Sharpe 3-Book Collection 1: Sharpe's Tiger, Sharpe's Triumph, Sharpe's Fortress

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Sharpe 3-Book Collection 1: Sharpe's Tiger, Sharpe's Triumph, Sharpe's Fortress Page 34

by Bernard Cornwell


  The first rocket shuddered, then streaked away. The second went an instant later, then two more, and suddenly the whole cart was shaking and jerking as the rockets seethed away. A musket bullet hit the cart, another flicked dust from the corner of the building, but then there were no more shots, just shouts of terror as the missiles screamed between the alley’s close walls. Some of the rockets had solid shot in their nose cones, others had small charges of black powder, and those now began to explode. A man screamed. More rockets exploded, the sound of their blasts cramming the alley with noise while the missiles’ fierce trails filled the small street with smoke and flame. Sharpe waited till the last lit rocket flamed off the cart. “Now’s the hard bit,” he warned Lawford. He replaced the priming in his musket with a pinch from a fresh cartridge, then seized the handcart and pushed it in front of him down the alley. At least thirty of the rockets had fired, and the alley was now an inferno of boiling smoke amongst which a handful of live rockets still ricocheted or spun crazily while the carcasses of the spent weapons burned bright in the gloom. Sharpe charged into that chaos, hoping that the half-loaded cart would serve as a shield if any man still lived in the alley.

  Lawford charged with him. At least four men were still on their feet, while another had found shelter in a deep doorway, but they were all dazed by the violence of the rockets and half blinded by the thick smoke. Sharpe gave the cart a huge push to send it clattering toward them. One of the jettis saw the cart, dodged aside, and charged at Sharpe with a drawn sabre, but Lawford shot him with his musket, taking the huge man in the throat as quickly and cleanly as if he had been a pheasant rising from a brake. The cart struck two of the standing men and sent them reeling. Sharpe stamped on the head of one and kicked the other in the crotch. He slammed the butt of the musket onto the back of a Frenchman’s skull, then drove the weapon’s muzzle deep into a jetti’s belly and, as the man folded, he rammed the barrel into his face. The jetti screamed and staggered away, his hands clutched tight to one eye. Lawford had seized a fallen sword and sliced it savagely across another jetti’s neck and was so inspired and elated by battle that he did not even feel any revulsion when the man’s blood gushed out to hiss in the burning remnants of a rocket. Sergeant Rothière was on the ground with one of his legs broken by the strike of a rocket, but he cocked his musket and aimed the gun at Lawford, then the Sergeant heard Sharpe behind him and tried to swing the musket round. Sharpe was too close and too fast. He felled Rothière with a huge swing of his gun. He felt the butt break the Sergeant’s skull. The gun was still loaded, so he reversed it and snarled a challenge as he peered through the choking smoke. He could see no danger now, just wounded men, dead men, and flickering rocket cases. The mine’s trail, a snaking length of quick fuse, had somehow escaped the fire of the rockets and lay discarded beside the toppled barrel in which Rothière had been keeping a lit linstock. Sharpe moved toward the barrel, then heard the click of a gun being cocked.

  “That’s far enough, Sharpe.” It was Colonel Gudin who spoke. He was behind Sharpe. The Colonel had been waiting for the Tippoo’s signal on the inner ramparts just beside the gatehouse, but he had jumped down onto a rooftop and then into the alley and now he aimed his pistol at Sharpe. Lawford, sabre in hand, was a half-dozen paces away, too far to help. Gudin jerked the pistol. “Put the musket down, Sharpe.” Gudin spoke calmly.

  Sharpe had turned with the musket at his hip. The Colonel was only three or four paces away. “Put your pistol down, sir,” Sharpe said.

