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

Home > Historical > Sharpe 3-Book Collection 1: Sharpe's Tiger, Sharpe's Triumph, Sharpe's Fortress > Page 69
Sharpe 3-Book Collection 1: Sharpe's Tiger, Sharpe's Triumph, Sharpe's Fortress Page 69

by Bernard Cornwell


  “Where’s Wellesley?” Colonel Wallace asked McCandless.

  “He went northwards.” McCandless was now staring towards the village where a dreadful battle was being fought, but he could see no details for there were just enough trees to obscure the fight, though the mass of powder smoke rising above the leaves was as eloquent as the unending crackle of musketry. McCandless knew his business was to be where that battle was being fought, for Dodd was surely close to the fight if not involved, but in McCandless’s path was the stub of the Mahratta defense line, that part of the line which had not been attacked by the Scots or the sepoys, and those men were turning to face southwards. To reach that southern battle McCandless would have to loop wide to the east, but that stretch of country was full of marauding bands of enemy cavalry. “I should have advanced with Swinton,” he said ruefully.

  “We’ll catch up with him soon enough,” Wallace said, though without conviction. It was clear to both men that Wallace’s regiment, the 74th, had marched too far to the north and had become entangled in the thicket of Mahratta defenses about Assaye and their commanding officer, removed from them to lead the brigade, was plainly worried. “Time to turn north, I think,” Wallace said, and he shouted at his two sepoy battalions to wheel right. He had no authority over the remaining two sepoy battalions, nor over the 78th, for those were in Harness’s brigade, but he was ready to march his two remaining battalions towards the distant village in the hope of rescuing his own regiment.

  McCandless watched as Wallace organized the two battalions. This part of the battlefield, which minutes before had been so loud with screaming canister and the hammer of volleys, was now strangely quiet. Wellesley’s attack had been astonishingly successful, and the enemy was regrouping while the attackers, left victorious on the Kaitna’s northern bank, drew their breath and looked for the next target. McCandless thought of using Sevajee’s handful of horsemen as an escort to take him safely towards the village, but another rush of Mahratta cavalry galloped up from the low ground. Wellesley and his aides had ridden northwards and they seemed to have survived the milling enemy horsemen, but the General’s passing had attracted more horsemen to the area and McCandless had no mind to run the gauntlet of their venom and so he abandoned the idea of a galloping dash northwards. It was just then that he noticed Sergeant Hakeswill, crouching by a dead enemy with the reins of a riderless horse in one hand. A group of redcoats was with him, all from his own regiment, the 33rd. And just as McCandless saw the Sergeant, so Hakeswill looked up and offered the Scotsman a glance of such malevolence that McCandless almost turned away in horror. Instead he spurred his horse across the few yards that separated them. “What are you doing here, Sergeant?” he asked harshly.

  “My duty, sir, as is incumbent on me,” Hakeswill said. As ever, when addressed by an officer, he had straightened to attention, his right foot tucked behind his left, his elbows back and his chest thrust out.

  “And what are your duties?” McCandless asked.

  “Puckalees, sir. In charge of puckalees, sir, making sure the scavenging little brutes does their duty, sir, and nothing else, sir. Which they does, sir, on account of me looking after them like a father.” He unbent sufficiently to give a swift nod in the direction of the 78th where, sure enough, a group of puckalees was distributing heavy skins of water they had brought from the river.

  “Have you written to Colonel Gore yet?” McCandless asked.

  “Have I written to Colonel Gore yet, sir?” Hakeswill repeated the question, his face twitching horribly under the shako’s peak. He had forgotten that he was supposed to have the warrant reissued, for he was relying instead on McCandless’s death to clear the way to Sharpe’s arrest. Not that this was the place to murder McCandless, for there were a thousand witnesses within view. “I’ve done everything what ought to be done, sir, like a soldier should,” Hakeswill answered evasively.

  “I shall write to Colonel Gore myself,” McCandless now told Hakeswill, “because I’ve been thinking about that warrant. You have it?”

