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 62

by Bernard Cornwell


  Sevajee and his men had ridden ahead, but when they reached a crest some two hundred yards in front of McCandless they suddenly wrenched on their reins and swerved back. Sharpe expected to see a horde of Mahratta cavalry come boiling over the crest, but the skyline stayed empty as Sevajee and his men halted a few yards short of the ridge and there dismounted.

  “You’ll not want them to see you, Colonel,” Sevajee said dryly when McCandless caught up.

  “Them?”

  Sevajee gestured at the crest. “Take a look. You’ll want to dismount.”

  McCandless and Sharpe both slid from their saddles, then walked to the skyline where a cactus hedge offered concealment and from where they could stare at the country to the north and Sharpe, who had never seen such a sight before, simply gazed in amazement.

  It was not an army. It was a horde, a whole people, a nation. Thousands upon thousands of the enemy, all in line, mile after mile of them. Men and women and children and guns and camels and bullocks and rocket batteries and horses and tents and still more men until there seemed to be no end to them. “Jesus!” Sharpe said, the imprecation torn from him.

  “Sharpe!”

  “Sorry, sir.” But no wonder he had sworn, for Sharpe had never imagined that an army could look so vast. The nearest men were no more than half a mile away, beyond a discolored river that flowed between steep mud banks. A village lay on the nearer bank, but on the northern side, just beyond the mud bluff, there was a line of guns. Big guns, the same painted and sculpted cannon that Sharpe had seen in Pohlmann’s camp. Beyond the guns was the infantry and behind the infantry, and spreading far out of sight to the east, was a mass of cavalry and beyond them the myriad of camp followers. More infantry were posted about a distant village where Sharpe could just see a cluster of bright flags. “How many are there?” he asked.

  “At least a hundred thousand men?” McCandless ventured.

  “At least,” Sevajee agreed, “but most are adventurers come for loot.” The Indian was peering through a long ivory-clad telescope. “And the cavalry won’t help in a battle.”

  “It’ll be down to these fellows,” McCandless said, indicating the infantry just behind the gun line. “Fifteen thousand?”

  “Fourteen or fifteen,” Sevajee said. “Too many.”

  “Too many guns,” McCandless said gloomily. “It’ll be a retreat.”

  “I thought we came here to fight!” Sharpe said belligerently.

  “We came here expecting to rest, then march on Borkardan tomorrow,” McCandless said testily. “We didn’t come here to take on the whole enemy army with just five thousand infantry. They know we’re coming, they’re ready for us and they simply want us to walk into their fire. Wellesley’s not a fool, Sharpe. He’ll march us back, link up with Stevenson, then find them again.”

  Sharpe felt a pang of relief that he would not discover the realities of battle, but the relief was tempered by a tinge of disappointment. The disappointment surprised him, and the relief made him fear he might be a coward.

  “If we retreat,” Sevajee warned, “those horsemen will harry us all the way.”

  “We’ll just have to fight them off,” McCandless said confidently, then let out a long satisfied breath. “Got him! There, the left flank!” He pointed and Sharpe saw, far away at the very end of the enemy gunline, a scatter of white uniforms. “Not that it helps us,” McCandless said wryly, “but at least we’re on his heels.”

  “Or he’s on ours,” Sevajee said, then he offered his telescope to Sharpe. “See for yourself, Sergeant.”

  Sharpe rested the glass’s long barrel on a thick cactus leaf. He moved the lens slowly along the line of infantry. Men slept in the shade, some were in their small tents and others sat in groups and he could have sworn a few were gambling. Officers, Indian and European, strolled behind their men, while in front of them the massive line of guns waited with their ammunition limbers. He moved the glass to the very far left of the enemy line and saw the white jackets of Dodd’s men, and saw something else. Two huge guns, much bigger than anything he had seen before. “They’ve got their siege guns in the line, sir,” he told McCandless, who trained his own telescope.

  “Eighteen-pounders,” McCandless guessed, “maybe bigger?” The Colonel collapsed his glass. “Why aren’t they patrolling this side of the river?”

