Sharpe 12 - Sharpe's Battle (15 page)

Read Sharpe 12 - Sharpe's Battle Online

Authors: Bernard Cornwell

BOOK: Sharpe 12 - Sharpe's Battle
2.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Why would Loup do that?” Harper asked.

“Because he's a mad, brave, ruthless bugger, that's why. And because he hates me and because kicking the lights out of us would be a cheap victory for the bastard.” Sharpe had become preoccupied by the threat of a night raid by

Loup's brigade. He had first thought of the raid merely as a means of frightening Colonel Runciman into signing his fraudulent wagon orders, but the more Sharpe had thought about it, the more likely such a raid seemed. And the

San Isidro Fort was hopelessly ill prepared for such an attack. A thousand men might have been able to hold its degraded ramparts, but the Real Companïa

Irlandesa was far too small a unit to offer any real resistance. They would be trapped within the vast, crumbling walls like rats in a terrier's fighting ring. “Which is just what Hogan and Wellington want,” Sharpe said aloud.

“What's that, sir?”

"They don't bloody trust your Irishmen, see? They want them out of the way and

I'm supposed to help get rid of the buggers, but the trouble is I like them.

Damn it, Pat. If Loup comes we'll all be dead."

“You think he's coming?”

“I bloody well know he's coming,” Sharpe said fervently, and suddenly the vague suspicions hardened into an utter certainty. He might have just made a vigorous proclamation of his practicality, but in truth he relied on instinct most of the time. Sometimes, Sharpe knew, the wise soldier listened to his superstitions and fears because they were a better guide than mere practicality. Good flat hard sense dictated that Loup would not waste valuable effort by raiding the San Isidro Fort, but Sharpe rejected that good sense because his every instinct told him there was trouble coming. “I don't know when or how he'll come,” he told Harper, “but I'm not trusting a palace guard to serve picquet. I want our boys up here.” He meant he wanted riflemen guarding the fort's northern extremity. “And I want a night picquet too, so make sure a couple of the lads get some sleep today.”

Harper gazed down the long northern slope. “You think they'll come this way?”

“It's the easiest. West and east are too steep, the southern end is too strong, but a cripple could waltz across this wall. Jesus.” This last imprecation was torn from Sharpe as he realized just how vulnerable the fort was. He stared eastwards. “I'll bet that bastard is watching us right now.”

From the far peaks a Frenchman armed with a good telescope could probably count the buttons on Sharpe's jacket.

“You really think he'll come?” Harper asked.

“I think we're damn lucky he hasn't come already. I think we're damn lucky to be alive.” Sharpe jumped off the ramparts onto the grass inside the fort.

There was nothing but grass and weed-strewn waste land for a hundred yards, then the red stone barracks buildings began. There were eight long buildings and the Real Companïa Irlandesa bivouacked in the two that had been kept in best repair while Sharpe's riflemen camped in one of the magazines close to the gate tower. That tower, Sharpe decided, was the key to the defence, for whoever held the tower would dominate the fight. “All we need is three or four minutes' warning,” Sharpe said, “and we can make the bugger wish he'd stayed in bed.”

“You can beat him?” Harper asked.

“He thinks he can surprise us. He thinks he can break into the barracks and slaughter us in our beds, Pat, but if we just have some warning we can turn that gate tower into a fortress and without artillery Loup can't do a damn thing about it.” Sharpe was suddenly enthusiastic. “Don't you always say that a good fight is a tonic to an Irishman?” he asked.

“Only when I'm drunk,” Harper said.

“Let's pray for a fight anyway,” Sharpe said eagerly, “and a victory. My God, that'll put some confidence into these guards!”

But then, at dusk, just as the last red-gold rays were shrinking behind the western hills, everything changed.

The Portuguese battalion arrived unannounced. They were caçadores, skirmishers like the greenjackets, only these troops were outfitted in blood-brown jackets and grey British trousers. They carried Baker rifles and looked as if they knew how to use them. They marched into the fort with the easy, lazy step of veteran troops, while behind them came a convoy of three ox-drawn wagons loaded with rations, firewood and spare ammunition. The battalion was a little over half strength, mustering just four hundred rank and file, but the men still made a brave show as they paraded on the fort's old plaza.

Their Colonel was a thin-faced man called Oliveira. “For a few days every year,” he explained off-handedly to Lord Kiely, "we occupy the San Isidro.

Just as a way of reminding ourselves that the fort exists and to discourage anyone else from setting up house here. No, don't move your men out of the barracks. My men don't need roofs. And we won't be in your way, Colonel. I'll exercise my rogues across the frontier for the next few days."

