Sharpe 3-Book Collection 6: Sharpe's Honour, Sharpe's Regiment, Sharpe's Siege

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Sharpe 3-Book Collection 6: Sharpe's Honour, Sharpe's Regiment, Sharpe's Siege Page 76

by Bernard Cornwell


  Frederickson stared at Bampfylde. For a second he was tempted to dare Bampfylde to make good his threat, then, without a word, he turned and stalked from the room.

  Bampfylde smiled. ‘Shut the door, Bo’sun. Now, where were we, gentlemen?‘

  In the fort’s yard, carpenters from the Scylla hammered six inch nails into beams that, when all the work was done, would be raised to make a gallows for the morning where Cornelius Killick, instead of dancing scorn about the Navy, would dance attendance on a rope.

  Thomas Taylor, the Rifleman from Tennessee who had so far done his duty without murmur or protest, stopped Captain Frederickson close to the busy hammers. ‘Sir?’

  ‘It’ll stop, Taylor, I promise you.’

  Taylor, satisfied because of the fury on his captain’s face, stepped back. The air about the fort was ghostly with a mist that blurred the stars and touched frigid on Fredericks.on’s scarred skin. He saw his own anger mirrored in Taylor’s eyes and knew that loyalties were being stretched in this cold night. ‘It will stop,’ he promised again, then went to wake Sharpe.

  Sharpe struggled out of a dream in which he saw his wife as a flesh-rotted skeleton presiding at a tea-party. He groped for his sword, flinched from a stab of pain that seared in his bandaged head, then recognized the eye-patched face in the light of the horn-lantern that Frederickson carried. ‘Dawn already?’ Sharpe asked.

  ‘No, sir. But they’re beating the hell out of them, sir.’

  Sharpe sat up. It was piercingly cold in the room. ‘They’re doing what?’

  ‘The Americans.’ Frederickson told how the seamen were being dragged before Ford, while the officers were being entertained by Captain Bampfylde. Rifleman Taylor had woken Frederickson with the news, now Frederickson woke Sharpe. ‘They’ve found two deserters already.’

  Sharpe groaned as his head split with pain. ‘The deserters will have to hang.’ His tone conveyed that such men deserved nothing else.

  Frederickson nodded agreement. ‘But I gave my word to Killick that he would be treated like a gentleman. They’re half killing the poor bastard. And they’re all to hang, Bampfylde says, deserters or no.’

  ‘Oh, Christ.’ Sharpe pulled his boots on, not bothering to tuck his overall trousers into the leather. He put his arms into his jacket, then stood. ‘Bugger Bampfylde.’

  ‘Page nine, paragraph one of the King’s Regulations might be more appropriate, sir.’

  Sharpe frowned. ‘What?’

  “‘Post Captains,”’ Frederickson quoted, “‘commanding Ships or Vessels that do not give Post, rank only as Majors during their commanding such Vessels.”’

  Sharpe buttoned his jacket then buckled the snake hasp of his sword belt. ‘How the hell do you know that?’

  ‘I took care to look up the respective pages before we left, sir.’

  ‘Jesus. I should have done that!’ Sharpe snatched up his shako and led the way downstairs. ‘But he’s commanding the Vengeance! That gives Post and makes him a full Colonel!’

  ‘He’s not on board,’ Frederickson said persuasively, ‘and the Vengeance is a half mile offshore. If he commands anything, it’s the Scylla, and frigates aren’t Post.’

  Sharpe shrugged. The quibble seemed dubious grounds for taking command from Bampfylde.

  Frederickson clattered down the stairs behind Sharpe. ‘And may I remind you of the next paragraph?’

  ‘You’re going to anyway.’ Sharpe pushed open a door and went into the pitiless cold of the courtyard. The air stung his cheeks and brought tears to his eyes.

  “‘Nothing in these regulations is to authorize any Land Officer to command any of His Majesty’s Squadrons or Ships, nor any Sea Officer to command on Land.”’ Frederickson paused, raised his heel, and slammed it down on the iced cobbles. ‘Land, sir.’

  Sharpe stared at Frederickson. The carpenter’s mauls sounded like small cannons thumping to increase the throbbing agony of his skull. ‘I don’t give a damn, William, if they hang Killick. The bloody Americans shouldn’t be butting into this bloody war anyway, and I don’t give a tuppenny damn if we hang every mother’s son of them. But you gave your word?’

  ‘I did, sir.’

  ‘So I give a damn that your word’s kept.’

