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<h2> CHAPTER X. A PLOT DISCOVERED. </h2>
<p>The conversation between Gervaise and his fellow slave was interrupted by
the arrival at the side of the quay of a party of knights. Silence
instantly fell upon the slaves; all straightened themselves up to the
oars, and prepared for a start. Among the knights who took their places on
the poop Gervaise saw with amusement his friend Ralph. He had no fear of a
recognition, for the darkly stained skin and the black hair had so
completely altered him that when he had looked at himself in a mirror,
after the application of the dye, he was surprised to find that he would
not have known it to be his own face. Ralph was in command of the party,
which consisted of young knights who had but recently arrived at Rhodes;
and as it was the first time he had been appointed as instructor, Gervaise
saw that he was greatly pleased at what he rightly regarded as promotion.</p>
<p>The galley at once pushed off from the wharf, and rowed out of the port.
The work was hard; but as the slaves were not pressed to any extraordinary
exertions, Gervaise did not find it excessive. He congratulated himself,
however, that the stain was, as he had been assured, indelible, save by
time, for after a few minutes' exercise he was bathed in perspiration. As
the galley had been taken out only that instruction might be given to the
young knights, the work was frequently broken.</p>
<p>Sometimes they went ahead at full speed for a few hundred yards, as if to
chase an adversary; then they would swerve aside, the slaves on one side
rowing, while those on the other backed, so as to make a rapid turn. Then
she lay for a minute or two immovable, and then backed water, or turned to
avoid the attack of an imaginary foe. Then for an hour she lay quiet,
while the knights, divesting themselves of their mantles and armour,
worked one of the guns on the poop, aiming at a floating barrel moored for
the purpose a mile out at sea. At eleven o'clock they returned to the
port. Bread and water were served out to the slaves, and they were then
permitted to lie down and sleep, the galley being moored under the shadow
of the wall.</p>
<p>At four o'clock another party of knights came down, and the work was
similar to that which had been performed in the morning. At seven o'clock
the slaves were taken back to their barracks.</p>
<p>“Well, what do you think of your work?” one of the slaves asked Gervaise,
as they ate their evening meal.</p>
<p>“It would not be so bad if it was all like that.”</p>
<p>“No. But I can tell you that when you have to row from sunrise to sunset,
with perhaps but one or two pauses for a few minutes, it is a different
thing altogether, especially if the galley is carrying despatches, and
speed is necessary. Then you get so worn out and exhausted, that you can
scarce move an oar through the water, until you are wakened up by a smart
as if a red hot iron had been laid across your shoulders. It is terrible
work then. The whip cracks every minute across some one's back; you are
blinded by exhaustion and rage, and you feel that you would give the world
if you could but burst your chain, rush on your taskmasters, and strike,
if only one blow, before you are killed.”</p>
<p>“It must be terrible,” Gervaise said. “And do you never get loose, and
fall upon them?”</p>
<p>The man shook his head.</p>
<p>“The chains are too strong, and the watch too vigilant,” he said. “Since I
came here I have heard tales of crews having freed themselves in the
night, and fallen upon the Christians, but for my part I do not believe in
them. I have thought, as I suppose every one of us has thought, how such a
thing could be done; but as far as I know no one has hit on a plan yet.
Now and then men have managed to become possessed of a file, and have, by
long and patient work, sawn through a chain, and have, when a galley has
been lying near our own shore, sprung overboard and escaped; but for every
attempt that succeeds there must be twenty failures, for the chains are
frequently examined, and woe be to the man who is found to have been
tampering with his. But as to a whole gang getting free at once, it is
altogether impossible, unless the key of the pad locks could be stolen
from an overseer, or the man bribed into aiding us.”</p>
<p>“And that, I suppose, is impossible?” Gervaise said.</p>
<p>“Certainly, impossible for us who have no money to bribe them with, but
easy enough if any one outside, with ample means, were to set about it.
These overseers are, many of them, sons of Turkish mothers, and have no
sympathy, save that caused by interest, with one parent more than another.
Of course, they are brought up Christians, and taught to hold Moslems in
abhorrence, but I think many of them, if they had their free choice, would
cross to the mainland. Here they have no chance of ever being aught but
what they are—overseers of slaves, or small prison officials. They
are despised by these haughty knights, and hated by us, while were they to
reach the mainland and adopt their mothers' religion, everything would be
open to them. All followers of the Prophet have an equal chance, and one
may be a soldier today, a bey tomorrow, and a pasha a year hence, if he be
brave, or astute, or capable in any way beyond his fellows. Men like these
warders would be sure to make their way.</p>
<p>“They cannot have gathered much during their service, therefore the offer
of a large sum of money would find plenty among them eager to earn it.
