"Here's a fellow in the most desperate hurry," said Wogan, and parrying

the thrust he disengaged, circled, disengaged again, and lunging felt

the soldier's leather coat yield to his point. "The Emperor's arm is

weak, too, one might believe," he laughed, and he drove his sword home.

The man fell upon the stairs; but as Wogan spoke the leader crouched on

the step plucked violently at his cloak below his knees. Wogan had not

recovered from his lunge; the jerk at the cloak threw him off his

balance, his legs slipped forward under him, in another moment he would

have come crashing down the stairs upon his back, and at the bottom of

the flight there stood one man absolutely unharmed supporting his

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comrade who had been wounded in the throat. Wogan felt the jerk,

understood the danger, and saw its remedy at the same instant. He did

not resist the impetus, he threw his body into it, he sprang from the

stairs forwards, tearing his cloak from the leader's hands, he sprang

across the leader, across the soldier who had fired at him, and he

dropped with all his weight into the arms of the third man with the

pierced throat. The blood poured out from the wound over Wogan's face

and breast in a blinding jet. The fellow uttered one choking cry and

reeling back carried the comrade who supported him against the

balustrade at the turn of the stairs. Wogan did not give that fourth man

time to disengage himself, but dropping his sword caught him by the

throat as the third wounded man slipped between them to the ground.

Wogan bent his new opponent backwards over the balustrade, and felt the

muscles of his back resist and then slacken. Wogan bent him further and

further over until it seemed his back must break. But it was the

balustrade which broke. Wogan heard it crack. He had just time to loose

his hands and step back, and the railing and the man poised on the rail

fell outwards into the courtyard. Wogan stepped forward and peered

downwards. The soldier had not broken his neck, for Wogan saw him

writhe upon the ground. He bent his head to see the better; he heard a

report behind him, and a bullet passed through the crown of his hat. He

swung round and saw the leader of the four with one of his own pistols

smoking in his hand.

"You!" cried Wogan. "Sure, here's a rabbit attacking a terrier dog;" and

he sprang up the stairs. The man threw away the pistol, fell on his

knees, and held up his hands for mercy.




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