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Authors: Allan Mallinson

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BOOK: A Regimental Affair
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Private Broadhurst, the next for a chevron, doubled up the line and stood to attention almost peak to knee with his captain. ‘Sir!’

‘Broadhurst, that light’s a turnpike lodge. There’s one keeper there. I think he’s straight, but I want you to watch him – inside. And if Corporal Sykes and the revenue guide arrive, tell them that we’ve gone on to the windmill. The keeper will tell you by which way. Just have your wits about you generally, and wait till relieved.’

‘Sir!’ Broadhurst saluted and doubled back to fetch his trooper.

‘How long is it to the windmill, sir?’ asked Armstrong, already mounted and gathering his reins.

‘Half an hour if we can get a move on. There’s a good track to it a furlong down the turnpike.’ He turned and called to Johnson.

‘Ay, sir?’

‘Your eyes are better used to this. Kick on to the milestone and find the cart track off to the right. We’ll come up as fast as we can.’

Hervey was happier now he could feel some momentum again. How much their late arriving at the rendezvous would prejudice the revenue operation he had no idea, for its details had yet to be given him. As they rounded the lodge and gained the turnpike he pressed his gelding to a careful trot: he didn’t want to come down
on slippery metal at this stage. But two minutes was all it took to find Johnson. And now at last he was confident of finding the windmill – a mile and a half to the right up a well-made track, the ground rising all the way.

Minutes later Harkaway checked, else they would have collided. A horse was square-on to them, standing stock-still in the middle of the cross-tracks. Hervey had barely turned alongside when he realized it had no rider and there were more horses to front and rear.

‘Christ!’ he cursed as he wheeled and reached for his sabre. But a blow on the shoulder blade almost made him miss his grip. He ducked to Harkaway’s neck to escape the next one, spurring him to turn on the spot to meet the assault. ‘Alarm! Alarm!’ he shouted, and lunged forward in the saddle to make an uppercut into the darkness. His sword failed to make contact.

‘Alarm’ ran the length of the column, though what in God’s name they could do in this light Hervey didn’t know. ‘Trumpeter! Trumpeter!’ he called repeatedly, until Johnson found him, and then Armstrong and finally ‘Susan’ Medwell. ‘I think we’ve run on the owlers’ train,’ shouted Hervey. ‘Serjeant Armstrong, take half a dozen men left along the crossing track, and I’ll go right. Johnson, stand with two men to picket the track ahead about fifty yards, and detail another two as videttes here.’ Then he told off the same number, and struck along the drove determined to take one prisoner at least.

But the packhorses were gone, and though Hervey rode for a furlong and more he could find nothing. He dared not leave the drove for fear of losing himself. What would the owlers be trying to do now? They wouldn’t still be making for the shore, not with dragoons – and, for all they knew – the revenue men on their heels? They would double back, seeking safety inland, surely?

He turned and led his men back the way they’d come. It was no easier a business than leading them out, and he almost missed the cross-tracks, even with its vidette. If only the rain would cease: they’d at least have an extra couple of yards to see.

There was no sign of Armstrong. Had his serjeant had more luck? ‘Sound “rally”,’ he called to Susan.

Hervey’s trumpeter managed it very well, considering the gale, cracking the octave descent only once in three repeats.

In the ten minutes it took Armstrong to return, Hervey thought over his options. He could abandon the mission altogether: the owlers would surely be abandoning theirs and, now alerted to the presence of troops, the contrabanders would hardly risk a landing. But that decision ought rightly to be the revenue’s. Or he could throw out a cordon in the hope of intercepting the owlers: at first light he might well catch them still trying to come off the downs. Or he could give up the owlers as lost and make for the rendezvous with the revenue. Could he throw out a cordon
and
tackle the contrabanders? Only with another two dozen men. Yet he was reluctant to let either opportunity go.

‘Johnson, I want you to gallop for me.’ Johnson was knee to knee with him, but still Hervey was having to raise his voice against the wind.

‘Ay, sir. Back to Brighton?’

