The Problem of Cell 13-Jacques Futrelle
The Problem of Cell 13-Jacques Futrelle
The Problem of Cell 13-Jacques Futrelle
Jacques Futrelle
Level: pre-intermediate
Genre: adventure
Length: short
Total words: 8475
Unique words: 1042
CHAPTER ONE
The Bet
"You're saying that you could escape from the cell just
by thinking about it?" Ransome asked.
"Fine."
"No."
Chisholm Prison
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.
"Not really," said the guard. "They built the new wall
four years ago."
"Ah, I see," said the prisoner. "How far is the river over
there?"
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.
"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.
"And where did he get the pen and ink to write with?"
added the guard.
"Yes."
"Yes."
"No," he said.
"A thousand?"
The guard ran to the warden's office and told him about
the prisoner's offer.
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.
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.
A Strange Voice
"I can't tell you," said the prisoner. "Please take me out
of this cell - put me anywhere - but take me out of here."
"But they can't prove it," said the prisoner. "They can't
prove it!" The warden was silent for a minute.
"I can't tell you." Ballard was crying now. "Where did
it come from?"
"Was it a voice?"
"I can't tell you," said the prisoner. "You must tell me,"
said the warden, angrily.
"The fifteenth."
"No."
“No.”
The warden was very angry. He left the cell and went
back to bed.
Countdown to Freedom
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.
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.
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.
The three men were silent for a long time. Finally the
warden called a guard.
"He's still in his cell, sir," he said. "I saw him. He's
sleeping."
"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.
"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.
"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.
"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.
- THE END -