  Sharpe did not bother to knock on Bampfylde’s door, instead he kicked it in and the crack of the swinging wood slamming against the wall made Captain Bampfylde jump in alarm.

  This time there were two Rifle officers, both scarred, both with faces harder than rifle butts, and both displaying an anger that was chilling in the fire-heated room.

  Sharpe ignored Bampfylde. He crossed the room and stooped to the fallen men who had been further punched and kicked since Frederickson had left. Sharpe straightened and looked at the bo‘sun. ’Untie them.‘

  ‘Major Sharpe ...’ Bampfylde began, but Sharpe turned on him.

  ‘You will oblige me, Captain Bampfylde, by not interfering with my exercise of command on land.’

  Bampfylde understood instantly. He knew a quotation from the Regulations and he knew a lost battle. But a battle was not a campaign. ‘These men are the Navy’s prisoners.’

  ‘These men were captured by the Army, on land, where they were fighting as auxiliaries to the Imperial French Army.’ Sharpe was making it up as he went along. ‘They are my prisoners, my responsibility, and I order them untied!’ This last was to the captain’s barge crew who, startled by the sudden shout, stooped to the bound men.

  Captain Bampfylde wanted these Americans, but he wanted to preserve his dignity more. He knew that in a struggle over precedence, a struggle fuelled by legalistic interpretations of the Regulations, he would barely survive. He also felt the disarming touch of fear in the presence of these men. Bampfylde well knew what reputations came with Sharpe and Frederickson, and their ruffianly looks and scarred faces suggested that this was a battle Bampfylde could not win by force. Instead he would have to use subtlety, and in that knowledge he smiled. ‘We shall discuss their fate in the morning, Major.’

  ‘Indeed we will.’ Sharpe, somewhat surprised by the ease of his victory, turned to Frederickson. ‘Order the other Americans into proper confinement, Mr Frederickson. Use our men as guards. Then clear the kitchen and ask Sergeant Harper to join me there. Bring them.’ He nodded at the American officers.

  In the kitchens, Sharpe offered an awkward apology.

  Cornelius Killick, who was tearing a loaf of bread apart, cocked a bloodied eyebrow. ‘Apologize?’

  ‘You were given an officer’s word, and it was broken. I apologize.’

  Patrick Harper pushed open the kitchen door. ‘Captain Frederickson said you wanted me, sir?’

  ‘To be a cook, Sergeant. There’s some Frog soup on the stove.’

  ‘Pleasure, sir.’ Harper, whose face was almost back to its normal size and who seemed remarkably well recovered from his self-inflicted surgery, opened the stove’s fire-box and threw in driftwood. The kitchens were blessedly warm.

  ‘You’re Irish?’ Lieutenant Docherty suddenly asked Harper.

  ‘That I am. From Tangaveane in Donegal and a finer piece of God’s country doesn’t exist. It’s fish soup, sir,’ Harper said to Sharpe.

  ‘Tangaveane?’ The thin-faced lieutenant stared at Harper. ‘Then you’d be knowing Cashelnavean?’

  ‘On the road to Ballybofey? Where the old fort would be?’ Harper’s face suddenly took on a look of magical happiness. ‘I’ve walked that road more times than I remember, so I have.’

  ‘We farmed on the slopes there. Before the English took the land.’ Docherty gave Sharpe a sour, challenging look, but the English officer was leaning against the wall, apparently oblivious. ‘Docherty,’ Docherty said to Harper.

  ‘Harper. There was a Docherty,’ Harper said, ‘who had a smithy in Meencrumlin.’

  ‘My uncle.’

  ‘God save Ireland.’ Harper stared in wonder at the lieutenant. ‘And you from America? Do you hear that, sir? He has an uncle that used to ti
nker my ma’s pans.’

  ‘I heard,’ Sharpe spoke sourly. He was thinking that he had stuck his neck out and to small avail. He had saved these men for twelve hours, no more, and there were times, he thought, when a soldier should know when not to fight. Then he remembered how Ducos, the Frenchman, had treated him in Burgos and how a French officer had risked his career to save Sharpe, and Sharpe knew he could not have lived with his conscience if he had simply allowed Bampfylde to continue his savagery. These men might well be pirates, they probably did deserve the rope, but Frederickson had pledged his word. Sharpe walked to the table. ‘How are your wounds?’

  ‘I lost a tooth,’ Killick grinned to show the bloody gap.

  ‘That’s a fashion these days,’ Harper said equably from the range.

  Sharpe pulled a bottle of wine towards him and knocked the neck off against the table. ‘Are you pirates?’

  ‘Privateer,’ Killick said it proudly, ‘and legally licensed.’

