“Roel!” D’Alquen called, in a loud whisper.
The masked one threw out his hands in an impatient gesture.
“Ah!” he cried, in a voice trembling with excitement, “it is you, Abele D’Alquen, or am I dreaming? Heaven be thanked! You have come to release me.”
“If we can manage it,” his kinsman returned. “At least, if we do not my life shall pay for our failure.”
“Ah, you have others with you?” the Prince exclaimed.
“Yes; two friends who have been working for your release.”
“Thanks, thanks,” he cried, and the fervour of his tone contrasted oddly with the hideous stolidity of the mask. “You are good fellows to save a man from torture worse than death.”
A hurried consultation was held and a plan decided upon. As the height of the room made escape by the skylight practically impossible, at least by such means as they could command, another and far more daring method of rescue had been hit upon. And this they now proceeded to put into execution. By the aid of the long stout strap D’Alquen was lowered into the room. At once after a quick hand-shake he began with a file to cut through the steel fastening of the mask. To impatient men it was a long operation, but at last the irksome covering was loose, and Prince Roel could pull it off with an action of eager relief. As he did so, the two, watching from above, saw D’Alquen start back with a look and an exclamation of horror. The face which was disclosed was, it seemed, almost that of a corpse. It was deadly pale, even livid, wasted and shrunken; the eyes in their great blue sockets blazed with a feverish light; it had never been a handsome face; now, in the tale it told of the unutterable torture of a living death, it was absolutely appalling.
“Poor wretch!” Galabin exclaimed involuntarily, averting his eyes. But there was no time for comment. After that one gasp of horror D’Alquen, according to their pre-arranged plan, took the mask and fitted it to his own head, then he changed coats with the Prince, telling him the while the details of their scheme. The exchange of attire having been made, D’Alquen hastily removed the traces of the broken glass, and took his seat at the table in the prisoner’s usual attitude of reading. At the same time the Prince took his station behind the curtains near the door. The positions were assumed only just in time; indeed, the disturbed curtain was still moving when the door opened, and the man who acted as gaoler came in. For an instant, until he had satisfied himself of his prisoner’s whereabouts, he did not leave the door; then, closing it, he crossed the room with a surly nod to the mask. For the watchers it was an anxious moment, but the man’s casual glance, though keen enough, did not seem to detect any difference in the man who sat by the lamp, and indeed there was not much to be seen. The figures of the two men were not very dissimilar, and although D’Alquen was taller than his kinsman, this was not observable as he sat leaning over his book.
The gaoler had a flask of wine in his hand, and this he set down upon the table. D’Alquen had raised his head, and the two men above could tell that he was watching the fellow, who now crossed to the screen by the concealed window, and examined it as though to see whether it had been tampered with. It was impossible to tell what made him do so, but suddenly the man looked up, and saw the great hole in the skylight. Simultaneously D’Alquen rose with the word “Now!” and swiftly moved to the door, before which he took his stand, covering the gaoler with a pistol. Before the astonished man could quite realize the situation, Prince Roel had slipped from his hiding place and out of the door, which D’Alquen shut and held, pistol in hand.