thinking on the chances
of fate. They had served him ill, for a long
time. Had the turn now come? He did not know
it, but it was the human companionship, the friendly
voice that had raised such a great hope in his breast.
He glided from thought into a peaceful sleep and slept
a long time, without dreams or even vague, floating
visions. His breath came long and full at regular
intervals, and with every beat of his pulse new strength
flowed into his body. While he slept nature was
hard at work, rebuilding the strong young frame which
had yielded only to overpowering circumstances.
Ned ate his breakfast voraciously
the next day and wanted more. Dinner also left
him hungry, but, carrying out his original plan, he
counterfeited weakness, and, before the soldier left,
lay down upon the pallet as if he were too languid
to care for anything. He disposed of supper in
similar fashion, and then waited with a throbbing pulse
for the second call from the senior member of the
firm of White & Fulton.
After an incredible period of waiting
he heard the slight rasping of the fork in the keyhole.
Then the door was opened and the older partner entered.
Before speaking he carefully relocked the door.
“I believe you’re glad
to see me,” he said to Ned. “You’re
sitting up. I don’t think I ever before
saw a boy improve so much in twenty-four hours.
I’ll just feel your pulse. It will be one
of my duties as senior partner to practice medicine
for a little while. Yes, it’s a strong
pulse, a good pulse. You’re quite clear
of fever. You need nothing now but your strength
back again, and we’ll wait for that. All
things come to him who waits, if he doesn’t
die of old age first.”
His talk was so rapid and cheerful
that he seemed fairly to radiate vigor. It was
a powerful tonic to Ned who felt so strong that he
was prepared to attempt escape at once. But Obed
shook his head when he suggested it.
“That strength comes from your
feelings,” he said. “All that glitters
isn’t gold or silver or any other precious metal.
That false strength would break down under a long
and severe test. We’ll just wait and plan.
For what we’re going to undertake you’re
bound to have every ounce of vigor that you can accumulate.”
“You’ve been able to go
out in the hall when you chose, then why haven’t
you gone away already?” asked Ned.
“I didn’t get my key perfected
until a few days ago, and then as I heard you yelling
in here I decided to find out about you. Two are
company; one is none, and so we formed a partnership.
Now when the firm acts both partners must act.”
Ned did not reply directly. He
did not know how to thank him for his generosity.
“Have you explored the hall?” he asked.
“It leads up a narrow stairway,
down which I came some time ago when my Mexican brethren
decided that I was too much of a Texan patriot.
Doubtless you trod the same dark and narrow path.
At the head of that is another door which I have not
tried, but which I know I can open with this master
key of mine. Beyond that I’m ignorant of
the territory, but there must be a way out since there
was one in. Now, Ned, we must make no mistake.
We must not conceal from ourselves that the firm of
White & Fulton is confronted by a great task.
We must select our time, and have ready for the crisis
every particle of strength, courage and quickness
that we possess.”
Ned knew that he was right, and yet,
despite his youth and natural strength, his convalescence
was slow. He had passed through too terrible
an ordeal to recover entirely in a day or even a week.
He would test his strength often and at night Obed
White would test it, too, but always he was lacking
in some particular. Then Obed would shake his
head wisely and say: “Wait.”
One night they heard the sea more
loudly than ever before. It rolled heavily, just
over their heads.
“There must be a great storm
on the gulf,” said Obed White. “I’ve
lost count of time, but perhaps the period of gales
is at hand. If so, I’m not sorry, it’ll
hide our flight across the water. You’ll
remember, Ned, that we’re a half mile from the
mainland.”
Fully two weeks passed before they
decided that Ned was restored to his old self.
Meanwhile they had matured their plan.
“We came in as Texans,”
said Obed, “but we must go out as Mexicans.
There is no other way. It’s all simple in
the saying, but we’ve got to be mighty quick
in the doing. We must make the change right here
in this cell of yours, because, you having been an
invalid so long, they’re likely to be careless
about you.”
