Sharpe 16 - Sharpe's Honour (2 page)

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Authors: Bernard Cornwell

BOOK: Sharpe 16 - Sharpe's Honour
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And, of necessity, a secret. If the British government even dreamed that such a treaty was being prepared then British gold would flow, bribes be offered, and the populace of Spain roused against the very thought of peace with France. The Treaty, Ducos allowed, would not be popular in Spain. The common people, the peasants whose lands and women had been ravaged by the French, would not welcome a peace with their bitterest enemy. Only their beloved, absent King could persuade them to accept it, and their King hesitated.

Ferdinand VII wanted reassurance. Would the nobility of Spain support him? Would the Spanish Generals? What, most important of all, would the Church say? It was Ducos' job to provide those answers for the King, and the man who would give Ducos those answers was the Inquisitor.

Father Hacha was clever. He had risen in the Inquisition by his cleverness, and he knew how to use the secret files that the Inquisition kept on all Spain's eminent men. He could use his fellow Inquisitors in every part of Spain to collect letters from such men, letters that would be passed to the imprisoned Spanish King and assure him that a peace with France would be acceptable to enough nobles, churchmen, officers, and merchants to make the Treaty possible.

To all this El Matarife listened. He shrugged when the story finished, as if to suggest that such politics were not his business. `I am a soldier.'

Pierre Ducos sipped wine. A gust of wind lifted one of the damp blankets at a window and fluttered the tallow candle that lit their meal. He smiled. `Your family was rich once.' El Matarife stabbed his cheese flecked knife at the Frenchman. `Your troops destroyed our wealth.'

`Your brother,' and Ducos' voice held a hint of mockery, `has put a price upon the assistance he will give me.'

`A price?' The bearded face smiled at the thought of money.

Ducos smiled back. `The price is the restoration of your family's fortune, and more.'

`More?' El Matarife looked at his brother. The priest nodded. `Three hundred thousand dollars, Juan.'

El Matarife laughed. He looked from his brother to the Frenchman and he saw that neither smiled, that the sum was true, and his laughter died. He stared belligerently at Ducos. `You're cheating us, Frenchman. Your country will never pay that much. Never!'

`The money will not come from France,' Ducos said. `Where then?

`From a woman.' Ducos spoke softly. `But first there has to be a death, then an imprisonment, and that, El Matarife, is your part of this.'

The Partisan leader looked at his brother for confirmation, received it, and looked back at the small Frenchman. `A death?'

`One death. The woman's husband.'

`The imprisonment?'

`The woman.'

`When?'

Pierre Ducos saw the Partisan's smile and felt the surge of hope. The secret would be safe and France saved. He would buy, with three hundred thousand Spanish dollars that were not his to spend, the future of Napoleon's empire. `When?' the Partisan asked again.

`Spring,' Ducos said. This spring. You will be ready?'

`So long as your troops leave me alone.' El Matarife laughed.

`That I promise.'

`Then I will be ready.'

The bond was sealed by a handshake. The secret would be safe, the Treaty that would defeat Britain made, and, in the course of it, Pierre Ducos would accomplish his revenge on the Englishman who had broken his spectacles. When the spring came, and when the armies prepared to fight a war that would, within a year, be made redundant by the secret treaty, a man called Richard Sharpe, a soldier, would die.

CHAPTER 1

Major Richard Sharpe, on a damp spring day when a cold wind whipped down a rocky valley, stood on an ancient stone bridge and stared at the road which led southwards to a low pass in the rocky crest. The hills were dark with rain.

Behind him, standing at ease, with their musket locks wrapped with rags and the muzzles plugged with corks to stop the rain soaking into the barrels, stood five companies of infantry.

The crest, Sharpe knew, was five hundred yards away. In a few moments there would be enemy on that crest and his job was to stop them crossing the bridge. A simple job, a soldier's job. It was made easier because the spring of 1813 was late, the weather had brought these border hills nothing but rain, and the stream beneath the bridge was deep, fast, and impassable. The enemy would have to come to the bridge where Sharpe waited or not cross the watercourse at all.

