Clementina - Page 34/200

He went forward in the dark and opened a door at the end of the passage.

A glow of ruddy light came through the doorway, and Wogan caught a

glimpse of a brick-floored kitchen and a great open chimney and one or

two men on a bench before the fire. Then the door was again closed. The

closing of the door seemed to Wogan a churlish act.

"The hospitality," said he to himself, "which plants a man in the road

so that a traveller on a rainy night may not miss his bed should at

least leave the kitchen door open. Why should I stay here in the dark?"

Wogan went forward, and from the careful way in which he walked,--a way

so careful and stealthy indeed that his footsteps made no sound,--it

might have been inferred that he believed the floor to be newly painted

too. He had, at all events, no such scruples about the kitchen door, for

he seized the handle and flung it open quickly. He was met at once by a

cold draught of wind. A door opposite and giving onto a yard at the back

had been opened at precisely the same moment; and as Wogan stepped

quickly in at his door a man stepped quickly out by the door opposite

and was lost in the darkness.

"What! Are you going?" the landlord cried after him as he turned from

the fire at which he was lighting a candle.

"Wilhelm has a wife and needs must," at once said a woman who was

reaching down some plates from a dresser.

The landlord turned towards the passage and saw Wogan in the doorway.

"You found your way, sir," said he, looking at Wogan anxiously.

"Nor are your walls any poorer of paint on that account," said Wogan as

he took his wet cloak and flung it over a chair.

The landlord blew out his candle and busied himself about laying the

table. A great iron pot swung over the fire by a chain, and the lid

danced on the top and allowed a savoury odour to escape. Wogan sat

himself down before the fire and his clothes began to steam.

"You laugh at my paint, sir," said the landlord. He was a fat,

good-humoured-looking man, communicative in his manner as a Boniface

should be, and his wife was his very complement. "You laugh at my

paint, but it is, after all, a very important thing. What is a great

lady without her rouge-pot, when you come to think of it? It is the same

with an inn. It must wear paint if it is to attract attention and make a

profit."