  Frederickson, shivering from the cold in the yard, came through the door. ‘I’ve put the rest of the Jonathons in the guardroom. Rossner’s watching them.’ He looked towards the seated Americans. ‘I’m sorry, Mr Killick.’

  ‘Captain Killick,’ Killick said without rancour, ‘and thank you for what you did. Both of you.’ He held out a tin mug for wine. ‘When they dangle us at a rope’s end I’ll say that not every Britisher is a bastard.’

  Sharpe poured wine into Killick’s cup. ‘I saw you,’ he said, ‘at St Jean de Luz.’

  Killick gave a great, hoarse whoop of a laugh that reminded Sharpe of Wellington’s strange merriment. ‘That was a splendid day!’ Killick said. ‘We had them wetting their breeches, right enough!’

  Sharpe nodded, remembering Bampfylde’s fury in the dining-room as the naval captain had watched the American. ‘You did.’

  Killick felt in his pocket, realized he had no cigars, and shrugged. ‘Nothing in peace will offer such joy, will it?’ Sharpe made no reply and the American looked at his Lieutenant. ‘Perhaps we ought to become real pirates in peacetime, Liam?’

  ‘If we live that long.’ Docherty stared sourly at the Rifleman.

  ‘For an Irishman,’ Killick said to Sharpe, ‘he has an unnatural sense of reality. Are you going to hang us, Major?’

  ‘I’m feeding you.’ Sharpe avoided the question.

  ‘But in the morning,’ Killick said, ‘the sailormen will want us, won’t they?’

  Sharpe said nothing. Patrick Harper, by the stove, watched Sharpe and took a chance. ‘In the morning,’ he said softly, ‘we’ll be away from here, so we will, and more’s the pity.’

  Sharpe frowned because the sergeant had seen fit to interrupt, yet in truth he had asked for Harper’s presence because the good sense of the huge Ulsterman was something that he valued. Harper’s words had served two purposes; first to warn the Americans that the Riflemen could not control their fate, and secondly to tell Sharpe that the consensus, among the Green Jackets at least, was that a hanging would not be welcome. The Rifles had captured these Americans, had done it without bloodshed to either side, and they felt bitterly that the Navy should so high handedly decide to execute opponents whose only fault had been to fight with unrealistic hopes.

  No one spoke. Harper, his pennyworth contributed, turned back to the stove. Docherty stared at the scarred, stained table, while Killick, a half smile on his bruised face, watched Sharpe and thought that here was another English officer who did not match the image encouraged by the American news-sheets.

  Frederickson, still by the door, thought how alike Sharpe and the American were. The American was younger, but both had the same hard, good-looking face and both had the same savage recklessness in their eyes. It would be interesting, Frederickson decided, to see whether such similar men liked or hated each other.

  Sharpe seemed embarrassed by the encounter, as if he was uncertain what to do with this exotic and unfamiliar enemy. He turned to Harper instead. ‘Isn’t that soup ready?’

  ‘Not unless you want it cold, sir.’

  ‘A full belly,’ Killick said, ‘to make us hang heavier?’ No one responded.

  Sharpe was thinking that in the morning, once the Riflemen were gone, Bampfylde would string these Americans up like sides of beef. Ten minutes ago that thought had not upset Sharpe. Men were hanged in droves every day, and a hanging was prime entertainment in any town with a respectable sized population. Pirates had always been hanged and, besides, these Americans were the enemy. There were good reasons, therefore, to let the Thuella’s crew hang.

  Yet to reason thus, in cold blood, was one thing, and it was quite another to look across a table-top and apply that chilling reason to men whose only fault had been to pick a fight with Riflemen. There were French soldiers grown old in war who would have hesitated to take on Green Jackets, so should a seaman hang because of optimism? Besides, and though Sharpe knew this was not a reasonable objection, he found it hard to think of men who spoke his own language as enemies. Sharpe fought Frenchmen.

  Yet the law was the law, and in the morning Sharpe’s orders would take him far from this fort, and far from Cornelius Killick who would, abandoned to Bampfylde’s mercies, hang. That, Sharpe decided, was certain and so, unable to offer any reassurance, he poured wine instead. He wished Harper would hurry with the damned soup.

  Cornelius Killick, understanding all of Sharpe’s doubts from the troubled look on the Rifleman’s bandaged face, spoke a single word. ‘Listen.’

  Sharpe looked into Killick’s eyes, but the American said nothing more. ‘Well?’ Sharpe frowned.