`Sir?' D'Alembord, Captain of the Light Company, sounded apprehensive, as if he did not want to provoke Major Sharpe's ill temper.

`Captain?'

`Staff officer coming, sir.'

Sharpe grunted, but said nothing. He heard the hooves slow behind him, then the horse was in front of him and an excited cavalry Lieutenant was looking down on him. `Major Sharpe?'

A pair of dark eyes, hard and angry, looked from the Lieutenant's gilt spurs, up his boots, up the rich, mud-spattered, blue woollen cloak till they met the excited staff officer's eyes. `You're in my way, Lieutenant.'

`Sorry, sir.'

The Lieutenant hastily moved his horse to qne side. He had ridden hard, making a circuit of difficult country, and was proud of his ride. His mare was restless, matching the rider's exhilarated mood. `General Preston's compliments, sir, and the enemy is coming your way.'

`I've got picquets on the ridge.' Sharpe said it ungraciously. `I saw the enemy a half hour since.'

`Yes, sir.'

Sharpe stared at the ridge. The Lieutenant was wondering whether he ought to quietly ride away when suddenly the tall Rifleman looked at him again. `Do you speak French?'

The Lieutenant, who was nervous of meeting Major Richard Sharpe for the first time, nodded. `Yes, sir.'

`How well?'

The cavalryman smiled. `Tres bien, Monsieur, jeparle.'

`I didn't ask for a god-damned demonstration! Answer me.'

The Lieutenant was horrified by the savage reproof. `I speak it well, sir.'

Sharpe stared at him. The Lieutenant thought that this was just such a stare that an executioner might give a plump and once-privileged victim. `What's your name, Lieutenant?'

`Trumper-Jones, sir.'

`Do you have a white handkerchief?'

This conversation, Trumper-Jones decided, was becoming increasingly odd. `Yes, sir.'

`Good.' Sharpe looked back to the ridge, and to the saddle among the rocks where the road came over the skyline.

This had become, he was thinking, a bastard of a day's work. The British army was clearing the roads eastward from the Portuguese frontier. They were driving back the French outposts and prising out. the French garrisons, making the roads ready for the army's summer campaign.

And on this day of fitful rain and cold wind five British Battalions had attacked a small French garrison on the River Tormes. Five miles behind the French, on the road that would be their retreat, was this bridge. Sharpe, with half a Battalion and a Company of Riflemen had been sent by a circuitous night march to block the retreat. His task was simple; to stop the French long enough to let the other Battalions come up behind and finish them off. It was as simple as that, yet now, as the afternoon was well advanced, Sharpe's mood was sour and bitter.

`Sir?' Sharpe looked up. The Lieutenant was offering him a folded linen handkerchief. Trumper-Jones smiled nervously. `You wanted a handkerchief, sir?'

`I don't want to blow my nose, you fool!' It's for the surrender!' Sharpe scowled and walked two paces away.

Michael Trumper-Jones stared after him. It was true that fifteen hundred French were approaching this small force of less then four hundred men, but nothing that Trumper-Jones had heard of Richard Sharpe had prepared him for this sudden willingness to surrender. Sharpe's fame, indeed, had reached England, from whence Michael Trumper-Jones had so recently sailed to join the army, and the closer he had come to the battle lines, the more he had heard the name. Sharpe was a soldier's soldier, a man whose approval was eagerly sought by other men, whose name was used as a touchstone of professional competence, and apparently a man who now contemplated surrender without a fight.

Lieutenant Michael Trumper-Jones, appalled at the thought, looked surreptitiously at a face made dark by sun and wind. It was a handsome face, marred only by a scar that pulled down Sharpe's left eye to give him a mocking, knowing expression. Trumper-Jones did not know it, but that scar-pulled expression would disappear with a smile.

