The Problem of Cell 13-Jacques Futrelle

Download as rtf, pdf, or txt
Download as rtf, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 49

 

THE PROBLEM OF CELL 13

 Jacques Futrelle

Level: pre-intermediate
Genre: adventure
Length: short

Total words: 8475
Unique words: 1042
CHAPTER ONE

The Bet

Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen's appearance


was as strange as his name. He was thin with the thin
shoulders of a student and his face was extremely pale. His
eyes were the eyes of a man who studies little things. They
were always half-closed in concentration. Although he wore
thick glasses you could see that his eyes were blue. But his
strangest feature was his abnormally large forehead, on top
of which sat a crown of yellow hair. Together all these things
gave him a bizarre, almost grotesque personality.
Professor Van Dusen's family came from Germany.
Many of his ancestors had been famous scientists; he was
the logical result, the mastermind. And logic was his
passion. He believed that two and two always equal four,
except in unusual cases, when they may equal three or Five.
He believed that all things that start must go somewhere, and
he was able to concentrate all the mental force of his
ancestors to solve any problem.

The public knew Van Dusen as The Thinking Machine


and perhaps this phrase described him best of all. He spent
all his time in his small laboratory where he invented
brilliant theories that shocked scientists and had a profound
effect on the world.

The Thinking Machine didn't have many visitors.


When people did come to see him they were usually
scientists. Two of these men, Dr Charles Ransome and
Alfred Fielding visited him one evening to discuss some
theory (what it was exactly is of no importance).

"That is impossible," said Dr Ransome.

"Nothing is impossible," said The Thinking Machine.


"The mind is master of all things. When science understands
this, it will be a great day."

"What about the airship?" asked Dr Ransome.

"That's not impossible at all," said The Thinking


Machine. "It will be invented soon. I would do it myself, but
unfortunately I'm too busy."
Dr Ransome laughed.

"I've heard you say things like that before," he said.


"But they mean nothing. The mind may be master of the
material world, but there are some problems that cannot be
solved by thought alone."

"Give me an example," demanded The Thinking


Machine.

Dr Ransome thought for a moment as he smoked.

"Well, what about the walls of a prison?" he replied.


"No man can escape from a cell just by thinking about it. If
he could, there would be no prisoners." He continued. "Let's
imagine a case. A cell for prisoners who are condemned to
death. These men will do anything to try to escape. Imagine
you were in that cell. Could you escape?"

"Certainly," said The Thinking Machine.

"Of course," said Mr Fielding, "you could destroy the


cell with an explosive, but if you are a prisoner inside the
cell you can't have that."

"I don't need an explosive," said The Thinking


Machine. "I would be just like any other prisoner and I
would still be able to leave the cell."

"You could escape only if you entered it with tools,"


said Dr Ransome.
The Thinking Machine was visibly irritated.

"Lock me in any cell in any prison anywhere at any


time, wearing only normal clothes, and I'll escape in a
week," he declared. Dr Ransome was interested. Mr.
Fielding lit a new cigar.

"You're saying that you could escape from the cell just
by thinking about it?" Ransome asked.

"I could get out."

"Are you serious?"

"Certainly, I'm serious."

Dr Ransome and Mr Fielding were silent for a long


time.

"Would you like to try it?" asked Mr Fielding finally.

"Certainly," said Professor Van Dusen and added


ironically, "I have done more ridiculous things than that to
convince men of less important facts."

Of course it was an absurd thing but they decided it at


that moment.

"To begin now." said Dr Ransome.

"I'd prefer tomorrow," said The Thinking Machine,


"because..."
"No, now!" said Mr Fielding. "You will be locked in a
cell with no chance to communicate with friends. You will
receive exactly the same attention as a real prisoner, a man
condemned to death. Do you still agree to do it?"

"All right. Now, if you want," said The Thinking


Machine, and he stood up. "The death-cell in Chisholm
Prison?"

"Fine."

"And what will you wear?"

"Very little," said The Thinking Machine. "Shoes, long


socks, trousers and a shirt."

"The guards will search you, of course."

"They must treat me like any other prisoner," said The


Thinking Machine.

And so they made the arrangements. They had to


obtain permission for the experiment but all three of them
wore important men and everything was finalised with a few
telephone calls. The prison governors could not understand
why Professor Van Dusen wanted to do it. But one thing was
certain. They had never had such an important prisoner.

The Thinking Machine dressed himself in the clothes


that he was going to wear in prison, and called his
housekeeper.
"Martha," he said, "it is now twenty-seven minutes past
nine. I am going away. One week from tonight at half-past
nine, these gentlemen and one or two others will have dinner
with me here. Remember Dr Ransome likes carrots."

A driver took the three men to Chisholm Prison. The


warden was waiting for them. He understood only that
Professor Van Dusen was going to be his prisoner for one
week. He was not a criminal, but he must be treated just like
any other prisoner.

"Search him," said Dr Ransome.

The guards searched The Thinking Machine but they


didn't find anything. The pockets of his trousers were empty
and his shirt didn't have any pockets. They took off his shoes
and socks and looked inside them. Nothing.

