The widow boiled the stringy flesh which tasted foul, but it was still meat and Sharpe wolfed it down as though he had not eaten in months. The smell of the meat roused Colonel McCandless who sat up in his bed and frowned at the pot. “I could almost eat that,” he said.
“You want some, sir?”
“I haven’t eaten meat in eighteen years, Sharpe, I won’t start now.” He ran a hand through his lank white hair. “I do declare I’m feeling better, God be praised.”
The Colonel swung his feet onto the floor and tried to stand. “But I’m weak as a kitten,” he said.
“Plate of meat will put some strength in you, sir.”
“’Get thee behind me, Satan,’” the Colonel said, then put a hand on one of the posts which held up the roof and hauled himself to his feet. “I might take a walk tomorrow.”
“How’s the leg, sir?”
“Mending, Sharpe, mending.” The Colonel put some weight on his left leg and seemed pleasantly surprised that it did not buckle. “God has preserved me again.”
“Thank God for that, sir.”
“I do, Sharpe, I do.”
Next morning the Colonel felt better still. He ducked out of the hut and blinked in the bright sunlight. “Have you seen any soldiers these last two weeks?”
“Not a one, sir. Nothing but farmers.”
The Colonel scraped a hand across the white bristles on his chin. “A shave, I think. Would you be so kind as to fetch my box of razors? And perhaps you could heat some water?”
Sharpe dutifully put a pot of water on the fire, then stropped one of the Colonel’s razors on a saddle’s girth strap. He was just perfecting the edge when McCandless called him from outside the house. “Sharpe!”
Something in McCandless’s voice made Sharpe snatch up his musket, then he heard the beat of hooves as he ducked under the low doorway and he hauled back the musket’s cock in expectation of enemies, but McCandless waved the weapon down. “I said Sevajee would find us!” the Colonel said happily. “Nothing stays secret in this countryside, Sharpe.”
Sharpe lowered the musket’s flint as he watched Sevajee lead his men towards the widow’s house. The young Indian grinned at McCandless’s disheveled condition. “I heard there was a white devil near here, and I knew it would be you.”
“I wish you’d come sooner,” McCandless grumbled.
“Why? You were ill. The folks I spoke to said you would die.” Sevajee slid out of the saddle and led his horse to the well. “Besides, we’ve been too busy.”
“Following Scindia, I trust?” the Colonel asked.
“Here, there and everywhere.” Sevajee hauled up a skin of water and held it under his horse’s nose. “They’ve been south, east, back north again. But now they’re going to hold a durbar, Colonel.”
“A durbar!” McCandless brightened, and Sharpe wondered what on earth a durbar was.
“They’ve gone to Borkardan,” Sevajee announced happily. “All of them! Scindia, the Rajah of Berar, the whole lot! A sea of enemies.”
“Borkardan,” McCandless said, summoning a mental map in his head. “Where’s that? Two days’ march north?”
“One for a horseman, two on foot,” Sevajee agreed.
McCandless, his shave forgotten, stared northwards. “But how long will they stay there?”
“Long enough,” Sevajee said gleefully, “and first they have to make a place fit for a prince’s durbar and that will take them two or three days, and then they’ll talk for another two or three days. And they need to rest their animals, too, and in Borkardan they’ve found plenty of forage.”
“How do you know?” McCandless asked.
“Because we met some brindarries,” Sevajee said with a smile, and turned at the same time to indicate four small, lean and riderless horses that were the trophies of that meeting. “We had a talk with them,” Sevajee said airily, and Sharpe wondered how brutal that talk had been. “Forty thousand infantry, sixty thousand cavalry,” Sevajee said, “and over a hundred guns.”
McCandless limped back into the house to fetch paper and ink from his saddlebag. Then, back in the sunlight, he wrote a dispatch and Sevajee detailed six of his horsemen to take the precious news south as fast as they could. They would need to search for Wellesley’s army and Sevajee told them to whip their horses bloody because, if the British moved fast, there was a chance to catch the Mahrattas while they were encamped for their durbar and then to attack them before they could form their battle array. “That would even things up,” McCandless announced happily. “A surprise attack!”