Ned agreed with him fully, and they
began to train their bodies and minds for a supreme
effort. They were now able to tell the difference
between night and day by the temperature. The
air that came through the holes in the ceiling was
a little cooler by night, enough for senses trained
to preternatural acuteness by long imprisonment to
tell it. The guard always came about eight o’clock
with Ned’s supper and they chose that time for
the attempt.
Obed White entered Ned’s cell
about six o’clock. The boy could scarcely
restrain himself and the man’s blue eyes were
snapping with excitement. But Obed patted Ned
on the shoulder.
“We must both keep cool,”
he said. “The more haste the less likely
the deed. The first man comes in with the tray
carrying your food. I stand here by the door
and he passes by without seeing me. I seize the
second, drag him in and slam the door. Then the
victory is to the firm of White & Fulton, if it prove
to be the stronger. But we’ll have surprise
in our favor.”
They waited patiently. Ned lay
upon his pallet. Obed flattened himself against
the wall beside the door. Their plan fully arranged,
neither now spoke. Overhead they heard the slow
roll of the sea, lashed by the waves sweeping in from
the gulf. But inside the cell the silence was
absolute.
Ned lay in an attitude apparently
relaxed. His face was still white. It could
not acquire color in that close cell, but he had never
felt stronger. A powerful heart pumped vigorous
blood through every artery and vein. His muscles
had regained their toughness and flexibility, and
above all, the intense desire for freedom had keyed
him to supreme effort.
Usually he did not hear the soldier’s
key turn in the lock, but soon he heard it and his
heart pumped. He glanced at White, but the gray
figure, flattened against the wall, never moved.
The door swung open and the soldier, merely a shambling
peon, bearing the tray, entered. Behind him according
to custom came the second man who stood in the doorway,
leaning upon his musket. But he stood there only
an instant. A pair of long, powerful arms which
must have seemed to him at that moment like the antennae
of a devil-fish, reached out, seized him in a fierce
grip by either shoulder, and jerked him gun and all
into the cell. The door was kicked shut and the
grasp of the hands shifted from his shoulders to his
throat. He could not cry out although the terrible
face that bent over him made his soul start with fear.
The man with the tray heard the noise
behind him and turned. Ned sprang like a panther.
All the force and energy that he had been concentrating
so long were in the leap. The soldier went down
as if he had been struck by a cannon ball and his
tray and dishes rattled upon him. But he was
a wiry fellow and grasping his assailant he struggled
fiercely.
“Now stop, my good fellow.
Just lie still! That’s the way!”
It was Obed White who spoke, and he
held the muzzle of a pistol at the man’s head.
The other soldier lay stunned in the corner. It
was from his belt that Obed had snatched the pistol.
“Get up, Ned,” said White.
“The first step in our escape from the Castle
of San Juan de Ulua has been taken. Meanwhile,
you lie still, my good fellow; we’re not going
to hurt you. No, you needn’t look at your
comrade. I merely compressed his windpipe rather
tightly. He’ll come to presently.
Ned, take that gay red handkerchief out of his pocket
and tie his arms. If I were going to be bound
I should like for the deed to be done with just such
a beautiful piece of cloth. Meanwhile, if you
cry out, my friend, I shall have to blow the top of
your head off with this pistol. It’s not
likely that they would hear your cry, but they might
hear my pistol shot.”
Ned bound the man rapidly and deftly.
There was no danger that he would utter a sound, while
Obed White held the pistol. Under the circumstances
he was satisfied with the status quo. The second
man was bound in a similar fashion just as he was
reviving, and he, too, was content to yield to like
threats. Obed drew a loaded pistol from the first
man’s belt and handed it, too, to Ned.
He also looked rather contemptuously at the musket
that the guard by the door had dropped.
“A cheap weapon,” he said.
“A poor substitute for our American rifle, but
we’ll take it along, Ned. We may need it.
You gather their ammunition while I stand handy with
this pistol in case they should burst their bonds.”
Ned searched the men, taking all their
ammunition, their knives and also the key to the door.