  “Because they don’t want to frighten us away,” Sevajee said. “They want us to stroll up to their guns and die in the river, but they’ll still have some horsemen hidden on this bank, waiting to tell them when we retreat.”

  The sound of hooves made Sharpe whip around in expectation of those enemy cavalry, but it was only General Wellesley and his two aides who cantered along the lower ground beneath the crest. “They’re all there, McCandless,” the General shouted happily.

  “So it seems, sir.”

  The General reined in, waiting for McCandless to come down from the skyline and join him. “They seem to presume we’ll make a frontal attack,” Wellesley said wryly, as though he found the idea amusing.

  “They’re certainly formed for it, sir.”

  “They must assume we’re blockheads. What time is it?”

  One of his aides consulted a watch. “Ten minutes of noon, sir.”

  “Plenty of time,” the General murmured. “Onwards, gentlemen, stay below the skyline. We don’t want to frighten them away!”

  “Frighten them away?” Sevajee asked with a smile, but Wellesley ignored the comment as he spurred on eastwards, parallel with the river. Some troops of Company cavalry were scouring the fields and at first Sharpe thought they were looking for concealed enemy pickets, then he saw they were hunting down local farmers and harrying them along in the General’s wake.

  Wellesley rode two miles eastwards, a string of horsemen behind him. The farmers were breathless by the time they reached the place where his horse was picketed just beneath a low hill. The General was kneeling on the crest, staring east through a glass. “Ask those fellows if there are any fords east of here!” he shouted down to his aides.

  A hurried consultation followed, but the farmers were quite sure there was no ford. The only crossing places, they insisted, were directly in front of Scindia’s army. “Find a clever one,” Wellesley ordered, “and bring him up here. Colonel? Maybe you’d translate?”

  McCandless picked one of the farmers and led him up the hill. Sharpe, without being asked, followed and Wellesley did not order him back, but just muttered that they should all keep their heads low. “There”—the General pointed eastwards to a village on the Kaitna’s southern bank—“that village, what’s it called?”

  “Peepulgaon,” the farmer said, and added that his mother and two sisters lived in the huddle of mud-walled houses with their thatched roofs.

  Peepulgaon lay only a half-mile from the low hill, but it was all of two miles east of Taunklee, the village that was opposite the eastern extremity of the Mahratta line. Both villages were on the river’s southern bank while the enemy waited on the Kaitna’s northern side, and Sharpe did not understand Wellesley’s interest. “Ask him if he has any relatives north of the river,” the General ordered McCandless.

  “He has a brother and several cousins, sir,” McCandless translated.

  “So how does his mother visit her son north of the river?” Wellesley asked.

  The farmer launched himself into a long explanation. In the dry season, he said, she walked across the river bed, but in the wet season, when the waters rose, she was forced to come upstream and cross at Taunklee. Wellesley listened, then grunted in apparent disbelief. He was staring intently through the glass. “Campbell?” he called, but his aide had gone to another low rise a hundred yards westwards that offered a better view of the enemy ranks. “Campbell?” Wellesley called again and, getting no answer, turned. “Sharpe, you’ll do. Come here.”

  “Sir?”

  “You’ve got young eyes. Come here, and keep low.”

  Sharpe joined the General on the cre
st where, to his surprise, he was handed the telescope. “Look at the village,” Wellesley ordered, “then look at the opposite bank and tell me what you see.”

  It took Sharpe a moment to find Peepulgaon in the lens, but suddenly its mud walls filled the glass. He moved the telescope slowly, sliding its view past oxen, goats and chickens, past clothes set to dry on bushes by the river bank, and then the lens slid across the brown water of the River Kaitna and up its opposite bank where he saw a muddy bluff topped by trees and, just beyond the trees, a fold of land. And in the fold of land were roofs, straw roofs. “There’s another village there, sir,” Sharpe said.

  “You’re sure?” Wellesley asked urgently.

  “Pretty sure, sir. Might just be cattle sheds.”