Dr Ransome regarded Van Dusen's weak body and his


colourless face. He was suddenly sorry about his idea.

"Are you sure you want to do this?" he asked.

"Would you believe me if I didn't do it?" The Thinking


Machine replied.

"No."

"All right, I'll do it."

Ransome didn't like the arrogance in Van Dusen's


voice. His sympathy for the man disappeared. He decided
that the experiment was a good thing. It would teach The
Thinking Machine a lesson.

"Will it be possible for him to communicate with


anyone outside the prison?" he asked.

"No. It will be absolutely impossible," said the warden.


"He will not have anything to write with."

"And the guards, will they send messages for him?"

"Not one word," said the warden. "They will tell me


anything he says and they will give me anything he gives
them."

"Good," said Mr Fielding.

"Of course if he does not escape in a week," said Dr


Ransome, "and asks to leave, you will let him go?"

"I understand," said the warden.

Then The Thinking Machine spoke.

"I have three requests," he said, "I would like some


toothpaste and also one five-dollar and two ten- dollar bills"

"Could he bribe" your guards for twenty-five dollars?"

Not even for twenty-five hundred dollars."

"In that case, give him the money," said Mr Fielding.


"And what is the third request?" asked Dr Ransome.

"Could somebody clean my shoes?"

The three men looked very surprised. This last request


seemed completely absurd, but they agreed to it anyway.
After this, they took The Thinking Machine to his cell. They
walked down a long corridor and stopped at the third steel
door.

"Here is Cell 13," said the warden. "This is where


condemned killers are kept. No one can leave it without my
permission. No one in it can communicate with anyone
outside. It is very near my office and I can hear any noise
that comes from it."

"Is this cell all right, gentlemen?" asked The Thinking


Machine.

"Yes, it's perfect," replied Fielding and Ransome


together.

The guard opened the door and The Thinking Machine


walked into the dark room. No sooner was he inside than the
warden closed the door and locked it with a double lock.
Ransome heard a noise from inside the cell.

"What is that noise?" he asked through the bars.

"Rats - the cell is full of rats," replied The Thinking


Machine.
The three men said goodnight and were turning to go
when The Thinking Machine called:

"What time is it exactly, warden?"

"Seventeen minutes past eleven."

"Thanks. I will see you all in your office at half-past


eight one week from this evening," said The Thinking
Machine.

"And if you do not?"

"There is no possibility of that."


CHAPTER TWO

Chisholm Prison

Chisholm prison was a large building. It was four


floors high and stood in the centre of a large open space. The
wall around it was six metres high and impossible to climb.
Even if a man managed to escape from his cell, he could not
pass over the wall.

The yard around the building was eight metres wide on


all sides. This was the distance from the prison building to
the wall. During the day, prisoners used the yard to do
exercises. But it was not for those prisoners in Cell 13.

There were always four armed guards in the yard, one


for each side of the building.

At night strong lights illuminated the yard and the wall.


The wires that carried electricity to these lights ran up the
walls of the building.

The Thinking Machine saw and understood all these


things. He had to stand on his bed to see out of the small
barred window. It was the morning after his incarceration.
He soon realised that somewhere on the other side of the
wall there was a river because he could hear the sound of a
boat and saw a river bird in the sky. From the same direction
he heard the sound of children playing baseball, so he knew
that there was a children's playground between the prison
wall and the river.

No man had ever escaped from Chisholm Prison and it


was easy to see why. The walls of the cell were perfectly
solid and the bars on the window were new. And in any case
the window itself was too small to escape through.

But this didn't discourage The Thinking Machine. He


looked up at the light and saw how the wire went from it to
the wall of the prison building. He realised that the wire
passed near the window of his cell. That could be useful.

Cell 13 was on the same floor as the prison offices.


The Thinking Machine couldn't see the ground through the
window of his cell. However, there were only four steps up
to the office floor. Therefore the cell must be near the
ground. Good.

The Thinking Machine remembered how he had come


to the cell. First there was the outside guard's room which
formed part of the wall, next to the prison gates. There was
always one guard at these gates who let people come into the
prison and then let them out again when the warden told him
to. The warden's office was in the prison building. From the
yard you had to pass through a solid steel door to get to it.
The door had only one small hole in it to see who was there.
Then between the office and Cell 13 there was a heavy
wooden door and two steel doors in the corridors of the
prison. Then, of course, there was the door of Cell 13.

"There are seven doors between Cell 13 and freedom,"


thought The Thinking Machine. "It will not be easy. But
there are advantages. I am alone here. Nobody looks at what
I am doing.

There is one guard who brings my food three times a


day, at six o'clock in the morning, at noon, then again at six
in the afternoon.

And then there is the inspection at nine o'clock. But


that is all."

There was nothing, absolutely nothing in his cell


except a bed that was strongly made and impossible to
dismantle. There was no chair, no table, no cup or fork or
spoon. Nothing. The guard watched him while he ate and
took away his plate and spoon as soon as he had finished.

