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"I know how to manage my affairs," he said with a gasp of annoyance.
"Certainly. But if they are maltreated you will be responsible after the war."
To this he made no reply.
We were removed without further ado, and after being photographed and measured in the most approved fashion for criminals, we were taken up long flights of stairs, and across a roof, to the quarters for prisoners awaiting trial. Here we were allotted separate cells, where we were to pa.s.s the next few days in strict isolation.
To my amazement (for I knew something of Turkish prisons from a previous experience, not here recorded) these cells were scrupulously clean. A bed, a table, and a chair were in each apartment, all very firm and foursquare, as if designed to withstand any access of fury or despair on the prisoner's part. There was electric light in the ceiling, covered with wire netting. Walls and woodwork were of a neutral colour. The windows, which were barred, had a convenient arrangement for regulating the ventilation. The heavy door, which admitted no sound, was provided with a sliding hatch, which could be opened by the warders at will for purposes of investigation. Everything was hideously efficient.
Turkey is a country of surprises, but I was not prepared for this. I would have preferred something more picturesque. One's mind, after the testing climax of recapture, craves for new doses of excitement.
The brain of a criminal, after he has been apprehended, must be a turmoil of thought. He curses his stupidity, or his luck, or his a.s.sociates. He longs to explain and defend himself. Instead of this, he is left in silence in a drab room, with no company but his thoughts.
My own thoughts were most unpleasant. I had failed miserably and innocent people were suffering as the result.
After five weeks of effort I was farther than ever from escape. Worse than all, Miss Whitaker was in danger. Never again shall I pa.s.s such dismal hours. I see myself now, seated on that solid chair with head on arms, bent over that efficient table. A prisoner's heart must soon turn to stone.
But although our surroundings were inhuman, one of our gaolers had a generous heart. He opened the slot in my door merely to say he was sorry about it all, and that the women were all right. It is little actions such as these that so often light the darkest hours of life. The man was a European Turk.
It was urgently necessary to communicate with my fellow-prisoners, in order to arrange to tell the same story. My friend next door solved the problem by bawling up through his barred window at the top of his voice that he would leave a note for me in the wash-place.
"Right you are!" I howled in answer, and instantly the slot of my door opened, and I had to explain that I was singing.
Already, interest was beginning to creep back into one's life. I found the note in the wash-place, read it secretly, thought over my answer, and transcribed the message on to a cigarette paper. Having no writing material, I used the end of a match dipped into an ink prepared from tobacco juice and ash. By these simple means we established a regular means of communication and before forty-eight hours of our strict seclusion had elapsed we were all three in possession of a complete, circ.u.mstantial, and fict.i.tious account of our adventures prior to capture.
When not engaged on reminiscences, I was generally pacing my cell, or trying to invent some new form of exercise to keep myself fit. But at times energy failed and one felt inclined to gnash one's teeth at the futility of it all.
One day, when I was feeling inclined to gnash my teeth, the slot in my door was furtively withdrawn, and, instead of a gaoler, a very comely vision appeared at the observation hatch. A pair of laughing black eyes were looking in on me. She wrinkled her nose, and laughed. I jumped up, thinking I was dreaming, and hoping that the dream would continue. At the same moment something dropped on to my floor. Then the trap door was softly shut to.
I found a tiny stump of lead pencil. That was proof of the reality of my vision.
Countless excuses to leave my cell, and voluminous correspondence with the pencil's aid eventually enabled me to find out that she was an Armenian girl, awaiting trial, who took a deep interest in us. At great risk to herself, she had provided the three of us with writing instruments. Except for a brief glimpse, and a mumbled word, I was never able to thank her, however, owing to circ.u.mstances beyond our control.
On the fourth day we were transferred to the Military Prison in the Square of the Seraskerat.
As usual in Turkey, our move was sudden and unexpected. That morning, on complaining at mid-day that I had as yet received no food, I was told that _inshallah_--if G.o.d pleased--it would arrive in due course.
Instead of a belated breakfast, however, a _posse_ of policemen arrived, and we started on our journeys again: my friends still in their shirt-sleeves and slippers, and myself still in my bowler hat, although I did not now wear it so rakishly.
But we were fairly cheery. We had learnt (no matter how) that the females of Theodore's family would soon be released, and that Theodore himself, although still in duress, would not suffer any extreme fate.
Also, it was by now fairly obvious that Miss Whitaker would not be apprehended, as sufficient evidence was not obtainable against her. She had covered her tracks too well. All things considered, there was no cause for depression.
But waiting is hungry work. That afternoon still saw us, fretful and unfed, waiting outside the office of Djevad Bey, the Military Commandant of Constantinople.
At last I was taken into an ornate room, where I had my first talk with this redoubtable individual, who was popularly supposed to be the hangman of the Young Turks. Anyone less like an executioner I have never seen. He was plump, well-dressed, with humorous grey eyes. He wore long, rather well-fitting boots, and smoked his cigarettes from a long amber holder. He also had a long amber moustache, which was being trained Kaiser-wise.
I stood before him at attention.
"About this forged pa.s.sport," he began--"do gentlemen in your country forge each other's signatures?"
"It is not usual," I admitted.
"Then you, as an English gentleman, surely did not counterfeit my writing?"
"Oh no! I wouldn't dream of doing such a thing."
"Then how do you account for this pa.s.sport being in your possession?"
I remained silent.
"Who forged it?" he insisted.
"May I look?" said I. "Is that really your signature?"
"It is indeed. With it you could easily have got out of the country."
"What an idiot I was not to use it!" I said with quite unfeigned annoyance.
"You were!" he laughed--"they would have pa.s.sed you straight through the Customs on seeing this."
I felt very faint at this moment, and staggered against the table. But I recovered after an instant. I quite forget his next few remarks, but I know that I committed myself to a story that I had bought the pa.s.sport from a man in a restaurant whom I could not now recognise.
"But where have you been living all these weeks?" he asked.
"I was living in the ruins near the Fatih mosque," I said glibly--"and I used to lunch and dine at various cafes in the city, a different one every day. It was in one of these places that I bought the pa.s.sport."
Djevad Bey considered this statement for a moment. There was a nasty look in his eye when he spoke again.
"I shall never rest until I know who it is who can forge my signature so well," he said--"and until I know, I am afraid you will be very uncomfortable, for by law you are in the position of a common malefactor."
"By law I am in the position of a prisoner of war," I answered--"and as such, I am liable to a fortnight's simple imprisonment, for attempting to escape. The Turkish Government signed this agreement only a few months ago with the British representatives at Berne."
"A man who forges another's name is not an officer, but a forger," he said meaningly.
"Say what you like, and do what you like," I answered--"I am in your power. But one thing I ask, and that is, that if you punish me, you should liberate the innocent Theodore and his family. True, we were found in their house, but----"
"I cannot believe what you say," said Djevad Bey thoughtfully.
There was a pause. Then:
"Come, as man to man, won't you tell me who forged that pa.s.sport?"
"You have just called me a liar," said I. "That ends the matter."
And with an all-is-over-between-us air I left the room, feeling dizzy and uncomfortable.
It was then four o'clock in the afternoon, and I had not yet eaten. I did not feel at all amused at the prospect of the Military Prison.
I was taken downstairs into the darkness, on entering this inferno of the d.a.m.ned of Enver Pasha. There were cries and shouts down there, and men scrambling for food, and other men who looked like wild animals, behind bars. A swarthy custodian took my name, and I then proceeded, down a long corridor, until my escort reached an iron portal such as Dante imagined long ago.