Then he and Obed divested the two of their outer clothing
and put it upon themselves. Fortunately both soldiers
had worn their hats and they pulled them down over
their own faces.
“If we don’t come into
too bright a light, Ned,” said White, “you’ll
pass easily for a Mexican. Mexican plumage makes
a Mexican bird. Now how do I look?”
“I could take you for Santa
Anna himself,” said Ned, elated at their success.
“That promises well. There’s
another advantage. You speak Spanish and so do
I.”
“It’s lucky that we do.”
“And now,” said Obed White
to the two Mexicans, “we will leave you to the
hospitality of Cos and Santa Anna, which my young friend
and I have enjoyed so long. We feel that it is
time for you to share in it. We’re going
to lock you in this cell, where you can hear the sea
rolling over your head, but you will not stay here
forever. It’s a long lane that does not
come somewhere to a happy ending, and your comrades
will find you by to-morrow. Farewell.”
He went into the hall and they locked
the door. They listened beside it a little while
but no sound came from within.
“They dare not cry out,”
said Obed. “They’re afraid we’ll
come back. Now for the second step in our escape.
It’s pretty dark here. Those fellows must
have known the way mighty well to have come down as
they did without a lantern.”
“There are other prisoners in
these cells,” said Ned. “Shouldn’t
we release them? You can probably open any of
the doors with your key.”
White shook his head.
“I’m sure that we’re
the only Texans or Americans in San Juan de Ulua,
and we couldn’t afford to be wasting time on
Mexicans whether revolutionaries or criminals.
There would merely be a tumult with every one of us
sure to be recaptured.”
The two now advanced down the passage,
which was low and narrow, walled in with massive stone.
It was so dark here that they held each other’s
hands and felt the way before every footstep.
“I think we’re going in
the right direction,” whispered White, “As
I remember it this is the way I came in.”
“I’m sure of it,”
Ned whispered back. “Ah, here are more steps.”
They had reached the stairway which
led down to the hall of the submarine cells, and still
feeling their way they ascended it cautiously.
As they rose the air seemed to grow fresher, as if
they were nearing the openings by which it entered.
“Those fellows who took our
places must have left a lamp or a lantern standing
somewhere here at the top of these steps,” whispered
White. “The man who carried the tray could
not have gone down them without a light.”
“It’s probably here,”
said Ned, “burned out or blown out by a draught
of wind.”
He smelled a slight smoke and in a
niche carved in the stone he found the lamp.
The wick was still smoking a little.
“We’ll leave it as it
is,” said Obed White. “Somebody may
relight it for those men when they come back again,
but that won’t be for several hours yet.”
Three more steps and they reached
the crest of the flight, where they were confronted
by a heavy door of oak, ribbed with iron. Obed
gently tried the key that they had seized, but it
did not fit.
“They must have banged on the
door for it to be opened whenever they came back,”
said Obed. “Now I shall use my fork which
is sure to turn the lock if I take long enough.
I wasn’t the best watch and key maker in Maine
for nothing. If first you don’t succeed,
then keep on trying till you do.”
Ned sat down on the steps while White
inserted the fork. He could hear it scratching
lightly for a minute and then the bolt slid. The
boy rose and the man stepped back by his side.
“Draw your pistol and have it
ready,” he said, “and I’ll do as
much with the old musket. We don’t know
what’s on the other side of the door but whatever
it is we’ve got to meet it. Thrice armed
is he who hath his weapon leveled.”
Ned needed no urging. He drew
the pistol and held it ready for instant use.
What, in truth, was on the other side of the door?
His whole fate and that of his comrade might depend
upon the revelation. Obed pushed gently and the
door opened without noise three or four inches.
A shaft of light from the room fell upon them but
they could not yet see into the room. They listened,
and, hearing nothing, Obed pushed more boldly.
Then they saw before them a large apartment, containing
little furniture, but with some faded old uniforms
hanging about the walls. Evidently it was used
as a barracks for soldiers. At the far end was
a door and on the side to the right were two windows.