But, you see, they are but the inferiors. On our voyages on board the
galley, the knights inspect our fetters twice a day, and the keys are kept
in the commander's cabin. For an hour or two, when we are not on a long
passage, the padlocks are unfastened, in order that we may jump over and
bathe, and exercise our limbs; but at this time the knights are always on
guard, and as we are without arms we are altogether powerless. It is the
same thing here. The senior warders, who all belong to the Order, although
of an inferior grade, come round, as you have seen, to examine our
fetters, and themselves lock and bar the doors. If one or two of these
could be corrupted, escape would be easy enough.”</p>
<p>“But is it impossible to do this?” Gervaise asked eagerly. “My father has
money, and would I know be ready, if I could communicate with him, to pay
a handsome sum, if sure that it would result in my obtaining my freedom.”</p>
<p>The man nodded significantly.</p>
<p>“There may be other means of doing it,” he said. “Perhaps it will not be
long before you hear of it. You seem a stout fellow, and full of spirit,
but, as yet, anything that may be going on is known but to a few, and will
go no further until the time comes that all may be told. I think not so
badly of men of our faith as to believe that any one would betray the
secret for the sake of obtaining his own freedom and a big reward; but
secrets, when known by many, are apt to leak out. A muttered word or two
in sleep, or the ravings of one down with fever, might afford ground for
suspicion, and torture would soon do the rest. I myself know nothing of
the secret, but I do know that there is something going on which, if
successful, will give us our freedom. I am content to know no more until
the time comes; but there are few, save those engaged in the matter, that
know as much as this, and you can see that it is better it should be so.
Look at that man opposite; he has been here fifteen years; he seldom
speaks; he does his work, but it is as a brute beast—despair has
well nigh turned him into one. Think you that if such a man as that were
to know that there is hope, he would not be so changed that even the
dullest would observe it? I see you are a brisk young fellow, and I say to
you, keep up your courage. The time is nearer than you think when you will
be free from these accursed shackles.”</p>
<p>Each morning, as he went out to work with his gang, Gervaise saw the
servant from the auberge standing near; but he made no sign. He was
satisfied that his suspicions had been justified, and that he was not
leading this life in vain, but he thought it better to wait until the week
passed, and he was taken away to have his colour renewed, than to make a
sign that might possibly rouse the suspicions of his comrades. On the
eighth morning, when the door of the room was unlocked, the overseer said—“Number
36, you will remain here. You are wanted for other work.”</p>
<p>After the gang had left the prison, the overseer returned.</p>
<p>“I am to take you up to the English auberge. The knight who handed you
over to me when you landed, told me that you might be wanted as a
servitor; and as it is he who has sent down, it may be that a vacancy has
occurred. If so, you are in luck, for the servitors have a vastly better
time of it than the galley slaves, and the English auberge has the best
reputation in that respect. Come along with me.”</p>
<p>The English auberge was one of the most handsome of the buildings standing
in the great street of the Knights. Its architecture was Gothic in its
character, and, although the langue was one of the smallest of those
represented at Rhodes, it vied with any of them in the splendour of its
appointments. Sir John Boswell was standing in the interior courtyard.</p>
<p>“Wait here for a few minutes,” he said to the overseer. “The bailiff will
himself question the slave as to his accomplishments; but I fancy he will
not be considered of sufficient age for the post that is vacant. However,
if this should not be so, I shall no doubt find a post to fit him ere
long, for he seems a smart young fellow, and, what is better, a willing
one, and bears himself well under his misfortunes.”</p>
<p>Then he motioned to Gervaise to follow him to the bailiff's apartments.</p>
<p>“Well, Sir Gervaise,” Sir John Kendall exclaimed, as the door closed
behind him, “have you found aught to justify this cruel penance you have
undertaken?”</p>
<p>“As to the penance, Sir John, it has been nothing unsupportable. The
exercise is hard enough, but none too hard for one in good health and
strength, and, save for the filth of the chamber in which we are shut up
at night, and the foul state of the rushes on which we lie, I should have
naught to complain of. No, I have as yet heard nothing of a surety—and
yet enough to show me that my suspicions were justified, and that there is
a plot of some sort on foot,” and he related to the two knights the
conversation he had had with the galley slave.</p>
<p>“By St. George!” the bailiff said, “you have indeed been justified in your
surmises, and I am glad that I attached sufficient importance to your
suspicions to let you undertake this strange enterprise. What think you,
Sir John Boswell?”</p>
<p>“I think with you, that Sir Gervaise has fully justified his insistence in
this matter, which I own I considered to be hare brained folly. What is to
be done next, Sir Gervaise?”</p>
<p>“That is what I have been turning over in my mind. You see, I may have
little warning of what is going to take place. I may not hear of it until
we are locked up for the night and the affair is on the point of taking
place, and it will, of course, be most needful that I shall be able to
communicate with you speedily.”</p>
<p>“That, of course, is of vital importance,” the bailiff said. “But how is