What astonished Trumper-Jones most was that Major Richard Sharpe bore no marks of rank, neither sash nor epaulettes; indeed nothing except the big battered cavalry sword at his side indicated that he was an officer. He looked, Trumper-Jones thought, the very image of a man who had taken the first French Eagle captured by the British, who had stormed the breach at Badajoz, and charged with the Germans at Garcia Hernandez. His air of confidence made it hard to believe that he had started his career in the ranks. It made it even harder to believe that he would surrender his outnumbered men without a fight.

`What are you staring at, Lieutenant?'

`Nothing, sir.' Trumper-Jones had thought Sharpe was watching the southern hills.

Sharpe was, but he had become aware of the Lieutenant's gaze, and he resented it. He hated being pointed out, being watched. He was comfortable these days only with his friends. He was also aware that he had sounded unnecessarily harsh to the young cavalry officer. He looked up at him. `We counted three guns. You agree?'

`Yes, sir.'

`Four pounders?'

`I think so, sir.'

Sharpe grunted. He watched the crest. He hoped the two questions would make him appear friendlier to the officer, though in truth Sharpe did not feel friendly to any strangers these days. He had been oppressed since Christmas, swinging between violent guilt and savage despair because his wife had died in the snows at the Gateway of God. Unbidden into his mind came the sudden picture of the blood at her throat. He shook his head, as if to drive the picture away. He felt guilty that she had died, he felt guilty that he had been unfaithful to her, he felt guilty that her love had been so badly returned, he felt guilty that he had let his daughter become motherless.

He had become poor through his guilt. His daughter, still not two years old, was growing up with her uncle and aunt, and Sharpe had taken all his savings, that he had stolen from the Spanish government in the first place, and given them to Antonia, his daughter. He had nothing left, except his sword, his rifle, his telescope, and the clothes on his back. He found himself resenting this young staff officer with his expensive horse and gilt scabbard furnishings and new leather boots.

There was a murmur in the ranks behind him. The men had seen the small figures who suddenly appeared on the southern crest. Sharpe turned round.

`Talion!' There was silence. `Talion! 'Shun!'

The mens' boots crashed on the wet rocks. They were in two ranks, stretched across the mouth of the small Valley which carried the road northwards.

Sharpe stared at them, knowing their nervousness. These were his men, of his Battalion, and he trusted them, even against this outnumbering enemy. `Sergeant Huckfield!'

`Sir!'

`Raise the Colours!'

The men, Lieutenant Michael Trumper-Jones thought, grinned most unfittingly for` such a solemn moment, then he saw why. The `Colours' were not the usual flags of a Battalion, instead they were scraps of cloth that had been tied to two stripped birch trunks. The rain made them hang limp and flat, so that from any distance it was impossible to see that the flags were nothing more than two cloaks tricked out with yellow facings torn from the jackets of the soldiers. At the head of the two staffs were wrapped more of the yellow cloth to resemble, at least at a distance, the crowns of England.

Sharpe saw the staff officer's surprise. `Half Battalions don't carry Colours, Mr Trumper-Jones.'

`No, sir.'

`And the French know that.'

`Yes, sir.'

`So what will they think?'

`That you have a full Battalion, sir?'

`Exactly.' Sharpe looked back to the south, leaving Michael Trumper-Jones curious as to why this deception was a necessary preliminary to surrender. He decided it was best not to ask. Major Sharpe's face discouraged casual questions.

And no wonder, for Major Richard Sharpe, as he stared at the southern ridge, was thinking that this river valley was a miserable, unfitting, and stupid place to die. He wondered, sometimes, if in death he would meet Teresa again, would see her thin, bright face that had always smiled a welcome; a face that, as her death receded, had lost the detail in his memory. He did not even have a picture of her, and his daughter, growing up in her Spanish family, had no picture of her mother or her father.

The army, Sharpe knew, would march away from Spain one day, and he would march with it, and his daughter would be left to life, just as he had been left orphaned as a small child. Misery begets misery, he thought, and then he remembered the consolation that Antonia's uncle and aunt were better, more loving parents than he could have been.