“They’re not fools,” Sevajee warned, “they’ll have a host of picquets.”
“But it takes time to organize a hundred thousand men, Sevajee, a lot of time! They’ll be milling about like sheep while we march into battle!”
The six horsemen rode away with the precious dispatch and McCandless, tired again, let Sharpe shave him. “All we can do now is wait,” the Colonel said.
“Wait?” Sharpe asked indignantly, believing that McCandless was implying that they would do nothing while the battle was being fought.
“If Scindia’s at Borkardan,” the Colonel said, “then our armies will have to march this way to reach him. So we might as well wait for them to come to us. Then we can join up again.”
It was time to stop dreaming. It was time to fight.
* * *
Wellesley’s army had crossed the Godavery and marched towards Aurungabad, then heard that Scindia’s forces had gone far to the east before lunging south towards the heartland of Hyderabad, and the report made sense for the old Nizam had just died and left a young son on the throne and a young ruler’s state could make for rich pickings, and so Wellesley had turned his small army and hurried back to the Godavery. They laboriously recrossed the river, swimming the horses, bullocks and elephants to the southern bank, and floating the guns, limbers and wagons across on rafts. The men used boats made from inflated bladders, and it took two whole days to make the crossing and then, after a day’s march south towards threatened Hyderabad, more news came that the enemy had turned about and gone back northwards.
“Don’t know what they’re bleeding doing,” Hakeswill declared.
“Captain Mackay says we’re looking for the enemy,” Private Lowry suggested helpfully.
“Looking for his arse, more like. Bloody Wellesley.” Hakeswill was sitting beside the river, watching the bullocks being goaded back into the water to cross once again to the north bank. “In the water, out the water, up one road, down the next, walk in bleeding circles, then back through the bleeding river again.” His blue eyes opened wide in indignation and his face twitched. “Arthur Wellesley should never be a general.”
“Why not, Sarge?” Private Kendrick asked, knowing that Hakeswill wanted the opportunity to explain.
“Stands to reason, lad, stands to reason.” Hakeswill paused to light a clay pipe. “No bleeding experience. You remember that wood outside Seringapatam? Bloody chaos, that’s what it was, bloody chaos and who caused it? He did, that’s who.” He gestured at Wellesley who, mounted on a tall white horse, had come to the bluff above the river. “He’s a general,” Hakeswill explained, “because his father’s an earl and because his elder brother’s the Governor General, that’s why. If my father had been a bleeding earl, then I’d be a bleeding general, says so in the scriptures. Lord Obadiah Hakeswill, I’d be, and you wouldn’t see me buggering about like a dog chasing fleas up its arse. I’d bleeding well get the job done. On your feet, lads, look smart now!”
The General, with nothing to do except wait while his army crossed the river, had turned his horse up the bank and his path brought him close to where Hakeswill had been seated. Wellesley looked across, recognized the Sergeant and seemed about to turn away, but then an innate courtesy overcame his distaste for speaking with the lower ranks. “Still here, Sergeant?” he asked awkwardly.
“Still here, sir,” Hakeswill said. He was quivering at attention, his clay pipe thrust i
nto a pocket and his firelock by his side. “Doing my duty, sir, like a soldier.”
“Your duty?” Wellesley asked. “You came to arrest Sergeant Sharpe, isn’t that right?”
“Sir!” Hakeswill affirmed.
The General grimaced. “Let me know if you see him. He’s with Colonel McCandless, and they both seem to be missing. Dead, probably.” And on that cheerful note the General tugged on his reins and spurred away.
Hakeswill watched him go, then retrieved his clay pipe and sucked the tobacco back to glowing life. Then he spat onto the bank. “Sharpie ain’t dead,” he said malevolently. “I’m the one who’s going to kill Sharpie. Says so in the scriptures.”
Then Captain Mackay arrived and insisted that Hakeswill and his six men help organize the transfer of the bullocks across the river. The animals carried packs loaded with spare round shot for the artillery, and the Captain had been provided with two rafts for that precious ammunition. “They’re to transfer the shot to the rafts, understand? Then swim the beasts over. I don’t want chaos, Sergeant. Make them line up decently. And make sure they don’t roll the shot into the river to save themselves the bother of reloading it.”