The Thinking Machine considered all these facts very


carefully. Then he began an examination of his cell. He
examined the stones in the walls and roof and the cement
between them. He walked over the floor many times but it
was solid cement. After the examination he sat on his bed
and thought for a long time. Because Professor Augustus
S.F.X. Van Dusen had something to think about.

Suddenly, he was disturbed by a rat which ran across


his foot and disappeared into a dark corner of the cell. The
Thinking Machine looked hard into the corner. After some
time he saw several pairs of yellow eyes looking back at
him.

Then for the first time The Thinking Machine noticed


the bottom of his cell door. There was a space of about five
centimetres between the steel bar and the floor. The
Thinking Machine walked into the corner where the rats
were, but he continued to look at the door. The rats were
afraid and tried to escape. There was the sound of running
feet and several squeaks and then silence.

None of the rats had gone out the door, yet the cell was
now empty. Therefore there must be another way out of the
cell, even if it was very small. He got down on his hands and
knees and began to look for the opening. Finally he found it.
It was a small circular hole in the floor about four
centimetres in diameter. "So this is how the rats escaped.
Interesting." He put his hand in the hole. It seemed to be an
old drainpipe.

The Thinking Machine sat on the bed and thought for


an hour. Then he looked once more outside his cell window.
One of the outside guards stood directly opposite, beside the
wall. He was looking at the window of Cell 13 when The
Thinking Machine's large head appeared. But the Professor
didn't see the guard.

At twelve o'clock the Cell 13 guard brought The


Thinking Machine his food. It was horrible but The
Thinking Machine didn't mind. He wasn't interested in food.
He spoke to the guard, who watched him as he ate.

"Have they made any modifications here in the last few


years?" asked The Thinking Machine.

"Not really," said the guard. "They built the new wall
four years ago."

"Have they done anything to the prison building?"

"Well, they painted the outside. And then seven years


ago they had a new plumbing system installed."

"Ah, I see," said the prisoner. "How far is the river over
there?"

"About a hundred metres. The boys have a baseball


ground between the wall and the river."

The Thinking Machine had nothing more to say, but


when the guard was ready to go he asked for some water.

"I get very thirsty here," he explained. "Could I have


some water in a cup please?"

"I'll ask the warden," replied the guard, and he went


away.

Half an hour later he returned with a small cup.


"The warden says you may keep this cup," he told the
prisoner. "But you must show it to me when I ask for it. If
you break it, I won't give you another one."

"Thank you," said The Thinking Machine. "I won't


break it."

Two hours later the same guard was passing the door
of Cell 13. He heard a noise and stopped. The Thinking
Machine was on his hands and knees in a corner of the cell.
There was the sound of several squeaks. The guard watched
him.

"Ah, I've got you," he heard the prisoner say.

"What have you got?" said the guard.

"One of these rats," he replied. "See?" The guard saw a


rat in The Thinking Machine's hands. The prisoner carried it
towards the light. "It's a water rat," he said.

"Haven't you got anything better to do than catch rats?"


asked the guard.

"It's terrible that there are rats in this prison," said The
Thinking Machine. "Take this one away and kill it. There are
many more where it came from."

The guard took the rat and killed it. Later he told the
warden about the incident, but the warden only smiled.
Later that afternoon the armed guard in the yard
outside Cell 13 saw the prisoner look out and put a hand
through the bars of the window. Something white fell slowly
to the ground. It was a roll of linen from a shirt, and
wrapped around it was a five-dollar bill. The guard looked
up at the window again but the face was no longer there.

With a smile he took the cloth and the five-dollar bill


to the warden's office. There was something written on the
outside of the cloth in strange ink. It said:

"Please deliver to Dr Charles Ransome."

"Ha!" said the warden, "His first plan of escape has


failed. But why did he address it to Dr Ransome?"

"And where did he get the pen and ink to write with?"
added the guard.

The warden looked at the guard and the guard looked


at the warden. There was no easy solution to the mystery.
The warden studied the writing carefully.

"Well, let's see what he wanted to say to Dr Ransome,"


he said. He unrolled the second piece of linen.

"Well, if that - what - what do you think of that?" he


asked, extremely confused.

The guard took the piece of linen and read:

"Epa cseot d'net niiy awe htto n'si sih. T."


CHAPTER THREE

A Message from Cell 13

The warden spent an hour trying to discover what the


message was. Why did his prisoner want to talk to Dr
Ransome? And where had he got the materials to write? He
examined the linen again. It was a part of a white shirt. But
what had he written with? The warden knew that the
prisoner didn't have a pen or a pencil. So what had he used?
The warden decided to investigate. The Thinking Machine
was his prisoner. "If this man is trying to escape by sending
coded messages," he thought, "I will stop him."

The warden returned to Cell 13. He found The


Thinking Machine on his hands and knees. He was catching
rats. The prisoner heard the warden and turned to him
quickly.

"It's terrible," he said. "These rats. There are hundreds


of them."

"Other men can live with them," said the warden.


"Give me your shirt. Here is another one."

"Why?" demanded The Thinking Machine.


"You have attempted to communicate with Dr
Ransome," said the warden, angrily. "As the warden of this
prison, I must stop you." The Thinking Machine was silent
for a moment.