  “I do, sir.”

  “Then let me see it again,” the Colonel demanded.

  Hakeswill unwillingly pulled the grubby paper from his pouch and offered it to the Colonel. McCandless unfolded the warrant, quickly scanned the lines, and suddenly the falsity in the words leaped out at him. “It says here that Captain Morris was assaulted on the night of August the fifth.”

  “So he was, sir. Foully assaulted, sir.”

  “Then it could not have been Sharpe who committed the assault, Sergeant, for on the night of the fifth he was with me. That was the day I collected Sergeant Sharpe from Seringapatam’s armory.” McCandless’s face twisted with distaste as he looked down at the Sergeant. “You say you were a witness to the assault?” he asked Hakeswill.

  Hakeswill knew when he was beaten. “Dark night, sir,” the Sergeant said woodenly.

  “You’re lying, Sergeant,” McCandless said icily, “and I know you are lying, and my letter to Colonel Gore will attest to your lying. You have no business here, and I shall so inform Major General Wellesley. If it was up to me then your punishment would take place here, but that is for the General to decide. You will give me that horse.”

  “This horse, sir? I found it, sir. Wandering, sir.”

  “Give it here!” McCandless snapped. Sergeants had no business having horses without permission. He snatched the reins from Hakeswill. “And if you do have duties with the puckalees, Sergeant, I suggest you attend to them rather than plunder the dead. As for this warrant . . .” The Colonel, before Hakeswill’s appalled gaze, tore the paper in two. “Good day, Sergeant,” McCandless said and, his small victory complete, turned his horse and spurred away.

  Hakeswill watched the Colonel ride away, then stooped and picked up the two halves of the warrant which he carefully stowed in his pouch. “Scotchman,” he spat.

  Private Lowry shifted uncomfortably. “If he’s right, Sergeant, and Sharpie wasn’t there, then we shouldn’t be here.”

  Hakeswill turned savagely on the private. “And since when, Private Lowry, did you dispose of soldiery? The Duke of York has made you an officer, has he? His Grace put braid on your coat without telling me, did he? What Sharpie did is no business of yours, Lowry.” The Sergeant was in trouble, and he knew it, but he was not broken yet. He turned and stared at McCandless who had given the horse to a dismounted officer and was now in deep conversation with Colonel Wallace. The two men glanced towards Hakeswill and the Sergeant guessed they were discussing him. “We follows that Scotchman,” Hakeswill said, “and this is for the man who puts him under the sod.” He fished a gold coin from his pocket and showed it to his six privates.

  The privates stared solemnly at the coin, then, all at once, they ducked as a cannonball screamed low over their heads. Hakeswill swore and dropped flat. Another gun sounded, and this time a barrelful of canister flecked the grass just south of Hakeswill.

  Colonel Wallace had been listening to McCandless, but now turned eastwards. Not all the gunners in the Mahratta line had been killed and those who survived, together with the cavalry which had been looking for employment, were now manning their guns again. They had turned the guns to face west instead of east and were now firing at the five regiments who were waiting for the battle to begin again. Except the gunners had surprised them, and the captured British guns, fetched from the east, now joined the battery to pour their shot, shell and canister into the red-coated infantry. They fired at three hundred paces, point-blank range, and their missiles tore bloodily through the ranks.

  For the Mahrattas, it seemed, were not beaten yet.

  William Dodd could smell victory. He could almost feel the sheen of the captured silk colors in his hands, and all it would take was two blasts of canister, a mucky slaughter with bayonets, and then the 74th would be destroyed. Horse Guards in London could cross the first battalion of the regiment off the army list, all of it, and mark down that it had been sacrificed to William Dodd’s talent. He s
narled at his gunners to load their home-made canister, watched as the loaders rammed the missiles home, and then the trumpet sounded.