  A slight look of regret crossed the Colonel’s face as he straightened his arm to take more careful aim. Sharpe fired as soon as he saw the small movement and though he had not aimed the musket, but fired it from the hip, his bullet struck the Colonel high on his right shoulder so that Gudin’s pistol arm flew into the air. “Sorry, sir,” Sharpe said, and then he ran to where one of the spent rockets still had weak flames burning from its exhaust. He carried the flaming carcass to the end of the quick fuse and there paused to listen. He could hear cannons firing, and knew they must be the Tippoo’s guns, for no British artilleryman would dare fire now for fear of hitting the assaulting troops. He could hear musket fire, but he could not hear the massive, deep-throated roar of men coming into the breach. The Forlorn Hope alone must be fighting, and that meant the space between the walls must still be clear of British soldiers. He stooped to put the rocket’s feeble flames to the waiting fuse, but Lawford pushed his arm aside. Sharpe looked up at the Lieutenant. “Sir?”

  “Best to leave the mine alone, I think, Sharpe. Our men might be too close.”

  Sharpe still held the burning tube. “Just you and me, sir, eh?”

  “You and me, Sharpe?” Lawford asked, puzzled.

  “In five minutes, sir, when the Tippoo wonders why his fireworks aren’t going off? And he sends a dozen men to find out what’s happening. You and me? We’re going to fight all those buggers off alone?”

  Lawford hesitated. “I don’t know,” he said uncertainly.

  “I do, sir,” Sharpe said, and he pushed the burning rocket onto the fuse and immediately a quick and bitter fire began to fizzle and spark down the powder-impregnated rope. Gudin tried to stub it out with his foot, but Sharpe unceremoniously shoved the Frenchman aside. “Are you hurt bad, sir?” he asked Gudin.

  “Broken shoulder, Sharpe.” Gudin looked close to tears, not because of his wound, but because he had failed in his duty. “I’ve no doubt Doctor Venkatesh will mend it. How did you escape?”

  “Killed a tiger, sir, and some more of those jetti buggers.”

  Gudin smiled sadly. “The Tippoo should have killed you when he had the chance.”

  “We all make mistakes, sir,” Sharpe said as he watched the fire burn through the stone barricade that had been piled up in front of the ancient archway’s gates. “I reckon we’d better get you into cover, sir,” he said, and he pulled an unwilling Gudin into a doorway where Lawford was already crouching. The smoke was thinning from the alley. A wounded jetti was crawling blindly against the farther wall, another was vomiting, and Sergeant Rothière was groaning. There was blood bubbling at the Sergeant’s nostrils, and the back of his head was black with gore.

  “I reckon you’ve just made Sergeant, Sharpe,” Lawford said.

  Sharpe smiled. “I reckon I have, sir.”

  “Well done, Sergeant Sharpe.” Lawford held out a hand. “A good day’s work.”

  Sharpe shook his officer’s hand. “But the day’s work ain’t done yet, sir.”

  “It isn’t?” Lawford asked. “For God’s sake, man, what else are you planning?”

  But Lawford never heard what Sergeant Sharpe answered, for at that moment the mine blew.

  CHAPTER 11

  The Tippoo’s engineers had done their work well. Not all the mine’s force was directed northwards, but the greater part of it was, and that part was devastating. The explosion scoured the space between the inner and outer walls, a space that should have been packed with British soldiers.

  To Sharpe, peering around the doorway, it at first looked as though the whole squat gatehouse disintegrated; not into rubble and dust, but into its constituent stones, for the dressed granite blocks all jarred slightly apart as the ancient building bulged from the terrible pressure of the fire within. Dust sprang from every opened crevice as the big stones separated cleanly along their mortared joints, then Sharpe lost sight of the collapsing gatehouse because there was suddenly nothing but dust, smoke, flame, and noise. He jerked back into shelter and covered his head with his arms when the noise boomed past him just an instant after he had seen the dust whip past the doorway as the gases escaped from the expanding fire.

  The noise seemed to go on forever. First there was the swelling bang of the powder exploding, then the grinding crash of stones cracking and tumbling and the whistle of shards whirling away across the city, and then there was a ringing in Sharpe’s ears and above the ringing, but sounding as far away and as thin as the trumpet that had heralded the a
ssault, the screams of men caught by fire or blast or stone. After that came the sound of a wind, an unnatural wind that scoured thatch off houses, threw down tiles, and raised dust devils in streets a quarter of a mile away from the explosion.