“It isn’t a soldier’s job,” Hakeswill complained when the Captain was gone. “Chivvying bullocks? I ain’t a bleeding Scotchman. That’s all they’re good for, chivvying bullocks. Do it all the time, they do, down the green roads to London, but it ain’t a job for an Englishman.” But he nevertheless did an effective job, using his bayonet to prod men and animals into the queue which slowly snaked its way down to the water. By nightfall the whole army was over, and next morning, long before dawn, they marched north again. They camped before midday, thus avoiding the worst of the heat, and by mid-afternoon the first enemy cavalry patrols showed in the distance and the army’s own cavalry rode out to drive the horsemen away.
They did not move at all for the next two days. Cavalry scouts tried to discover the enemy’s intentions, while Company spies spread gold throughout the north country in search of news, but the gold was wasted for every scrap of intelligence was contradicted by another. One said Holkar had joined Scindia, another said Holkar was declaring war on Scindia, then the Mahrattas were said to be marching west, or east, or perhaps north, until Wellesley felt he was playing a slow version of blind man’s buff.
Then, at last, some reliable news arrived. Six Mahratta horsemen in the service of Syud Sevajee came to Wellesley’s camp with a hastily written dispatch from Colonel McCandless. The Colonel regretted his absence and explained that he had taken a wound that had been slow to heal, but he could assure Sir Arthur that he had not abandoned his duty and could thus report, with a fair degree of certainty, that the forces of Dowlut Rao Scindia and the Rajah of Berar had finally ceased their wanderings at Borkardan. They planned to stay there, McCandless wrote, to hold a durbar and to let their animals recover their strength, and he estimated those intentions implied a stay in Borkardan of five or six days. The enemy numbered, he reported, at least eighty thousand men and possessed around a hundred pieces of field artillery, many of inferior caliber, but an appreciable number throwing much heavier shot. He reckoned, from his own earlier observations in Pohlmann’s camp, that only fifteen thousand of the enemy’s infantry were trained to Company standards, while the rest were makeweights, but the guns, he added ominously, were well served and well maintained. The dispatch had been written in a hurry, and in a shaky hand, but it was concise, confident and comprehensive.
The Colonel’s dispatch drove the General to his maps and then to a flurry of orders. The army was readied to march that night, and a galloper went to Colonel Stevenson’s force, west of Wellesley’s, with orders to march north on a parallel course. The two small armies should combine at Borkardan in four days’ time. “That will give us, what?” Wellesley thought for a second or two. “Eleven thousand prime infantry and forty-eight guns.” He jotted the figures on the map, then absent-mindedly tapped the numbers with a pencil. “Eleven thousand against eighty,” he said dubiously, then grimaced. “It will serve,” he concluded, “it will serve very well.”
“Eleven against eighty will serve, sir?” Captain Campbell asked with astonishment. Campbell was the young Scottish officer who had thrice climbed the ladder to be the first man into Ahmednuggur and his reward had been a promotion and an appointment as Wellesley’s aide. Now he stared at the General, a man Campbell considered as sensible as any he had ever met, yet the odds that Wellesley was welcoming seemed insane.
“I’d rather have more men,” Wellesley admitted, “but we can probably do the job with eleven thousand. You can forget Scindia’s cavalry, Campbell, because it won’t manage a thing on a battlefield, and the Rajah of Berar’s infantry will simply get in everyone else’s way, which means we’ll be fighting against fifteen thousand good infantry and rather too many well-served guns. The rest don’t matter. If we beat the guns and the infantry, the rest of them will run. Depend on it, they’ll run.”
“Suppose they adopt a defensive position, sir?” Campbell felt impelled to insert a note of caution into the General’s hopes. “Suppose they’re behind a river, sir? Or behind walls?”
“We can suppose what we like, Campbell, but supposing is only fancy, and if we take fright at fancies then we might as well abandon soldiering. We’ll decide how to deal with the rogues once we find them, but the first thing to do is find them.” Wellesley rolled up the map. “Can’t kill your fox till you’ve run him down. So let’s be about our business.”