"All right," he said, finally. "Here. Take it."

The warden smiled. The prisoner stood up and took off


his shirt. He gave it to the warden. In exchange, the warden
gave him a blue prison shirt. The warden looked at The
Thinking Machine's white shirt. He compared the pieces of
linen he had with the shirt. It was torn in two places. The
Thinking Machine watched him.

"Did the guard give you those?" he asked.

"Yes, he did," said the warden. "And that is the end of


your first attempt to escape." The Thinking Machine
watched the warden as he looked at the shirt. He saw that
there were only two pieces missing from it. He smiled.

"What did you write this message with?" asked the


warden.

"I'm afraid you must discover that!" The Thinking


Machine said.

The warden became angry but he didn't say anything


more. He made a very careful inspection of the cell and the
prisoner, but he found nothing. Nothing that The Thinking
Machine could use as a pen. And the liquid that he had used
to write the message was also a mystery. Finally the warden
went out of the cell. He took The Thinking Machine's shirt
with him.

"Well, he won't escape by writing messages on a shirt,"


the warden thought.

On the third day of his incarceration The Thinking


Machine tried to bribe the guard so that he could escape. The
guard brought his food and waited outside the cell door.

"The drainpipes of the prison go to the river, don't


they?" The Thinking Machine asked.

"Yes," said the guard.

"I imagine they are very small?"

"Yes. They are too small to escape through."

There was silence. The Thinking Machine finished his


food. Then he said:

"You know I'm not a criminal, don't you?"

"Yes."

"And I can leave the prison if I want to?"

"Yes."

"Well, when I came here I believed I could escape,"


said the prisoner. "Will you help me if I give you some
money?"
The guard was an honest man.

"No," he said.

"Five hundred dollars," said The Thinking Machine. "I


am not a criminal."

"No," said the guard.

"A thousand?"

"No. If you gave me ten thousand dollars, I couldn't get


you out. To get out you have to pass through seven doors
and I only have the keys to two."

The guard ran to the warden's office and told him about
the prisoner's offer.

"Plan number two fails," said the warden and smiled.


"First a message and then a bribe."

At six o'clock, the guard went to Cell 13 again to bring


food to The Thinking Machine. He stopped in the corridor.
There was a noise coming from inside the cell. The guard
walked very quietly to the cell door. Through the bars he
saw The Thinking Machine at the window. He was trying to
cut through the iron bars of the window with a file.

The guard went back to the office and told the warden.
The two men went back to Cell 13, walking very quietly.
The warden looked into the cell and saw The Thinking
Machine still at the window. He entered the cell.
The Thinking Machine turned round and jumped onto
the floor. He tried to hide the file in his hand.

"Give it to me," said the warden.

"No," said the prisoner. There was anger in his voice.

"Come on. Give it to me."

"No," repeated The Thinking Machine.

"Very well. Search him," said the warden to the guard.

The guard searched The Thinking Machine. After some


minutes he found a piece of steel about five centimetres long
in the prisoner's trousers. A few minutes later he found
another piece. The guard gave the pieces of steel to the
warden. The warden looked at them.

"You couldn't cut through the bars on the window with


these," he said.

"Yes I could," said The Thinking Machine.

"In six months perhaps," said the warden, smiling.

"Just wait, you'll see," said The Thinking Machine.

Once more the guard searched the cell. But once more
they found nothing. The warden stood on the bed and looked
at the bars of the window. He took the bars in his hand and
tried to move them. They were immovable. He smiled and
then got down from the bed.
"Forget it, Professor, you will never escape from here,"
he said.

The Thinking Machine said nothing. He just sat on the


bed with his head in his hands. The warden and the guard
went out of the cell and closed the door.

"He is mad to try and escape," said the warden, "but he


is very clever. I would like to know what he used to write
that coded message."

It was four o'clock the next morning when a terrible


scream resounded through the prison. It came from a cell
near the centre of the building, a sound full of horror and
great fear. The warden heard it and ran with three of his men
into the long corridor that went to Cell 13.
CHAPTER FOUR

A Strange Voice

As they ran they heard the scream again. The white


faces of prisoners appeared at cell doors. They were afraid.

"It's that crazy man in Cell 13." the warden said.

He stopped and looked into the cell. "That crazy man


in Cell 13" was sleeping comfortably in his bed. They heard
the scream again. It was coming from somewhere above.
The warden and the guards went upstairs. There they found a
man in Cell 43, directly above Cell 13. He was sitting in the
corner of his cell like a child.

"What's wrong?" demanded the warden.

"Thank God you've come!' said the prisoner.

"What is it?" demanded the warden again.

He opened the door and went into Cell 43. The


prisoner's face was white with terror.

"Take me out of this cell, please take me out," he said.

"What is it?" asked the warden.


"I heard something - something."

"What did you hear?"

"I can't tell you," said the prisoner. "Please take me out
of this cell - put me anywhere - but take me out of here."

"Who is this man?" the warden asked the guard.

"His name is Joseph Ballard," the guard replied.