‘Yes, to Captain Strickland. His troop’s the nearest. Give him my compliments, and ask if he will send as many men as he can spare – twenty at least – to the road back there. Tell him what’s happened and ask him to lay up along the turnpike to catch the owlers as they beat back. I’ll go on with Serjeant Armstrong and the rest to try to meet with the revenue. Do you have all that?’

‘Ay, sir. Shall I follow you up once I’m done?’

‘No. It’ll be best that no one comes east of the turnpike. That way we should avoid mistakes. And you’d better remind them the password is “Wellington”.’

Strickland’s cordon was a very long shot indeed, and his own chance with the contrabanders was perhaps no greater. If only the guide had shown! If only he hadn’t missed the fork!

It took them three-quarters of an hour to cover the remaining mile to the windmill, for the going in that pitch darkness was as hard as any he could remember in Spain, and he was especially wary of running into the owlers again. As they broached the windmill rise he saw the reassuring flicker of a storm lantern, and then by its light the same revenue riding officer of the afternoon.

‘Good God, Captain Hervey, we were within an ace of opening fire,’ he called. ‘Why in heaven’s name are you come from that direction?’

Hervey didn’t give their flash powder much of a chance in this
weather, even inside the windmill. But you could never be sure, and even one ball might have struck flesh at that range, pointblank. ‘The guide didn’t show in over an hour, so we set out as best we could. We came on the owlers a mile back and they’ve scattered to the winds. I’ve sent word back to Brighton for reinforcements to picket the Lewes road. And then we came on here as fast as we could.’

The riding officer looked dismayed. ‘You’d better come inside.’

By lantern light, sacking shielding the windows, Hervey was at last made privy to the revenue’s information and intention. An Ordnance map like his own was spread on a table, and the officer – his face a chiselled image of incorruptibility – pointed to the route by which he believed the owlers to have come. ‘They’re seasoned hands, Captain Hervey. The wool isn’t theirs, so their first instinct will be to save their own skins – though they won’t abandon the packs unless they have to. My estimate is that they’ll lie up on the downs until they can be sure of their escape route. Your men on the Lewes road will frighten them, that’s for sure, but it would take two more lines – each from the road to the sea – to be sure of netting them.’

‘Will they alert the contrabanders?’

‘It’s a good question,’ said the riding officer, taking out pipe and tinderbox. ‘I should say not, though, for they owe nothing to the wetfeet, as they call them. The two ply their own trade independently. It’s only the economy of using the same vessel that attracts them. There’s no honour among their like.’

Hervey peered closely at the map. ‘Where is it you expect the landing?’

‘Here,’ said the riding officer confidently. ‘We have our sources, you know.’

Hervey continued to study the Ordnance sheet. ‘But how, on a night like this, will any vessel be able to find the cove, let alone heave to and send out boats?’

The riding officer smiled. ‘It’s a very fair question. Yet the answer is simple: there are lights placed on the headlands in such a way as to guide the craft to the very place from which to launch its boats.’

‘Lights which we can’t see from land?’

‘Exactly, Captain Hervey, but there are other methods, you know.’

Hervey looked abashed.

‘I have a cutter stationed offshore watching for those very lights,’ said the riding officer proudly. ‘Her instructions are to signal me with her observations.’

‘But if she signals, will that not alert the smugglers and those with the lights?’

The riding officer smiled. ‘Indeed so. That is why she will signal only if there are
no
lights, after midnight.’

The danger of signalling a negative had been drummed into him as a cornet, yet he could see there was no alternative in the revenue’s business. ‘And how do the contrabanders do their landings?’

The riding officer looked grave. ‘Usually they first land a dozen men, maybe two dozen, to secure the place where the contraband is to come ashore. I’ve known as many as fifty picket a cove for a rich cargo.’

Hervey was puzzled. ‘I should have thought it far easier to have men secure a place from landward.’

‘True,’ said the riding officer, with another wry smile. ‘And that’s how it used to be. But with so many troops watching for Bonaparte these past twenty years it became too hot to assemble on the coast. Now that things have quietened, we’ll see a return to the old ways no doubt.’