Ned went to the window and looked
out. He saw across a small court a high and blank
stone wall, but when he looked upward he saw also a
patch of sky. It was a black sky, across which
clouds were driving before a whistling wind, but it
was the most beautiful sight that he had ever seen.
The sky, the free, open sky curving over the beautiful
earth, was revealed again to him who had been buried
for ages in a dungeon under the sea. He would
not go back. In the tremendous uplift of feeling
he would willingly choose death first. He beckoned
to White who joined him and who looked up without
being bid.
“It’s out there that we’re
going,” he said. “We’ll have
to cross a stormy sea before we reach freedom, but
Ned, you and I are keyed up just high enough to cross.
We’ll put it to the touch and win it all.
Now for the next door.”
The second door was not locked and
when they pushed it open they entered a small room,
furnished handsomely in the Spanish fashion. A
lamp burned on a table, at which an officer sat looking
over some papers. He heard the two enter and
it was too late for them to retreat, as he turned at
once and looked at them, inquiry in his face.
“Who are you?” he asked.
“We are the soldiers who have
charge of the two Texans in the cells,” replied
Obed White boldly. “We have just taken them
their food and now we are going back to our quarters.”
“I have no doubt that you tell
the truth,” replied the officer, “but
your voice has changed greatly since yesterday.
You remember that I gave you an order then about the
man White.”
“Quite true,” replied
Obed quickly, raising his musket and taking aim, “and
now I’m giving the order back to you. It’s
a poor rule that won’t work first one way and
then the other. Just you move or cry out and I
shoot. I’d hate to do it, because you’re
not bad looking, but necessity knows the law of self-preservation.”
“You need not worry,”
said the officer, smiling faintly. “I will
not move, nor will I cry out. You have too great
an advantage, because I see that your aim is good
and your hand steady. I surmise that you are the
man White himself.”
“None other, and this is my
young friend, Edward Fulton, who likes San Juan de
Ulua as a castle but not as a hotel. Hence he
has decided to go away and so have I. Ned, look at
those papers on his desk. You might find among
them a pass or two which would be mighty useful to
us.”
“Do you mind if I light a cigarette?”
asked the officer. “You can see that my
hands and the cigarettes alike are on the table.”
“Go ahead,” said Obed hospitably, “but
don’t waste time.”
The officer lighted the cigarette
and took a satisfied whiff. Ned searched among
the papers, turning them over rapidly.
“Yes, here is a pass!”
exclaimed he joyfully, “and here is another and
here are two more!”
“Two will be enough,” said Obed.
“I’ll take this one made
out to Joaquin de la Barra for you and one to Diego
Fernandez for me. Ah, what are these?”
He held up four papers, looking at them in succession.
“What are they?” asked Obed White.
“Death warrants. They are
all for men with Mexican names, and they are signed
with the name of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, General-in-chief
and President of the Mexican Republic.”
The officer took the cigarette from
his mouth and sent out a little smoke through his
nostrils.
“Yes, they are death warrants,”
he said. “I was looking over them when
you came in, and I was troubled. The men were
to have been executed to-morrow.”
“Were to have been?” said
Ned. Then a look passed between him and the officer.
The boy held the death warrants one by one in the flame
of the lamp and burned them to ashes.
“I cannot execute a man without
a warrant duly signed,” said the officer.
“Which being the case, we’d
better go or we might have to help at our own executions,”
said Obed White. “Now you just sit where
you are and have a peaceful and happy mind, while
we go out and fight with the storm.”
The officer said nothing and the two
passed swiftly through the far door, stepping into
a paved court, and reaching a few yards further a
gate of the castle. It was quite dark when they
stepped once more into the open world, and both wind
and rain lashed them. But wind and rain themselves
were a delight to the two who had come from under the
sea. Besides, the darker the better.
Two sentinels were at the gate and
Ned thrust the passes before their eyes. They
merely glanced at the signatures, opened the gate,
and in an instant the two were outside the castle
of San Juan de Ulua.