"And what is his crime?"

"They say he killed a woman with acid."

"But they can't prove it," said the prisoner. "They can't
prove it!" The warden was silent for a minute.

"Listen to me, Ballard," he said, finally. "If you heard


something, I want to know what it was. Now tell me."

"I can't tell you." Ballard was crying now. "Where did
it come from?"

"I don't know. Everywhere - nowhere. I don't know."

"Was it a voice?"

"I can't tell you," said the prisoner. "You must tell me,"
said the warden, angrily.

"It was a voice - but - but - it wasn't human," said the


prisoner.
"A voice, but not human?" repeated the warden. He
was confused.

"It was strange and very far away, like a ghost."

"Did it come from inside or outside the prison?"

"It didn't come from anywhere. It was here, there,


everywhere. I heard it. I heard it!"

For an hour the warden tried to get the story, but


Ballard became silent and didn't say anything more. Finally
the warden went away. He was very confused. Ballard sat at
his cell door until morning, his white face staring through
the bars.

It was the fourth day of The Thinking Machine's


incarceration. He stood at his cell window and threw another
piece of linen to the guard outside. And once more the guard
took it to the warden. The warden read the message on it. It
said:

"Only three days more."

The warden was not surprised by the message. He


knew The Thinking Machine meant that there were only
three days more before he escaped.

"But how did he write it?" the warden thought. "Where


did he find another piece of linen? Where? How?" He
looked at the linen. It was white, like the material from a
shirt. He took The Thinking Machine's shirt and put the two
original pieces of linen on the torn places. The third piece
was completely superfluous. But it was the same material.
"Where did he get it? And where - where does he get
anything to write with?"

Later on the fourth day The Thinking Machine spoke


to the guard outside his window.

"What day of the month is it?" he asked.

"The fifteenth."

The Thinking Machine made a mental astronomical


calculation. "Good," he thought. "Tonight the moon will not
rise before nine o'clock." Then he asked another question.

"Who looks after the big lights on the roof?"

"An electrician from the company."

"You have no electricians in the building?"

"No."

At the end of the afternoon, just before he finished


work, the outside guard saw The Thinking Machine's head
again at the window. He had something in his hand which he
threw to the ground. It was a five-dollar bill.

"That's for you," said the prisoner.

Once again, the guard took it to the warden.


"He said it was for me."

"I imagine it's a present from him. I think you can


accept it," said the warden. Then suddenly he stopped. "Wait
a minute. When the professor went into the cell he had one
five-dollar bill and two ten-dollar bills. There was a five-
dollar bill with the first message. I have it here. But now he
has given you another five- dollar bill. It's impossible. He
has only two ten-dollar bills."

"Perhaps somebody changed a ten-dollar bill for him,"


said the guard.

"Perhaps. But tonight we are going to search Cell 13


again. We are going to search it as no cell has ever been
searched before."

So that night at three o'clock in the morning the warden


and his guards searched The Thinking Machine's cell again.
The warden found the hole in the floor. He put his hand into
it. There was something there. He pulled it out. A dead rat.
He threw it to the floor in disgust. But he continued the
search. Once more he examined the bars on the window but
found them to be solid. He then examined The Thinking
Machine’s clothes. In his trousers he found some money.

“Five one-dollar bills!” said the warden. He was very


surprised.

“That’s right,” said the prisoner.


“But the ... you had two tens and a five ... how do you
do it?”

“That’s my business,” said The Thinking Machine.

“Did any of my men change this money for you?”

“No.”

“Well, do you make it?” asked the warden.

“That’s my business,” said the prisoner again.

The warden was very angry. He left the cell and went
back to bed.

About an hour later he heard the scream again. He got


up and ran immediately to Cell 43, where he saw Ballard,
his errorized face pressed against the bars of the door.

“Take me out, take me out,” he screamed. “I did it. I


did it. I killed her. Take me out of here.”

“Was it the voice again?” asked the warden.

“Yes,” said Ballard.

“What did it say?”

“Acid – acid – acid!” said the prisoner. “It knew. I


threw the acid in the woman’s face and killed her. Oh!”

“Acid?” repeated the warden, more confused than ever.


CHAPTER FIVE

Countdown to Freedom

On the fifth day of The Thinking Machine's


incarceration, the warden looked tired. He wanted this thing
to finish. He wanted his confusion to end. But that day The
Thinking Machine threw another piece of linen to the guard.
It said "Only two days more". This time there was a silver
half-dollar with it.

Now the warden knew - he knew that the man in Cell


13 didn't have any half-dollars - he couldn't have any half-
dollars. Just as he couldn't have pen and ink and linen. But
he did have them. It was a fact, not a theory. And that is why
the warden looked so tired.

Then there was the voice that Ballard had heard. The
word acid. It didn't mean anything, of course. Ballard was
obviously mad. But there were so many things that "didn't
mean anything" now that The Thinking Machine was in the
prison.

On the sixth day, the warden received a letter from Dr


Ransome. It said:

Dear Sir.
Mr Fielding and I will meet you in your office
tomorrow evening. If Professor Van Dasen has not escaped -
and we believe he has not because we have not received a
letter from him - we will meet him there too.