The army marched that night. Six thousand cavalry, nearly all of them Indian, led the way, and behind them were twenty-two pieces of artillery, four thousand sepoys of the East India Company and two battalions of Scots, while the great clumsy tail of bullocks, wives, children, wagons and merchants brought up the rear. They marched hard, and if any man was daunted by the size of the enemy’s army, they showed no sign of it. They were as well trained as any men that had ever worn the red coat in India, they had been promised victory by their long-nosed General, and now they were going for the kill. And, whatever the odds, they believed they would win. So long as no one blundered.
Borkardan was a mere village with no building fit for a prince, and so the great durbar of the Mahratta chiefs was held in an enormous tent that was hastily made by sewing a score of smaller tents together, then lining the canvas with swathes of brightly colored silk, and it would have made a marvelously impressive structure had the heavens not opened when the durbar began so that the sound of men’s voices was half drowned by the beat of rain on stretched canvas and if the hastily made seams had not opened to let the water pour through in streams.
“It’s all a waste of time,” Pohlmann grumbled to Dodd, “but we have to attend.” The Colonel was fixing his newly tied stock with a diamond-studded pin. “And it isn’t a time for any European opinion except mine, understand?”
“Yours?” Dodd, who had rather hoped to make a case for boldness, asked dourly.
“Mine,” Pohlmann said forcibly. “I want to twist their tails, and I need every European officer nodding like a demented monkey in agreement with me.”
A hundred men had gathered under the dripping silk. Scindia, the Maharajah of Gwalior, and Bhonsla, the Rajah of Berar, sat on musnuds, elegant raised platform-thrones that were draped in brocade and sheltered from the intrusive rain by silk parasols. Their Highnesses were cooled by men waving long-handled fans while the rest of the durbar sweltered in the close, damp heat. The high-class brahmins, all in baggy trousers cut from gold brocade, white tunics and tall white turbans, sat closest to the two thrones, while behind them stood the military officers, Indian and European, who were perspiring in their finest uniforms. Servants moved unobtrusively through the crowd offering silver dishes of almonds, sweetmeats or raisins soaked in arrack. The three senior European officers stood together. Pohlmann, in a purple coat hung with golden braid and loops of chain, towered over Colonel Dupont, a wiry Dutchman who commanded Scindia’s second compoo, and over
Colonel Saleur, a Frenchman, who led the infantry of the Begum Somroo. Dodd lingered just behind the trio and listened to their private durbar. The three men agreed that their troops would have to take the brunt of the British attack, and that one of them must exercise overall command. It could not be Saleur, for the Begum Somroo was a client ruler of Scindia’s, so her commander could hardly take precedence over her feudal overlord’s officers, which meant that it had to be either Dupont or Pohlmann, but the Dutchman generously ceded the honor to the Hanoverian. “Scindia would have chosen you anyway,” Dupont said.
“Wisely,” Pohlmann said cheerfully, “very wisely. You’re content, Saleur?”
“Indeed,” the Frenchman said. He was a tall, dour man with a badly scarred face and a formidable reputation as a disciplinarian. He was also reputed to be the Begum Somroo’s lover, a post that evidently accompanied the command of that lady’s infantry. “What are the bastards talking about now?” he asked in English.
Pohlmann listened for a few seconds. “Discussing whether to retreat to Gawilghur,” he said. Gawilghur was a hill fort that lay north and east of Borkardan and a group of brahmins were urging the army to retire there and let the British break their skulls against its cliffs and high walls. “Goddamn brahmins,” Pohlmann said in disgust. “Don’t know a damn thing about soldiering. Know how to talk, but not how to fight.”
But then an older brahmin, his white beard reaching to his waist, stood up and declared that the omens were more suitable for battle. “You have assembled a great army, dread Lord,” he addressed Scindia, “and you would lock it away in a citadel?”
“Where did they find him?” Pohlmann muttered. “He’s actually talking sense!”
Sharpe 3-Book Collection 1: Sharpe's Tiger, Sharpe's Triumph, Sharpe's Fortress Page 57