  “You don’t keep cattle sheds apart from a village,” the General said scathingly, “not in a country infested by bandits.” Wellesley twisted around. “McCandless? Ask your fellow if there’s a village on the other side of the river from Peepulgaon.”

  The farmer listened to the question, then nodded. “Waroor,” he said, then helpfully informed the General that his cousin was the village headman, the naique.

  “How far apart are those villages, Sharpe?” Wellesley asked.

  Sharpe judged the distance for a couple of seconds. “Three hundred yards, sir?”

  Wellesley took the telescope back and moved away from the crest. “Never in my life,” he said, “have I seen two villages on opposite banks of a river that weren’t connected by a ford.”

  “He insists not, sir,” McCandless said, indicating the farmer.

  “Then he’s a rogue, a liar or a blockhead,” Wellesley said cheerfully. “The latter, probably.” He frowned in thought, his right hand drumming a tattoo on the telescope’s barrel. “I’ll warrant there is a ford,” he said to himself.

  “Sir?” Captain Campbell had run back from the western knoll. “Enemy’s breaking camp, sir.”

  “Are they, by God!” Wellesley returned to the crest and stared through the glass again. The infantry immediately on the Kaitna’s north bank were not moving, but far away, close to the fortified village, tents were being struck. “Preparing to run away, I dare say,” Wellesley muttered.

  “Or readying to cross the river and attack us,” McCandless said grimly.

  “And they’re sending cavalry across the river,” Campbell added ominously.

  “Nothing to worry us,” Wellesley said, then turned back to stare at the opposing villages of Peepulgaon and Waroor. “There has to be a ford,” he said to himself again, so quietly that only Sharpe could hear him. “Stands to reason,” he said, then he went silent for a long time.

  “That enemy cavalry, sir,” Campbell prompted him.

  Wellesley seemed startled. “What?”

  “There, sir.” Campbell pointed westwards to a large group of enemy horsemen who had appeared from a grove of trees, but who seemed content to watch Wellesley’s group from a half-mile away.

  “Time we were away,” Wellesley said. “Give that lying blockhead a rupee, McCandless, then let’s be off.”

  “You plan to retreat, sir?” McCandless asked.

  Wellesley had been hurrying down the slope, but now stopped and stared in surprise at the Scotsman. “Retreat?”

  McCandless blinked. “You surely don’t intend to fight, sir, do you?”

  “How else are we to do His Majesty’s business? Of course we’ll fight! There’s a ford there.” Wellesley flung his arm east towards Peepulgaon. “That wretched farmer might deny it, but he’s a blockhead! There has to be a ford. We’ll cross it, turn their left flank and pound them into scraps! But we must hurry! Noon already. Three hours, gentlemen, three hours to bring on battle. Three hours to turn his flank.” He ran on down the hill to where Diomed, his white Arab horse, waited.

  “Good God,” McCandless said. “Good God.” For five thousand infantry would now cross the Kaitna at a place where men said the river was uncrossable, then fight an enemy horde at least ten times their number. “Good God,” the Colonel said again, then hurried to follow Wellesley south. The enemy had stolen a march, the redcoats had journeyed all night and were bone tired, but Wellesley would have his battle.

  CHAPTER 9

  “There!” Dodd said, pointing.

  “I can’t see,” Simone Joubert complained.

  “Drop the telescope, use your naked eye, Madame. There! It’s flashing.”

  “Where?”

  “There!” Dodd pointed again. “Across the river. Three trees, low hill.”

  “Ah!” Simone at last saw the flash of reflected sunlight from the lens of a telescope that was being used on the far bank of the river and well downstream from where Dodd’s Cobras held the left of Pohlmann’s line.

  Simone and her husband had dined with the Major who was grimly happy in anticipation of a British attack which, he claimed, must inevitably fall hardest on his Cobras. “It will be slaughter, Ma’am,” Dodd said wolfishly, “sheer slaughter!” He and Captain Joubert had walked Simone to the edge of the bluff above the Kaitna and shown her the fords, and demonstrated how any men crossing the fords must be caught in the mangling crossfire of the Mahratta cannon, then maintained that the British had no option but to walk forward into that weltering onslaught of canister, round shot and shell. “If you wish to stay and watch, Madame,” Dodd had offered, “I can find a place of safety for you.” He gestured towards a low rise of ground just behind the regiment. “You could watch from there, and I credit no British soldier will come near you.”