Yours, Dr Ransome.

That day The Thinking Machine had three more


messages for the warden. They were written on the same
linen and referred to the meeting with Dr Ransome and Mr
Fielding.

On the afternoon of the seventh day the warden passed


Cell 13 and looked in. The Thinking Machine was sleeping
on his bed. Everything in the cell was completely normal.
"He cannot escape between now and half-past eight this
evening," the warden thought.

That evening after six o'clock he saw the guard. "Is


everything all right in Cell 13?" he asked. "Yes sir," replied
the guard. "But he didn't eat much today." The warden was
feeling happy when he met Dr Ransome and Mr Fielding
that evening, at seven o'clock. He wanted to show them The
Thinking Machine's messages. He wanted to tell them about
the events of the week. But before he could speak, the guard
from the river side of the prison yard came into the office.

"The light on my side of the yard is broken," the guard


said. Oh no. Another problem," said the warden. The guard
returned to his post in the dark. The warden called the
electric light company.

"Hello. This is Chisholm Prison," he said into the


phone. "One of our lights is broken.

Could you send four men here to repair it? Thank you.
Goodbye." The warden went out into the yard. While Dr
Ransome and Mr Fielding were waiting, the guard from the
prison gate came into the office. In his hand was a letter. Dr
Ransome looked at the letter.

"Incredible!" he said. "What is it?" asked Mr Fielding.


The doctor gave him the letter. Fielding looked at it. "It's a
coincidence. It must be," he said. It was almost eight o'clock
when the warden returned to his office.

"The electricians have arrived," he said. "They are


working on the light now."

The warden telephoned the guard at the prison gate.


"How many electricians came in?" he asked. "Four," was the
reply.

"All right. You must be certain that only four men go


out of the prison," said the warden. He put down the phone
and took the letter.

"My God! It's not possible," he said, shocked.

"What is it?" asked Mr Fielding.


"It's a letter from Cell 13," said the warden. "An
invitation to dinner!"

"What?" said Ransome.

The three men were silent for a long time. Finally the
warden called a guard.

"Go down to Cell 13 immediately," he said, "and see if


the Professor is still there."

The guard ran down the corridor. Dr Ransome and Mr


Fielding examined the letter.

"It's Van Dusen's handwriting; there's no doubt about


that," said Dr Ransome. "I've seen too much of it."

At that moment the telephone rang again. It was the


guard at the prison gate. There were two newspaper
reporters and they wanted to see the warden. The warden
told the guard to let them come in.

"It's impossible," he said. "Professor Van Dusen must


be in Cell 13."

Then the guard returned.

"He's still in his cell, sir," he said. "I saw him. He's
sleeping."

"There. I told you." said the warden. "But if he is still


in his cell how did he send the letter?"
There was a knock at the door.

"It's the reporters," said the warden. "Come in."

The door opened and the two men entered.

"Good evening, gentlemen," said one. It was


Hutchinson Hatch. The warden knew him well.

Then the second man came in.

"Well, I'm here," he said. It was The Thinking


Machine.

The warden sat with his mouth open. He was


paralysed.

"How - how - how did you do it?" asked the warden,


finally.

"Let's go back to the cell," said The Thinking Machine.

The men walked down the corridor to the door of Cell


13.

"Look inside," said The Thinking Machine.

The warden looked inside. Everything looked normal


and there - there on the bed was the figure of The Thinking
Machine. Certainly! There was his yellow hair! The warden
looked again at the man beside him. "I must be mad," he
thought.
Then he unlocked the cell door and The Thinking
Machine went inside.

"Look here," he said.

He put his foot on the steel bars at the bottom of the


cell door and three of them fell out.

"And here, too," The Thinking Machine stood on his


bed and put his hand to the bars on the window. All of them
came out.

"So what's this in the bed?" asked the warden.

"It's a wig," The Thinking Machine replied. "Take the


cover off."

The warden did this. Under it was a coil of strong rope


about ten metres long, a knife, three files, three metres of
electric wire, a pair of steel pliers, a hammer and a pistol

"How did you do it?" asked the warden. "You


gentlemen have an invitation to dinner with me at half-past
nine," said The Thinking Machine. "Come on, or we shall be
late."

"But how did you do it?" the warden insisted.

"You cannot hold a man in prison who can use his


brain," replied The Thinking Machine. "Come on, or we
shall be late."
CHAPTER SIX

How Did He Do It?

When dinner was finished The Thinking Machine


turned to Dr Ransome.

"Well, do you believe me now?" he asked.

"Yes I do," replied Dr Ransome.

There was a long silence. Like all the other guests,


Ransome was waiting for the explanation.

"So, tell us how you did it," said Fielding, finally.

The Thinking Machine began the story.

"The agreement was to go into a cell in Chisholm


Prison with nothing but the necessary clothes and to leave
that cell within seven davs. I didn't know Chisholm Prison.
When I went into the cell I asked for three things:
toothpaste, two ten-dollar bills and one five-dollar bill and to
have my shoes blacked. You agreed to these things.

