Wogan needed a rope, but since he had none he used the sheets and bound

his prisoner to the bed. Then he got up and went to the door. The house

was quite silent, quite dark. Wogan shut the door gently--there was no

key in the lock--and bending over the bed looked into the face of his

assailant. The face was twisted with pain, the whites of the eyes glared

horribly, but Wogan could see that the man was his landlord.

He stood up and thought. There was another man who had met him in the

village and had guided him to the inn; there was still a third who had

gone out of the kitchen as Wogan had entered it; there was the wife,

too, who might be awake.

Wogan crossed to the window and looked out. The window was perhaps

twenty feet from the ground, but the stanchion was three feet below the

window. He quickly put on his clothes, slipped the letter from under his

pillow into a pocket, strapped his saddle-bag and lowered it from the

window by a blanket. He had already one leg on the sill when a

convulsive movement of the man on the bed made him stop. He climbed back

into the room, drew the knife out of the board and out of the hand

pinned to the board, and making a bandage wrapped the wound up.

"You must lie there till morning, my friend," Wogan whispered in his

ear, "but here's a thing to console you. I have found a name for your

inn; I have painted the device upon your sign-board. The 'Inn of the

Five Red Fingers.' There's never a passer-by but will stop to inquire

the reason of so conspicuous a sign;" and Wogan climbed out of the

window, lowered himself till he hung at the full length of his arms from

the stanchion, and dropped on the ground. He picked up his saddle-bag

and crept round the house to the stable. The door needed only a push to

open it. In the hay-loft above he heard a man snoring. Mr. Wogan did not

think it worth while to disturb him. He saddled his horse, walked it out

into the yard, mounted, and rode quietly away.

He had escaped, but without much credit to himself.

"There was no key in the door," he thought. "I should have noticed it.

Misset, the man of resources, would have tilted a chair backwards

against that door with its top bar wedged beneath the door handle."

Certainly Wogan needed Misset if he was to succeed in his endeavour. He

was sunk in humiliation; his very promise to rescue the Princess shrank

from its grandeur and became a mere piece of impertinence. But he still

had his letter in his pocket, and in time that served to enhearten him.

Only two more days, he thought. On the third night he would sleep in

Schlestadt.




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