it to be managed?”</p>
<p>“That is what I cannot exactly see, Sir John. An armed guard remains in
our room all night. But, in the first place, he might be himself in the
plot, and if not, the slaves would almost certainly overpower him and kill
him, as a preliminary to the work of knocking off their chains.”</p>
<p>“Is there a window to the room? At least, of course there is a window, but
is it within your reach?”</p>
<p>“There are six small loopholes—one on each side of the door, and two
in each of the side walls; they are but four inches across and three feet
in length, and there are two crossbars to each; they are four feet from
the floor.”</p>
<p>“At any rate, they are large enough for your arm to pass through, Sir
Gervaise, and you might drop a strip of cloth out.”</p>
<p>“Certainly I could, Sir John. I could easily hide a piece of white cotton
a yard or so long in my clothes, scanty as these are, and could certainly
manage, unobserved, to drop it outside the window.”</p>
<p>“Then the rest is for us to contrive, Boswell. We must have some one
posted in the yard of the prison, with instructions to go every ten
minutes throughout the night to see if a strip of white cotton has been
dropped out. When he finds it he must go at once to William Neave, the
governor. He is a sturdy Englishman, and there is no fear of his having
been bribed to turn traitor; but it were well to take no one into our
confidence. I think we cannot do better than employ Ahmet on this
business, as he already knows that Sir Gervaise is masquerading there. We
will have William Neave up here presently. Tell him that for certain
reasons we wish Ahmet to pass the night for the present in the prison, and
arrange with him on what excuse we can best bestow him there without
exciting suspicion. At any rate, Sir Gervaise, that is our affair.”</p>
<p>He went to a closet and took out a white mantle, tore a strip off the
bottom, and gave it to Gervaise.</p>
<p>“It would be best not to keep you here any longer,” he said, “so renew
your stain while I speak. As soon as you learn the details of the plot,
you will drop this out from the loophole on the right hand side of the
door; that is to say, the one on your right, standing inside. If the
affair is not to come off at once, it were best for you to proceed as
before. Ahmet will be outside when you go out with your gang, and on your
nodding to him we will make some excuse to take you away on your return. I
say this because if you see that the affair, whatever it is, is not
imminent, you might think it better to remain with them longer, so as to
learn their plans more fully, instead of having the thing put a stop to at
once.”</p>
<p>“I understand, Sir John; but, as I have said, I do not think we should all
be told until the blow is ready to be struck, as they would be afraid that
some one might inform against them, if time and opportunity were granted
them.”</p>
<p>“I think so too, Sir Gervaise. This afternoon we will call upon the grand
master, for we have no means of knowing how serious or how extended this
plot may be; it may include only the crew of a single galley, and, on the
other hand, the whole of the slaves may be implicated in it. It is
evident, therefore, that the matter is too serious to be kept any longer
from his knowledge.”</p>
<p>Three more days passed. On the third evening, after the allowance of broth
and bread had been consumed, and the door was closed and locked upon them
for the night, three or four of the galley slaves, after talking eagerly
together, beckoned to the others to gather round them at the end of the
room farthest from the door. Two of them took up arms full of the bedding,
and stuffed it into the side windows. Gervaise saw, in the dim light, a
look of intense excitement on the faces of the slaves. It had been vaguely
known among them that a plot was in hand, although but few had been
admitted into the confidence of the leaders. Hitherto all had feared that
it concerned only a small number, but the preparations now made to insure
that they should not be overheard, showed that, whatever the plan might
be, all were to share in it.</p>
<p>“Thanks be to Allah, the All Powerful,” one of the men began, “my lips are
unsealed, and I can tell you the great news that our hour for escape from
bondage is at hand! We need not fear the warder there,” he went on, as
several eyes were turned apprehensively towards the guard, who, with his
spear beside him, was leaning carelessly against the wall at the farther
end, looking through the window into the courtyard; “he is with us. You
must know that for the last two months an agent from Constantinople has
been on the Island, and has been engaged in arranging this affair. Two of
our taskmasters belonging to the Order have been bribed by large sums of
money, and several of the overseers, who are half of our blood, have
eagerly embraced the prospect of returning to their mothers' country, and
of avowing openly their belief in our religion. These, again, have bought
over many of the guards, ours included, and tonight all will be ready for
action. Those not of our party will be killed without ceremony. Duplicate
keys have been made of all the padlocks of the fetters; the guards who are
with us have each one of them, the others will have been slipped into the
hands of one man in each gang as they returned tonight from work. The
overseers who are in the plot will, at midnight, go quietly round and
unlock the doors, and remove the bars from the outside. We have,
therefore, only to overcome the eight or ten men who patrol the prison;
and as we shall have the arms of the guards, some thirty in number, we
shall make quick work of them.</p>
<p>“The two guards at the outside gates must, of course, be killed.