"I knew that there was nothing useful in the cell, so I


had to use these three innocent things to help me escape. But
anything is dangerous in the hands of a man like me.
"The first night I did two things. I slept and I ran after
rats. You gentlemen thought I wanted time to organize an
escape with assistance from outside the prison. But this was
not true. I knew I could communicate with anyone I wanted
to at any time."

The warden looked at him for a moment. The Thinking


Machine continued.

"The guard woke me up at six o'clock the next


morning. He brought me my breakfast. He told me lunch
was at twelve o'clock and dinner was at six. I knew that
between these times I was alone. So after breakfast I
examined the outside area from my cell window. I saw that it
was impossible to get over the wall. But I knew that on the
other side of the wall there was a river and also a
playground. The guard confirmed it. So I knew one
important thing. A person could come near the prison on that
side without attracting the attention of the guards.

"But there was something even more important. I saw


a wire which went to the light on the prison roof. It was very
near my cell window. I knew then that if it was necessary I
could cut off that light.

"Then I thought about escaping through the prison


building. I remembered the way to my cell. I knew that was
the only way out. There were seven doors between my cell
and the outside. It was too difficult."
The Thinking Machine stopped for a moment. Dr
Ransome lit a new cigar. For several minutes there was
silence. Then The Thinking Machine continued.

"When I was thinking about these things a rat ran


across my foot. It gave me a new idea. I saw there were at
least six rats in the cell. But they didn't come from under the
door. I ran after them and they disappeared. But they didn't
go out of the door. So I knew there was another way out.

"I looked for this other way and found it. It was a hole
in the floor. It went to an old drainpipe. Obviously the rats
came this way. But where did they come from? Drainpipes
normally go outside the prison. This one probably went to
the river or near it. So the rats came from that direction.

"When the guard came with my lunch he told me two


important things. One was that there was a new plumbing
system in the prison. The other was that the river was only a
hundred metres away. So I knew that the pipe in my cell was
part of an old system. And I knew it went to the river. The
other end of the pipe was outside the prison walls.

"But before I could start work, I knew I had to distract


the warden. I wanted him to think that I was trying to
communicate with you, Dr Ransome. So I took two pieces of
linen from my shirt and wrote a message on them. Do you
have the message, warden?"

"Yes." The warden looked at the codec message. "But


what does it mean?" he asked. "Read it from right to left,
beginning with the T" said The Thinking Machine. "Don't
consider the division into words."

The warden read the message.

"T-h-i-s," he began, "is not the way I intend to escape."


The warden smiled. "But what did you write it with?"

"This," said The Thinking Machine. He put his foot on


the table. On it was the shoe that he wore in prison. But the
polish was gone.

"The shoe polish, mixed with some water, was my


ink," said The Thinking Machine, "and the metal end of the
shoe lace was a good pen."

The warden laughed. "Continue," he said.

"After the message the warden wanted to search my


cell. This was good. I wanted him to search my cell very
often. I thought, 'He won't find anything so he will stop and
leave me alone.'

"The warden took my shirt away and gave me a prison


shirt.

Without my white shirt I couldn't write any more


messages. But I had another piece of the same shirt in my
mouth."
"Where did it come from?" asked the warden. "I saw
that there were only two pieces cut from the shirt. And I had
both of them."

"You forget that shirts like mine have three layers of


linen," The Thinking Machine replied. "I took out the inside
one. You didn't notice it.

"Now that the warden was busy, I started to work on


my real escape plan. I knew that the pipe from my cell went
to the playground outside the prison. It is a place where boys
play baseball. I knew many of the boys there. I knew that the
rats came into my cell from out there. Perhaps it was
possible for me to communicate with someone outside. I
could use the rats.

"The first thing I needed was a long thread. So I used


the thread from my socks." He pulled up his trouser-legs.
The strong thread at the top of his long socks was not there.

"Then on one half of my last piece of linen I wrote a


message for Hutchinson Hatch. He is a friend and often
helps me. I knew he would help me this time. It was a great
story for his newspaper. I tied a ten-dollar bill to the letter to
attract attention. People always find money. I wrote on the
linen: 'If you find this message give it to Hutchinson Hatch.
He will give you another ten dollars for the information.'
Then I wrote instructions for Hatch.

"I had to get this note outside the prison. There were
two ways but the best way was the rats. I took one of them. I
tied the linen and the money to one of its legs and tied my
thread to another. Then I put it in the pipe.

"From the moment the rat disappeared into that dirty


pipe I was nervous. The thread could break. Anything could
happen. I waited. I was holding the thread and I saw that it
became gradually shorter. Finally there was only about one
metre of thread in my hand. I knew that the rat was outside
the prison. But would Hatch receive the message?

"I had to wait. I decided to try some other manoeuvres.


This was to confuse the warden more. I tried to bribe the
guard. I tried to cut through the bars on my cell window. The
warden became very angry. He took the bars in his hands to
see if they were solid. They were - then.