  The men on the walls nearest the gatehouse saw nothing, unless it was the flash that ended their lives, for the explosion plucked the Tippoo’s defenders clean off the ramparts south of the breach. The wall itself was undamaged, even where it ran past the gatehouse, for there the old outer archway was blown out like a bung and a monstrous jet of smoky flame jetted from the city wall to vent the explosive’s power safely beneath the ramparts, but the squat tower over the old gateway fell. It collapsed slowly, sliding down into the space between the inner and outer walls. Scraps of brick and stone arched up and outward, splashing in the river just ahead of Baird’s advancing columns. More scraps of stone rained down on the city.

  The noise slowly faded. The ringing in Sharpe’s ears diminished until he could hear a man whimpering somewhere in the horror. He peered out again and saw that the explosion had scoured the alley of dead and wounded men. There was no sign of the handcart. There was nothing except broken stone, burning thatch, and smears of blood.

  North of the breach, where the lick of flame and blast had been lessened by distance, the defenders were dizzied by noise. Their banners of gold and scarlet and green silk whipped stiff in the blast as men crouched in embrasures or reeled like drunks before the hot wind. The Tippoo’s heroes who had volunteered to fight the Forlorn Hopes on the breach were killed almost to a man, for they were on the inner side of the breach where nothing could save them, while the survivors of the Forlorn Hopes, thrust back by the first charge of the Tippoo’s men, had been shielded by the southern shoulder of the broken wall.

  In the breach itself there was a vast veil of swirling dust. A huge boiling pyre of smoke churned above the walls, but the breach, for a moment at least, was undefended. The Tippoo’s men who should have been guarding the shoulders of the breach were either dead or so shocked as to be unable to respond, while the men on the inner wall had ducked down as the terrible noise and heat and dust pounded about them. Most of them still crouched, fearful of the strange silence that followed the explosion.

  “Now, boys, now!” a man shouted on the breach, and die survivors of the Forlorn Hopes climbed into the smoke, then up the broken stonework of the walls. They choked on the airborne dust and their red coats were whitened by it, but they were men who had steeled themselves to the worst ordeal of war, the storming of a breach, and the steel was hard and cold in their souls so that they were scarcely aware of the horror of the last few seconds, only of the need to climb the shoulders of the breach and start their killing. Those who went south found an empty wall, while those who went north climbed to meet dazed men. The redcoats and sepoys had expected no mercy in this assault and were prepared to show none, and so they began their slaughter. “Pigsticking time, lads!” one corporal shouted. He stabbed his bayonet into a wild-eyed man and rid his blade of the body’s encumbrance by shaking the corpse over the inner ramparts’ edge. His comrades stormed past him, their blood whipped into rage by the fear of being the first men into the enemy citadel. Now, up on the ramparts, they killed in a frenzy to let their fear escape in a torrent of enemy blood.

  Baird had still been west of the river when the explosion occurred and he had felt a momentary pang of horror as the great blast blossomed in the city. For a terrible second he thought the whole city, all its houses and temples and palaces, was about to disintegrate before his eyes, but he had kept moving, indeed he had quickened his pace so that he splashed into the South Cauvery while the debris was still falling. He waded the shallows as all around him the river foamed with falling stone, and he shouted incomprehensibly, desperate to take his heavy sword to the enemy that had once imprisoned him. The dust obscuring the breach shifted as a snatch of wind caught and whirled it northwards and Baird saw that his Forlorn Hopes were on the walls now. He saw some red coats, oddly whitened, moving north, then he glimpsed a rush of the enemy coming from the southern bastions to replace the defenders who had been scoured from the ramparts by the explosion. Those reinforcements were running past a great roiling gray-white plume of smoke amongst which pale flames licked the sky. Baird assumed the explosion had been the Tippoo’s feared mine, but his horror at its force turned to exultation as he realized that the blast had been premature and that, instead of slaughtering his men, it had opened the city to storm. But he also recognized that the enemy was now waking from his nightmare and rushing men to face the attack, and so Baird hurried out of the river, through the shattered glacis, and up the breach that was now vividly slicked with great splashes of fresh blood. He chose to turn southward to help that Forlorn Hope face the rush of the Tippoo’s reinforcements.