Duplicates of the keys have been made, and will be hidden in a spot known
to some of our party, close to the gate. Thus we have but to issue out and
rush down, in a body, to the port. I and another are to take the arms of
our guard, and two others are told off in each room to do the same. That
will give us sixty armed men. We shall make very short work of the guards
at the gate leading into the port. Then twenty of us are to run along the
mole to Fort St. Nicholas, twenty to the Tower of St. Michael, and twenty
to that of St. John. There will be, at the most, but three or four men
keeping watch at each fort, and thus we shall have in our possession the
three forts commanding the entrance to the harbour. There are, as you
know, six galleys manned by crews from our prison there. The crew of each
galley will embark upon it, and man the oars; the rest will divide
themselves among the galleys. Before starting, we shall seize and set fire
to all other galleys and ships in the port. The gangs in four of the rooms
have been told off specially for this duty. Before firing them, they are
to take out such provisions as they may find, and transport them to the
galleys. We who take the forts are provided with hammers and long nails,
to drive down the vent holes of the cannon; when we have done this, we are
to wait until one of the galleys fetches us off. Ten minutes should be
ample time for all there is to be done, and even if the alarm is given at
once, we shall be away long before the knights can be aroused from sleep,
buckle on their armour, and get down to the port.”</p>
<p>Exclamations of delight and approbation burst from his hearers.</p>
<p>“Then it is only we of this prison who are in the plot?” one said.</p>
<p>“Yes. In the first place, it would have been too dangerous to attempt to
free all. In the second, the galleys would not carry them; we shall be
closely packed as it is, for there are over a thousand here. I hear that
there was a talk of freeing all, and that we, instead of embarking at
first, should make for the other prisons, burst open the doors, and rescue
the others; but by the time we could do so the knights would be all in
arms, and our enterprise would fail altogether, for as but a small
proportion of us can obtain weapons, we could not hope to overcome them.
Were it not for the strong wall that separates their quarter from the
town, we might make straight for their houses and slay them before the
alarm could be given. As it is, that would be impossible, and therefore
the plan will be carried out as I have told you. The loss of all their
galleys and of over one thousand slaves will be a heavy blow for them.
Great pains have been taken to prevent confusion when we reach the port.
The men in each room have been instructed as to the galleys on which they
are to embark. As for you, you know precisely what is to be done; you will
simply take your places, and then wait until all are on board. No galley
is to push out from the wharf until the last man of those employed in
burning the ships has returned, with the provisions found in them. Then
the order will be given by the man who has arranged all this, and the six
galleys will put out together.</p>
<p>“One is to row to each of the forts to carry off the party that will have
been engaged in silencing its cannon. Our galley is to row to St.
Nicholas, and take off the twenty men I shall lead there. There is no
possibility of failure. Everything has, you see, been arranged. One of the
overseers who is in the plot walked by my side as we returned from the
port, and gave me the instructions, and all the others will have been told
in the same way, or else by the guards in charge of them.” The gang now
broke up into little groups, talking excitedly over the unlooked for news,
and exulting over the speedy advent of liberty. Gervaise strolled
carelessly to the window, and dropped out the white strip of stuff. It was
now quite dark, and there was no fear of any one observing the movement.