Behind the last supply wagons the fort's great gates creaked shut. They crashed together, then one of Kiely's men lifted the locking bar into position. Colonel Runciman hurried out of the gatehouse to offer his greeting to Colonel Oliveira and to invite the Portuguese officer to supper, but

Oliveira declined. “I share my men's supper, Colonel. No offence.” Oliveira spoke good English and nearly half his officers were British, the result of a policy to integrate the Portuguese army into Wellington's forces. To Sharpe's delight one of the caçador officers was Thomas Garrard, a man who had served with Sharpe in the ranks of the 33rd and who had taken advantage of the promotion prospects offered to British sergeants willing to join the

Portuguese army. The two men had last met at Almeida when the great fortress had exploded in a horror that had led to the garrison's surrender. Garrard had been among the men forced to lay down his arms.

“Bloody Crapaud bastards,” he said feelingly. "Kept us in Burgos with hardly enough food to feed a rat, and what food there was was all rotted. Christ,

Dick, you and I have eaten some bad meals in our time, but this was really bad. And all because that damned cathedral exploded. I'd like to meet the

French gunner who did that and wring his bloody neck."

In truth it had been Sharpe who had caused the magazine in the cathedral's crypt to explode, but it did not seem a politic admission to make. “It was a bad business,” Sharpe agreed mildly.

“You got out next morning, didn't you?” Garrard asked. “Cox wouldn't let us go. We wanted to fight our way out, but he said we had to do the decent thing and surrender.” He shook his head in disgust. “Not that it matters now,” he went on. “The Crapauds exchanged me and Oliveira asked me to join his regiment and now I'm a captain like you.”

“Well done.”

“They're good lads,” Garrard said fondly of his company which was bivouacking in the open space inside the northern ramparts where the Portuguese campfires burned bright in the dusk. Oliveira's picquets were on every rampart save the gate tower. Such efficient sentries meant that Sharpe no longer needed to deploy his own riflemen on picquet duty, but he was still apprehensive and told Garrard his fears as the two men strolled round the darkening ramparts.

“I've heard of Loup,” Garrard said. “He's a right bastard.”

“Nasty as hell.”

“And you think he's coming here?”

“Just an instinct, Tom.”

“Hell, ignore those and you might as well dig your own grave, eh? Let's go and see the Colonel.”

But Oliveira was not so easily convinced of Sharpe's fears, nor did Juanita de

Elia help Sharpe's cause. Juanita and Lord Kiely had returned from a day's hunting and, with Father Sarsfield, Colonel Runciman and a half-dozen of the

Real Companïa Irlandesa's officers, were guests at the Portuguese supper.

Juanita scorned Sharpe's warning. “You think a French brigadier would bother himself with an English captain?” she asked mockingly.

Sharpe suppressed a stab of evil temper. He had been speaking to Oliveira, not to Kiely's whore, but this was not the time or the place to pick a quarrel.

Besides, he recognized that in some obscure way his and Juanita's dislike of each other was bred into the bone and probably unavoidable. She would talk to any other officer in the fort, even to Runciman, but at Sharpe's very appearance she would turn and walk away rather than offer a polite greeting.

“I think he'll bother with me, ma'am, yes,” Sharpe said mildly.

“Why?” Oliveira demanded.

“Go on, man, answer!” Kiely said when Sharpe hesitated.

“Well, Captain?” Juanita mocked Sharpe. “Lost your tongue?”

“I think he'll bother with me, ma'am,” Sharpe said, stung into an answer,

“because I killed two of his men.”

“Oh, my God!” Juanita pretended to be shocked. “Anyone would think there was a war happening!”

Kiely and some of the Portuguese officers smiled, but Colonel Oliveira just stared at Sharpe as though weighing the warning carefully. Finally he shrugged. “Why would he worry that you killed two of his men?” he asked.

Sharpe hesitated to confess to what he knew was a crime against military justice, but he could hardly withdraw now. The safety of the fort and all the men inside depended on him convincing Oliveira of the genuine danger and so, very reluctantly, he described the raped and massacred village and how he had captured two of Loup's men and stood them up against a wall.

“You had orders to shoot them?” Oliveira asked presciently.

“No, sir,” Sharpe said, aware of the eyes staring at him. He knew it might prove a horrid mistake to have admitted the executions, but he desperately needed to persuade Oliveira of the danger and so he described how Loup had ridden to the small upland village to plead for his men's lives and how, despite that appeal, Sharpe had ordered them shot. Colonel Runciman, hearing the tale for the first time, shook his head in disbelief.

“You shot the men in front of Loup?” Oliveira asked, surprised.