  Killick smiled. ‘You hear nothing. No wind, Major. There’s not a breath of wind out there, nothing but frost and mist.’

  ‘So?’

  ‘So we have a saying back home, Major,’ the American was staring only at Sharpe, ‘that if you hang a sailorman in still airs, his soul can’t go to hell. So it lingers on earth to take another life as revenge.’ The American pointed at Sharpe. ‘Maybe your life, Major?’

  Killick could have said nothing more helpful to his cause. His words made Sharpe think of Jane, shivering in the cold sweat of her fever, and he thought, with sudden self-pity, that if she could not be saved then he would rather catch the fever and die with her than be in this cold, ice-slicked fort where the mist writhed silent about the stones.

  Killick, watching the hard face that was slashed by a casual scar, saw a shudder go through the Rifleman. He sensed that Docherty was about to speak and, rather than have their situation jeopardized by Irish hostility, he kicked his lieutenant to silence. Killick, who had spoken lightly enough before, knew that his words had struck a seam of feeling and he pressed his advantage with a gentle voice. ‘There’s no peace for a man who hangs a sailorman in a calm.’

  Their eyes met. Sharpe wondered whether the American’s words were true. Sharpe told himself it was nonsense, a superstition as baseless as any soldier’s talisman, yet the thought was irresistibly lodged. Sharpe had been cursed years before, his name buried on a stone, and his first wife had died within hours of that curse. He frowned. ‘The deserters must hang. That’s the law.’

  No one spoke. Harper waited for the soup to seethe and Frederickson leaned against the door. Docherty licked bloodied lips, then Killick smiled. ‘All my men are citizens of the United States, Major. What they were before is not your business, nor my President’s business, nor the business of the bloody law. They all have citizens’ papers!’ Killick ignored the fact that the certificates had been burned by Bampfylde.

  ‘You give those scraps of paper to anyone who volunteers; anyone!’ Sharpe said mockingly. ‘If a donkey could pull a trigger you’d make it into a citizen of the United States!’

  ‘And what do you give to your volunteers?’ Killick retorted with an equal scorn. ‘Everyone knows a murderer is forgiven his crime if he’ll join your Army! You expect us to be more delicate than your own service?’ There was no reply, and Killick smiled. ‘And I tell you now that none of
my men deserted the Royal Navy. Some may have fouled-anchor tattoos, some may have English voices, and some may have scarred backs, but I tell you now that they are all, every last jack of them, free-born citizens of the Republic.’

  Sharpe looked into the hard, bright eyes. ‘You tell me? Or do you swear to me?’

  ‘I’ll swear on every damned Bible in Massachusetts if you demand it.’ Which meant that Killick lied, but that he lied to protect his men, and Sharpe knew that he himself would tell just such a lie for his own men.

  ‘Thomas Taylor is American, Frederickson observed mildly to Sharpe. ’Would you approve of him being hanged if the tables were turned?‘

  And if he let them go, Sharpe thought, then the Navy would complain to the Admiralty and the Admiralty would huff and puff to the Horse Guards and the Horse Guards would write a letter to Wellington and all hell would break loose about Major Richard Sharpe’s head. Men like Wigram, the bores who worshipped proper procedure, would demand explanations and decree punishments.

  And if he did not let the Americans go, Sharpe thought, then a girl might die, and he would go back to St Jean de Luz to be shown the fresh, damp earth of her grave. Somehow he believed, with the fervour of a man who would cling to any hope, that he could buy Jane’s life by not hanging a sailorman in still airs. He had lost one wife by a curse; he could not risk it again.

  He was silent. The soup boiled and Harper shifted it from the flames. Killick, as if he did not care what the outcome of this meeting was, smiled. ‘A flat calm, Major, and the ice will mask our dead faces just because we fought like men for our own country.’

  ‘If I were to let you go,’ Sharpe spoke so quietly that, even in this night’s uncanny silence, Killick and Docherty had to lean forward to hear his voice, ‘would you give me your word, as American citizens, that neither of you, nor any man in your crew, here or absent, will take up arms against Britain for the rest of this war’s duration?’

  Sharpe had expected instant acceptance, even gratitude, but the tall American was wary. ‘Suppose I’m attacked?’

  ‘Then you run.’ Sharpe waited for a reply that did not come, then, to his astonishment, found himself pleading with a man not to choose a hanging. ‘I can’t stop Bampfylde hanging you, Killick. I don’t have the power. I can’t escort you into captivity; we’re a hundred miles behind enemy lines! So the Navy has to take you away from here and the Navy will string you up, all of you. But give me your word and I’ll release you.’

 

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