Unfortunately for
von Daun, at that moment
Prince Henry was already making plans to leave the area. Throughout the evening of Saturday September 22 the Prussian forces quit their tents and marched away silently, leaving only watch fires and a token force to make plenty of noise. They made first for
Rothenburg (
Upper Lusatia) and rested there for three hours as twenty miles to the south, the Austrians sprang forward and overran their empty positions. Von Daun's scouting horse reported that the Prussian baggage was now heading northeast towards Glogau. He suspected a trap and retired to
Bautzen but in fact, when Prince Henry left
Rothenburg it was to head due west, eighteen miles, to the Saxon village of
Klitten. A further three hours rest was then followed by a forced march of twenty miles to the area of
Hoyerswerda where lay an unsuspecting
Imperial force of 3000 men under General Wehla. General Wehla had distinguished himself at the
Siege of Dresden. His subsequent deployment at
Hoyerswerda was as part of a line designed to prevent the Prussian forces in
Saxony and
Silesia combining together. Recent events suggested that such an occurrence was unlikely however, since
Frederick the Great was tied up in a minuet with the Russians whilst Prince Henry of Prussia now appeared on his way to join his brother in the east. Indeed, von Daun had written to Wehla just a few days previously, informing him that there was no danger on his eastern flank. ==Out of the woods==