  Behind Baird the twin columns of redcoats splashed through the river. Each column had three thousand men, and their task was to encircle the city and so capture the whole ring of Seringapatam’s walls and bastions and towers and gates, but the Tippoo’s men were recovering their wits now and the invading streams were at last being opposed. Muskets blasted down from ramparts, concealed guns were unmasked, and rockets streaked away from the parapets. Canister and round shot slashed down at the two columns, the missiles exploding high gouts of water as they struck the river. Sepoys and redcoats fell. Some crawled to safety, others were carried downstream, while the least fortunate were trampled by the boots of the men crossing the river. The leading troops of each column scrambled up the broken shoulders of the walls. The engineers shoved ladders against those shoulders, and still more men climbed their rungs to the ramparts.

  And there the fight changed. Now, on the narrow firestep of the outer wall, the columns had to force their way forward, but the Tippoo’s men were firing volley after volley into the attackers’ ranks. The most damaging fire came from the inner wall, for there the Tippoo’s men were protected by a parapet while the British and their Indian allies had no such protection on the inner side of the captured outer wall. Men fired at them from their front, and a torrent of fire came from their flank, yet still they pushed on, consumed by the blind rage of war. The only way to survive horror was to win through, and so they stepped over the dead to fire their muskets, then crouched to reload while the ranks behind pushed on. The wounded fell, some of them tumbling down to the inner ditch, while behind them, in the foaming river, the tails of the two columns hurried on toward the battle.

  The breach had been taken, but the city had not fallen yet. The sepoys and the redcoats had taken a hundred yards of the outer wall on either side of the breach, but the Tippoo’s soldiers were fighting back hard, and the Tippoo himself led the defenders north of the breach. The Tippoo had cursed Gudin for blowing the mine too early and thus wasting its terrible destructive power, but now he tried to revive the defense by his personal example. He stood in the front rank of his soldiers while behind him a succession of aides loaded jewel-encrusted hunting rifles. One by one the rifles were given to the Tippoo who aimed and fired, aimed and fired, and redcoat after redcoat was struck down. Whenever an enemy tried to rush along the ramparts, the Tippoo would drop that man, then pass the gun back, take another, step forward through the powder smoke, and fire again. Musket balls hissed about him. Two of his aides were wounded and a score of soldiers fighting at the Tippoo’s side were killed or maimed, but the Tippoo’s life seemed charmed. He stepped in blood, but none of it was his and it seemed as though he could not die, but only kill, and so he did, cold-bloodedly, deliberately, exultantly defending his city and his dream against the barbarians who had come to snatch his tiger throne.

  The fight on the walls intensified as more men came to the threatened ramparts. The men in red came from the river and the men in tiger stripes came from other parts of the city wall, and both came to kill on top of the wall: a narrow place, scarce five paces wide, lifted in the sky.

  Where the vultures flew, scenting death.

  Sh
arpe scooped up three fallen muskets from the end of the alley where they had been blown by the explosion. He checked that his new guns were undamaged, loaded the two which were empty, then went back to Lawford. “You stay with the Colonel, sir,” he suggested, “and put your coat right side out. Lads will be here soon. And when they’re here, sir, you might like to find Lali.”

  Lawford colored. “Lali?”

  “Look after her, sir. I promised the lass she’d come to no harm.”

  “You did?” Lawford asked with a trace of indignation. He was wondering just how well Sharpe knew the girl, then he decided it was better not to ask. “Of course I’ll look after her,” Lawford said, still blushing, then he noted that Sharpe, despite his own advice, had still not donned his red coat. “Where are you going?” the Lieutenant asked.

  “Got a job to do, sir,” Sharpe answered vaguely. “And, sir? Can I thank you, sir? I couldn’t have done any of this without you.” Sharpe was not used to offering such heartfelt compliments and he spoke awkwardly. “You’re a brave bugger, sir, you really are.”

  Lawford felt absurdly pleased. He knew he should have stopped Sharpe from leaving, for this was no time for a man to be roaming Seringapatam’s streets, but Sharpe was already gone. Lawford turned his coat the right side out and pushed his arms through the sleeves. Gudin, beside him, waved away a fly and wondered why the dust and smoke did not keep the pests away. “What will they do with me, Lieutenant?” he asked Lawford.

 

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