A gust of wind slapped rain over the valley, obscuring the view and hissing on the stones of the bridge. Sharpe looked up at the mounted staff officer. `What do you see, Lieutenant?'

`Six horsemen, sir.'

`They haven't got cavalry?'

`Not that we saw, sir.'

`That's their infantry officers then. Buggers will be planning our deaths now.' He smiled sourly. He wished this weather would end, that the sun would warm the land and push the memory of winter far behind him.

Then the skyline, where it was crossed by the road, was suddenly thick with the blue uniforms of the French. Sharpe counted the companies as they marched towards him. Six. They were the vanguard, the men who would be ordered to rush the bridge, but not till the French guns had been fetched into place.

That morning Sharpe had borrowed Captain Peter d'Alembord's horse and had ridden the French approach route a dozen times. He had put himself into the place of the opposing commander and had argued with himself until he was certain what the enemy would do. Now, as he watched, they were doing it.

The French knew that a large British force was behind them. They dared not leave the road, abandoning their guns to take to the hills, for then they would be meat for the Partisans. They would want to blast away this road-block swiftly, and their tools for the job would be their guns.

A hundred and fifty yards beneath the crest, where the road twisted for the last time towards the valley floor, there was a flat platform of rock that would make an ideal artillery platform. From there the French could plunge their canisters into Sharpe's two ranks, could twitch them bloody, and when the British were scattered and torn and wounded and dying, the infantry would charge the bridge with their bayonets. From the convenient rock platform the French guns could fire over the heads of their own infantry. The platform was made for the task, so much so that Sharpe had put a working party there this morning and made them clear the space of the boulders that might inconvenience the gunners.

He wanted the French guns there. He had invited the French to put their guns there.

He watched the three gun teams inch their way down the steep road. Infantrymen helped brake the wheels. Lower and lower they came. It was possible, he knew, that the guns might be brought to the flat land across from the bridge, but to stop that he had posted his handful of Riflemen from the South Essex Light Company on the river bank. The French would have seen them there, would fear the spinning accuracy of the bullets, and would, he hoped, choose to place the guns out of the rifles' range.

They so chose. Sharpe watched with relief as the teams swung onto the platform, as the weapons were unlimbered, and as the ready ammunition was brought forward.

Sharpe turned. `Unstop your muzzles!' The two red-coated ranks pulled the corks from their musket barrels and unwrapped the damp rags from the locks. `Present!'

The muskets went into the mens' shoulders. The French would see the movement. The French feared the speed of British musket fire, the well drilled rhythm of death that had scoured so many battlefields of Spain.

Sharpe turned away from his men. `Lieutenant?'

`Sir?' Michael Trumper-Jones answered in a squeak. He tried again in a deeper voice. `Sir?'

`Tie your handkerchief to your sabre.'

`But, sir.'

`You will obey orders, Lieutenant.' It was not said so loudly as to reach any ears other than Trumper-Jones`, but the words were harshly chilling.

`Yes, sir.'

The six attack companies of the French were two hundred and fifty yards away. They were in column, their bayonets fixed, ready to come forward when the guns had done their work.

Sharpe took the telescope from his haversack, extended the tubes, and looked at the guns. He could see the canisters, the tin cans that spread their balls in a fan of death, being carried to the muzzles of the three guns.

This was the moment when he hated being a Major. He must learn to delegate, to let other men do the dangerous, hard work, yet at this moment, as the French gunners made the last adjustments to the gun trails, he wished he was with the Company of Riflemen that he had been given for this day's work.

The first canister was pushed into a barrel.

`Now, Bill!' Sharpe said it aloud. Michael Trumper-jones wondered if he was supposed to reply and decided it was best to say nothing.

To the left of the road, from the high rocks that dominated the track, white puffs of smoke appeared. Seconds later Came the crack of the rifles. Already three of the gunners were down.

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