"That night I didn't sleep. The thread was tied to my


hand. I waited for the signal from outside. I thought. 'If
Hatch has received the message, and if he finds the
drainpipe, he will pull the thread.' At half-past three in the
morning I felt something pull the thread."

The Thinking Machine turned to Hutchinson Hatch.

"Now you can explain what you did," he said.

"A small boy brought the linen message to me. I gave


the boy another ten dollars. I got some string and then some
wire. I went with the boy to the playground. I looked for the
end of the drainpipe for an hour. Then finally I found it. It
was about thirty centimetres in diameter. I took the end of
the thread and pulled it three times. The Professor pulled
twice to reply. Quickly I tied my string to the Professor's
thread. Then I tied the wire to the string. Professor Van
Dusen began to pull it all into his cell. The wire was the
most important because it could not break. The thread was
too weak. It could break easily. With the wire I could
transport things to the cell."

"Yes," continued The Thinking Machine. "I was very


happy when the wire arrived in the cell. Then we tried
another experiment. I spoke to Mr Hatch through the pipe.
He heard me but it was not easy for him to understand me. I
wanted some nitric- acid and I had to repeat the word 'acid'
several times. Then I heard a scream from the cell above me.

"With the wire it was easy to transport things to my


cell. And it was also easy to hide them. I could put them into
the pipe. You, Mr Warden, found the pipe but you could not
find the wire. Your hands are too big. My fingers are longer
and thinner so it was easy for me. In addition I put a dead rat
in the pipe. You pulled it out."

"I remember," said the warden.

"The rat was there to stop you investigating the pipe,"


said The Thinking Machine.

"That night Mr Hatch could not send me anything


useful. But he did send me change for ten dollars as a test.
The next clay I continued to work on my plan.

"For this it was necessary that the guard outside saw


me often at my cell window. To attract his attention I threw
messages to him. I stood at my cell window for hours.
Sometimes I spoke to him. He told me that there were no
electricians inside the prison. If there was a problem with the
lights they had to call the light company.

"This was perfect for my escape plan. There was only


one more thing to do before I escaped. Once again I spoke to
Mr Hatch through the pipe. It was the fourth night of my
incarceration. Again Mr Hatch could not understand me.
Again I repeated the word 'acid' three times. It was this that
made the prisoner above me confess to murder. The guard
told me the next day. The prisoner heard strange voices
through the pipe. He thought it was a ghost.

"With nitric acid it was very easy to cut the bars of the
window. But it was a long process. The outside guard saw
me standing at my window. He didn't know what I was
doing. As he watched me I cut the bars with a piece of wire
covered with acid. On the night of my escape I used the
same acid to cut the electric wire that went to the lights. The
yard outside my window was completely dark. It was easy to
escape.

"I also had a wig from Mr Hatch. It was the same


colour as my hair. Yellow. I put it in the bed with some other
things that Hatch sent me. When the guard passed the door
he thought I was sleeping."

"But how did you get outside the prison gate," asked
the warden.
"It was simple," The Thinking Machine replied. "As I
said. I cut the wire to the lights before the guards turned on
the current. When they turned on the current, the light on my
side of the yard didn't work. The outside guard went to your
office to tell you and I escaped through my cell window. I
stayed in the shadows until the four electricians arrived. Mr
Hatch was one of them.

"When I saw him he gave me some workman's clothes


to put on. You, Mr Warden, were standing only three metres
away. Then Mr Hatch called me - as a workman - and
together we went out of the gate to get something from the
van. The guard at the gate knew that there were four workers
in the yard. He saw that we were workers so he let us go out
of the prison. Then we changed clothes and came back in.
We went to your office and asked to see you. That's all."

"And the letter of invitation?" asked Ransome.

"I wrote it in my cell with Mr Hatch's pen," said The


Thinking Machine. "Then I sent it through the pipe and Mr
Hatch posted it."

There was silence for several minutes. Dr Ransome


was the first to speak.

"Incredible!" he said. "Absolutely brilliant!"

But Mr Fielding had two more questions.

"And what was the toothpaste for?" he asked.


"For brushing my teeth."

"Why did Mr Hatch come with the electricians?"

"His father is the manager of the company," said The


Thinking Machine.

"But what if there was no Mr Hatch outside to help


you?"

"Every prisoner has at least one friend who will help


him if he can."

"What if there was no old drainpipe in your cell,"


asked the warden.

"There were another two ways to escape," said The


Thinking Machine.

Ten minutes later the telephone rang. It was for the


warden.

"Is the light working now?" asked the warden through


the phone. "Good. The wire was cut beside Cell 13? Yes I
know. What's that? There are too many electricians. Two
went out of the prison and there are three still inside. But
only four men came from the light company."

The warden turned to the others, confused.


"The guard says that he saw four electricians come into
the prison. Two went out again. But there are still three men
inside," he said.

"Don't you remember? I was the extra man," said The


Thinking Machine.

"Oh," said the warden. "I see." He turned back to the


phone. "You can let the fifth man go. He's all right."

- THE END -

Hope you have enjoyed the reading!

Come back to http://english-e-books.net/ to find more


fascinating and exciting stories!

You might also like