What was the consternation of the Vicomte and the hangman, and the horror of the crowd, to see that Mattingley’s toes just touched the ground! The body shook and twisted. The man was being slowly strangled, not hanged.
The Undertaker’s Apprentice was the only person who kept a cool head. The solution of the problem of the rope for afterwards, but he had been sent there to hang a man, and a man he would hang somehow. Without more ado he jumped upon Mattingley’s shoulders and began to drag him down.
That instant Ranulph Delagarde burst through the mounted guard and the militia. Rushing to the Vicomte, he exclaimed:
“Shame! The man was to be hung, not strangled. This is murder. Stop it, or I’ll cut the rope.” He looked round on the crowd. “Cowards—cowards,” he cried, “will you see him murdered?”
He started forward to drag away the deathmann, but the Vicomte, thoroughly terrified at Ranulph’s onset, himself seized the Undertaker’s Apprentice, who, drawing off with unruffled malice, watched what followed with steely eyes.
Dragged down by the weight of the Apprentice, Mattingley’s feet were now firmly on the ground. While the excited crowd tried to break through the cordon of mounted guards, Mattingley, by a twist and a jerk, freed his corded hands. Loosing the rope at his neck he opened his eyes and looked around him, dazed and dumb.
The Apprentice came forward. “I’ll shorten the rope oui-gia! Then you shall see him swing,” he grumbled viciously to the Vicomte.
The gaunt Vicomte was trembling with excitement. He looked helplessly around him.
The Apprentice caught hold of the rope to tie knots in it and so shorten it, but Ranulph again appealed to the Vicomte.
“You’ve hung the man,” said he; “you’ve strangled him and you didn’t kill him. You’ve got no right to put that rope round his neck again.”