  “I could not bear to watch a slaughter, Major,” Simone had said feelingly.

  “Your squeamishness does you credit, Ma’am,” Dodd had answered. “War is man’s work.” It was then that Dodd had spotted the British soldiers on the opposite bank and had trained his telescope on the distant men. Simone, knowing now where to look, rested the glass on her husband’s shoulder and trained its lens on the far hill. She could see two men there, one in a cocked hat and the other in a shako. Both were keeping low. “Why are they so far down the river?” she asked.

  “They’re looking for a way around our flank,” Dodd said.

  “Is there one?”

  “No. They must cross here, Ma’am, or else they don’t cross at all.” Dodd gestured at the fords in front of the compoo. A band of cavalrymen was galloping through the shallow water, spraying silver from their horses’ hooves as they crossed to the Kaitna’s south bank. “And those horsemen,” Dodd explained, “are going to see whether they will cross or not.”

  Simone collapsed the telescope and handed it back to the Major. “They might not attack?”

  “They won’t,” her husband answered in English for Dodd’s benefit. “They have too much sense.”

  “Boy Wellesley don’t have sense,” Dodd said scathingly. “Look how he attacked at Ahmednuggur? Straight at the wall! A hundred rupees says he will attack.”

  Captain Joubert shook his head. “I do not gamble, Major.”

  “A soldier should relish risk,” Dodd said.

  “And if they don’t cross,” Simone asked, “there is no battle?”

  “There’ll be a battle, Ma’am,” Dodd said grimly. “Pohlmann’s gone to fetch Scindia’s permission for us to cross the river. If they won’t come to us, we’ll go to them.”

  Pohlmann had indeed gone to find Scindia. The Hanoverian had dressed for battle, donning his finest coat, which was a blue silk jacket, trimmed in scarlet and decorated with loops of gold braid and black aiguillettes. He wore a white silk sash on which was blazoned a star of diamonds and from which hung a gold-hilted sword, though Dupont, the Dutchman, who accompanied Pohlmann to meet Scindia, noted that the Colonel’s breeches and boots were old and shabby. “I wear them for luck,” Pohlmann said, noting Dupont’s puzzled glance at his decrepit breeches. “They’re from my old East India Company uniform.” The Hanoverian was in a fine mood. His short march eastwards had achieved all he had desired, for it had brought one of the two small British a
rmies into his lap while it was still far away from the other. All he needed to do now was snap it up like a minnow, then march on Stevenson’s force, but Scindia had been insistent that no infantry were to cross the Kaitna’s fords without his permission and Pohlmann now needed that permission. The Hanoverian did not plan to cross immediately, for first he wanted to be certain that the British were retreating, but nor did he wish to wait for permission once he heard news of the enemy’s withdrawal.

  “Our lord and master will be scared at the thought of attacking,” Pohlmann told Dupont, “so we’ll flatter the bugger. Slap on the ghee with a shovel, Dupont. Tell him he’ll be lord of all India if he lets us loose.”

  “Tell him there are a hundred white women in Wellesley’s camp and he’ll lead the attack himself,” Dupont observed dryly.

  “Then that is what we shall tell him,” Pohlmann said, “and promise him that every little darling will be his concubine.”

  Except that when Pohlmann and Dupont reached the tree-shaded stretch of ground above the River Juah where the Maharaja of Gwalior had been awaiting his army’s victory, there was no sign of his lavish tents. They had been struck, all of them, together with the striped tents of the Rajah of Berar, and all that remained were the cook tents that even now were being collapsed and folded onto the beds of a dozen ox carts. All the elephants but one were gone, the horses of the royal bodyguards were gone, the concubines were gone and the two princes were gone.

 

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