Then he joined the others. After an hour and a half had passed he heard
footsteps approaching the door. There was a pause; then the outside bars
were taken down, and a key turned in the lock. A deep silence fell on the
slaves. Then a voice called, “Number 36!”</p>
<p>“What is it?” replied Gervaise, without raising himself from his seat on
the bedding. “I have done my share of work today, and earned my night's
sleep.”</p>
<p>“It is a knight from the English auberge; he has come to fetch you. It
seems that you are to go there as a servitor.”</p>
<p>“What a cursed fortune,” Gervaise muttered, in Turkish, “just when a road
to freedom is open! I have a good mind to say I am ill, and cannot go till
the morning.”</p>
<p>“No, no!” one of the others exclaimed. “They would only drag you out, and
when they saw that there was naught the matter with you, would suspect
that there must be some reason why you did not want to go, when, as every
one knows, the position of the servitors is in every way preferable to
ours.”</p>
<p>“Now then, why are you delaying?” a voice said sharply, and a warder
entered with a lighted torch. “Get up, you lazy hound! It will be worse
for you if I have to speak again.”</p>
<p>“I am coming,” Gervaise grumbled. “I was just asleep.”</p>
<p>He rose, as if reluctantly, and went forward. The warder gave him an angry
push, followed him out, and locked and barred the door after him.</p>
<p>“I suppose this is the right man?” Sir John Boswell said.</p>
<p>“This is Number 36, Sir Knight, the same who was taken over to your
auberge the other day,” and he held the light close to Gervaise's face.</p>
<p>“Yes, that is the man. Follow me,” he added, in Turkish. The gate of the
courtyard was unbarred, and they passed out unquestioned. Sir John
strolled on ahead. Gervaise followed him a pace or two behind. Not until
they had passed through the gate of the castle did Sir John turn.</p>
<p>“I have not spoken to you,” he said, “as we may have been watched. Keep
your news until we reach the auberge.”</p>
<p>Upon entering it they went up at once to Sir John Kendall's apartments.</p>
<p>“Well, Sir Gervaise, the strip of cotton was brought to us safely. What is
your news?”</p>
<p>“It is very serious, Sir John, and I have been in terrible anxiety since I
dropped it out, lest it should not come to hand in time. As it is, you
have till midnight to make your preparations.” He then repeated the
statement made by the galley slave.</p>
<p>“By my faith,” Sir John Kendall exclaimed, “this is a pretty plot indeed!
And had it succeeded, as it certainly would have done but for your
vigilance, it would have been a heavy blow to us. The burning of all our
galleys would have crippled us sorely, and the loss of over a thousand
slaves would have been a serious one indeed, when we so urgently require
them for completing our defences. Get rid of those clothes at once, Sir
Gervaise, and don your own. We must go straight to the grand master. You
will find your clothes and armour in the next room. I had them taken there
as soon as your token was brought me.”</p>
<p>In a few minutes Gervaise returned in his usual attire, and with his
armour buckled on. The two knights were already in their coats of mail,
and leaving the auberge they went to the grand master's palace. A servitor
had already been sent to D'Aubusson to inform him that they were coming,
and he advanced to meet them as they entered.</p>
<p>“Welcome, Sir Gervaise!” he said. “Whether your news be good or bad,
whether you have found that it is a general rising of the slaves that is
intended, or a plot by which a handful of slaves may seize a boat and
escape, the gratitude of the Order is no less due to you for the hardships
and humiliations you have undergone on its behalf.”</p>
<p>“It concerns but one prison: that of St. Pelagius.”</p>
<p>“The largest of them,” the grand master put in.</p>
<p>“The whole of the slaves there are to be liberated at twelve o'clock
tonight, are to seize the three water towers and to spike the guns, to
burn all the shipping in the harbour, to make off with six galleys, and
destroy the rest.”</p>
<p>“By St. John!” D'Aubusson exclaimed, “this is indeed a serious matter. But
tell me all about it. There must be treachery indeed at work for such a
scheme to be carried out.”</p>
<p>Gervaise now told him all the details he had learned.</p>
<p>“So two of the Order, though but of the inferior grade, are in the plot?”