“Yes, sir.”

“So this rivalry between you and Loup is a personal vendetta, Captain Sharpe?” the Portuguese Colonel asked.

“In a way, sir.”

“Either yes or no!” Oliveira snapped. He was a forceful, quicktempered man who reminded Sharpe of General Craufurd, the Light Division's commander. Oliveira had the same impatience with evasive answers.

“I believe Brigadier Loup will attack very soon, sir,” Sharpe insisted.

“Proof?”

“Our vulnerability,” Sharpe said, “and because he's put a price on my head, sir.” He knew it sounded feeble and he blushed when Juanita laughed aloud. She was wearing her Real Companïa Irlandesa uniform, though she had unbuttoned the coat and shirt so that the flamelight glowed on her long neck. Every officer around the fire seemed fascinated by her, and no wonder, for she was a flamboyantly exotic creature in this place of guns and powder and stone. She sat close to Kiely, an arm resting on his knee and Sharpe wondered if perhaps they had announced their betrothal. Something seemed to have put the supper guests into a holiday mood. “How much is the price, Captain?” she asked mockingly.

Sharpe bit back a retort that the reward would prove more than enough to hire her services for a night. “I don't know,” he lied instead.

“Can't be very much,” Kiely said. “Over-age captain like you, Sharpe? Couple of dollars maybe? Bag of salt?”

Oliveira glanced at Kiely and the glance expressed disapproval of his

Lordship's drunken gibes. The Colonel sucked on a cigar, then blew smoke across the fire. “I have doubled the sentries, Captain,” he said to Sharpe,

“and if this Loup does come to claim your head then we'll give him a fight.”

“When he comes, sir,” Sharpe insisted, “can I suggest, with respect, sir, that you get your men into the gatehouse?”

“You don't give up, do you, Sharpe?” Kiely interrupted. Before the Portuguese battalion's arrival Sharpe had asked Kiely to move the whole Real Companïa

Irlandesa into the gatehouse, a request that Kiely had peremptorily turned down. “No one's going to attack us here,” Kiely now said, reiterating his earlier argument, “and anyway, if they do, we should fight the bastards from the ramparts, not the gatehouse.”

“We can't fight from the ramparts-” Sharpe began.

“Don't tell me where we can fight! God damn you!” Kiely shouted, startling

Juanita. "You're a jumped-up corporal, Sharpe, not a bloody general. If the

French come, damn it, I'll fight them how I like and beat them how I like and

I won't need your help!"

The outburst embarrassed the assembled officers. Father Sarsfield frowned as though he was looking for some emollient words, but it was Oliveira who finally broke the awkward silence. “If they come, Captain Sharpe,” he said gravely, “I shall seek the refuge you advise. And thank you for your advice.”

Oliveira nodded his dismissal.

“Good night, sir,” Sharpe said, then walked away.

“Ten guineas to the price on your head says Loup won't come, Sharpe!” Kiely called after the rifleman. “What is it? Lost your damn nerve? Don't want to take a wager like a gentleman?” Kiely and Juanita laughed. Sharpe tried to ignore them.

Tom Garrard had followed Sharpe. “I'm sorry, Dick,” Garrard said and then, after a pause, “Did you really shoot two Crapauds?”

“Aye.”

“Good for you. But I wouldn't tell too many people about it.”

“I know, I know,” Sharpe said, then shook his head. “Bloody Kiely.”

“His woman's a rare one though,” Garrard said. “Reminds me of that girl you took up with at Gawilghur. You remember her?”

“This one's a bitch, that's the difference,” Sharpe said. God, he thought, but his temper was being abraded to a raw bloody edge. “I'm sorry, Tom,” he said,

“it's like fighting with wet powder, trying to shake sense into this bloody place.”

“Join the Portuguese, Dick,” Garrard said. “Good as gold they are and no bloody over-born buggers like Kiely making life hard.” He offered Sharpe a cigar. The two men bent their heads over Garrard's tinderbox and, when the charred linen caught the spark to flare bright, Sharpe saw a picture chased into the inner side of the lid.

“Hold it there, Tom,” he said, stopping his friend from closing the lid. He stared at the picture for a few seconds. I'd forgotten those boxes," Sharpe said. The tinderboxes were made of a cheap metal that had to be protected from rust by gun oil, but Garrard had somehow kept this box safe for twelve years.

Other books

SwitchMeUp by Cristal Ryder
Kolia by Perrine Leblanc
The Typhoon Lover by Sujata Massey
Battle Earth X by Nick S. Thomas
Welcome to the Dark House by Laurie Faria Stolarz