Hervey nodded. ‘So, do we speak of Englishmen or French who will come ashore?’

‘Frenchmen, for the most part. There are plenty of the old
Grande Armée
keen to earn some gold. And by God they’ll fight. They won’t scruple in the slightest to use their firearms.’

Hervey was not especially troubled by this, but the relative numbers were not good. If the French were to put fifty men ashore they would outnumber him more than two to one, taking account of the horseholders. Ordinarily that wouldn’t trouble him either, but in this darkness, with this rain, and with mutual support so difficult . . .

‘Is this a rich cargo? Do you expect the landing to be in any strength?’

The officer looked grave again. ‘Indeed I do. That is why I asked for a whole troop of regulars.’

Hervey raised his eyebrows.

‘Is something amiss?’

‘I have fewer than thirty men.’

For an instant the riding officer’s bile was roused, but his selfcontrol had been too many years in the making. ‘I confide that the deficiency will be no fault of yours, Captain Hervey, but this makes things damned tricky. I’d intended that we should take the vessel and everyone about the business. But this weather was already making that a forlorn hope, and with insufficient men we stand little chance of taking the landing party. All we can safely do is seize the contraband and the porters, and the light-men, for they’ll have information of use to us.’

‘It will have to be with the sabre, too, for we couldn’t trust to pistols and carbines in this rain.’

The riding officer agreed. ‘Let us talk of the details, then.’

Hervey found the riding officer to be a practical man. That he wanted keenly to close with the contrabanders was beyond doubt, but he was not so reckless as to expose Hervey’s dragoons to unnecessary danger, for, as he explained, they would succeed at the very least in putting the porters to flight without their uncustomed cargo. The design they worked out was therefore to send a party to the beach a half-mile or so from where the landing was expected, to work along under the cliffs until they were in a position to mount an attack which would separate the porters from the contraband. A second party would, meanwhile, work along the clifftops until they came across the light-men – the light on the other side of the cove would have to be left, for they hadn’t enough men to mount two simultaneous approaches.

Hervey was able to tell each and every one of his dragoons what was the design, crowding them into the mill in their two parties, cheered by the fervour of the sweats who were only too happy to have another go at Johnny Crapaud, and by the eagerness of the greenheads to claim their first laurels with the old enemy. He was at pains to disabuse them of any notion that it would be an easy affair, however. And the revenue riding officer, likewise, warned that these were men who would fight hard for their money, as well as for their lives.

At one o’clock – more than three hours later than the riding officer had hoped – Hervey’s dragoons began their final approach march. The rain had eased considerably, the wind had dropped, so
that speech no longer had to be in a raised voice, and it seemed just a fraction less dark than before. The going was easier anyway with a guide, and they quickly found the path to the beach. Hervey, with Serjeant Armstrong, led twelve of his most experienced men down its precipitous length, slipping and sliding and cursing, but with nothing worse at the bottom than a dragoon with a twisted ankle. He had put the other party, of eight, in the charge of one of the revenue men, for he dared not risk fewer than seven horseholders, and even that would be a trial for so indefinite a period. The two parties had no way of signalling to each other, so which of them was to begin its work first would have to be left to circumstance. Ideally, the light-men should be apprehended first, before they could extinguish their beacon, or else any commotion on the beach would have them flee. If only the revenue could see exactly where the beacons were – but so cunningly shielded to landward were they that only by coming right up on them could they be fixed.

Down on the beach it was distinctly lighter. The chalk cliffs and the sea seemed to be reflecting the faint moonlight piercing the breaking cloud, and Hervey could now make out his men at three paces – though it was still not enough to exercise any degree of control if it came to a fight. The wind was little more than a breeze now, and the rain had been stopped for a full ten minutes. Now was the time to unwrap the firelocks and load. It took only a minute with these dragoons, yet even that was one minute more than it took Armstrong to slip a bulleted cartridge into Hervey’s percussion-lock. Hervey himself carried his repeater. He carefully unwrapped the primed cylinder and fitted it to the carbine, surprised how quickly the real test of its handiness had come.

BOOK: A Regimental Affair
13.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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