the grand master said; “and several of the overseers? One of the villains
is, of course, the man you saw this Greek talking with. We must get hold
of the other if we can. As to the slaves, now that we have warning, there
is an end of the matter, though without such warning they would surely
have succeeded, for the plans are well laid, and they would have been at
sea before we could have gathered in any force at the port. If it were not
that it would cost the lives of many of the warders and of the prison
guards, I should say we ought to take post outside the gate, for we should
then catch the traitors who are to accompany them. As it is, we must be
beforehand with them. A hundred men will be more than ample for our
purpose. Do you take fifty of your knights, Sir John Kendall, and I will
draw fifty of those of Auvergne. At eleven o'clock we will meet at the
gate leading down into the town, and will march to the private entrance of
the governor's house. I will go in first with a few of you, tell him what
we have discovered, and post guards to prevent any one from leaving his
house. Then, having admitted the others, we will go quietly out and place
a party at each door of the overseers' house, with orders to seize any who
may come out. The rest, in small parties, will then go round the prison,
and, entering each room, show the slaves that their plot has been
discovered. This we must do to save the lives of the guards who may be
faithful to their trust. As to the higher officials engaged in the affair,
we must obtain their names from the overseers or slaves. It is not likely
that the two traitors will quit their houses, as they will leave the
matter in the hands of the overseers, who, as you say, intend to first
open the doors, and then to accompany the slaves in their escape. Do not
warn the knights until it is nearly time to start, Sir John. The less stir
made the better, for no one can say whether they may not have suborned
some of the servitors to send instant news of any unusual movements in any
of the auberges.”</p>
<p>At half past ten Sir John Kendall went round among the knights and bade
fifty of them arm themselves quietly, and proceed, one by one, down to the
gate, and there await orders. Up to this time Gervaise had remained in the
bailiff's room, so as to avoid the questioning that would take place, and
he went down to the gate with the bailiff and Sir John Boswell.</p>
<p>The knights assembled rapidly. None were aware of the reason for which
they had been called out at such an hour, and there was a buzz of talk and
conjecture until Sir John Kendall arrived. He was followed by four of the
servants, who at once lighted the torches they carried, when he proceeded
to go through the roll, and found that the muster was complete. Many of
the knights had gazed in some surprise at Gervaise, whose dark complexion
altogether concealed his identity, and it was supposed that he must be
some newly arrived knight, though none had heard that any ship had entered
the harbour that day.</p>
<p>Two or three minutes later fifty knights of the langue of Auvergne came
down, headed by the grand master himself, whose appearance greatly
heightened the surprise of the English knights. The torches were now
extinguished, the gate thrown open, and the party descended into the town.
Gervaise had purposely fallen in by the side of Harcourt.</p>
<p>“You are but newly arrived, Sir Knight?” the latter said, as they moved
off.</p>
<p>“Not so very newly, Ralph,” Gervaise replied.</p>
<p>“What! is it you, Gervaise?” Harcourt exclaimed, with a start of surprise.
“Why, I did not know you, though I looked hard at you in the torch light.
What have you done with yourself? Where have you been? Do you know what
all this is about?”</p>
<p>“I cannot tell you now, Ralph. You must be content to know that I have
been in prison, and working in the galleys.”</p>
<p>“The saints defend us! Why, what on earth had you done to entail such
punishment as that? It is an outrage. The grand master and the council
have the right to expel a knight from the Order after due trial and
investigation, but not to condemn him to such penalties as the galleys. It
is an outrage upon the whole Order, and I would say so to the grand master
himself.”</p>
<p>“There was no outrage in it, Ralph. Wait until you hear the whole story.
That I have not disgraced you, you may judge from the fact that I am in
the armour and mantle of the Order, and that, as you saw, I came down with
Sir John Kendall himself.”</p>
<p>There were no people about in the streets, though the lights still burned
on a few of the roofs. For a short distance the knights marched down
towards the port, and then turned down a street to the right. After a few
minutes' marching they halted under a high wall which all knew to be that
of the prison of St. Pelagius. Six knights were posted at the main
entrance, with orders that none should be allowed to leave the prison, and
that any persons who came up to the gate were to be at once seized and
made prisoners.</p>
<p>The rest marched on to a small door leading into the governor's house.
Here they were halted, and told to wait till called in; six knights of
England, and as many of Auvergne, being told off to accompany the grand
master and Sir John Kendall. A note had been sent to the governor,
informing him that the grand master intended to visit the prison at eleven
o'clock, but that the matter was to be kept an absolute secret; and that
the governor himself was to be down at the gate to admit him.</p>
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