  The British and Company cavalry had been posted in the northern half of the battlefield to guard against enemy horsemen sweeping about the infantry’s rear, but now they came to the 74th’s rescue. The 19th Dragoons emerged from the gully behind the Highlanders and their charge curved northwards out of the low ground towards the 74th and the village beyond. The troopers were mostly recruits from the English shires, young men brought up to know horses and made strong by farm work, and they all carried the new light cavalry saber that was warranted never to fail. Nor did it.

  They struck the Mahratta horse first. The English riders were outnumbered, but they rode bigger horses and their blades were better made, and they cut through the cavalry with a maniacal savagery. It was hacking work, brutal work, screaming and fast work, and the Mahrattas turned their lighter horses away from the bloody sabers and fled northwards, and once the enemy horsemen were killed or fleeing, the British cavalry raked back their spurs and charged at the Mahratta infantry.

  They struck the battalion from Dupont’s compoo first, and because those men were not prepared for cavalry, but were still in line, it was more an execution than a fight. The cavalry were mounted on tall horses, and every man had spent hours of saber drill learning how to cut, thrust and parry, but all they had to do now was slash with their heavy, wide-bladed weapons that were designed for just such butchery. Slash and hack, scream and spur, then push on through panicking men whose only thought was flight. The sabers made dreadful injuries, the weight of the blade gave the weapons a deep bite and the curve of the steel dragged the newly sharpened edges back through flesh and muscle and bone to lengthen the wound.

  Some Mahratta cavalry bravely tried to stem the charge, but their light tulwars were no match for Sheffield steel. The 74th were standing and cheering as they watched the English horsemen carve into the enemy who had come so terribly close, and behind the Englishmen rode Company cavalry, Indians on smaller horses, some carrying lances, who spread the attack wider to drive the broken Mahratta horsemen northwards.

  Dodd did not panic. He knew he had lost this skirmish, but the helpless mass of Dupont’s battalion was protecting his right flank and those doomed men gave Dodd the few seconds he needed. “Back,” he shouted, “back!” and he needed no interpreter now. The Cobras hurried back towards the cactus-thorn hedge. They did not run, they did not break ranks, but stepped swiftly backwards to leave the enemy’s horse room to sweep across their front, and, as the horsemen passed, those of Dodd’s men who still had loaded muskets fired. Horses stumbled and fell, riders sprawled, and still the Cobras went backwards.

  But the regiment was still in line and Dupont’s panicked infantry were now pushing their way into Dodd’s right-hand companies, and the second rank of dragoons rode in among that chaos to slash their sabers down onto the white-coated men. Dodd shouted at his men to form square, and they obeyed, but the two right-hand companies had been reduced to ragged ruin and their survivors never joined the square which was so hastily made that it was more of a huddle than an ordered formation. Some of the fugitives from the two doomed companies tried to join their comrades in the square, but the horsemen were among them and Dodd shouted at the square to fire. The volley cut down his own men with the enemy, but it served to drive the horsemen away and so gave Dodd time to send his men back through the hedge and still further back to where they had first waited for the British attack. The Rajah of Berar’s infantry, who had been on Dodd’s left, had escaped more lightly, but none had stayed to fight. Instead they ran back to Assaye’s mud walls. The gunners by the village saw the cavalry coming and fired canister, killing more of their own fugitives than enemy cavalry, but the brief cannonade at least signaled to the dragoons that the village was defended and dangerous.

  The storm of cavalry passed northwards, leaving misery in its wake. The two four-pounder cannon that Joubert had taken forward were abandoned now, their teams killed by the horsemen, and where the 74th had been there was now nothing but an empty enclosure of dead men and horses that had formed the barricade. The survivors of the beleaguered square had withdrawn eastwards, carrying their wounded with them, and it seemed to Dodd that a sudden silence had wrapped about the Cobras. It was not a true silence, for the guns had started firing again on the southern half of the battlefield, the distant sound of hooves was neverending and the moaning of the nearby wounded was loud, but it did seem quiet.

  Dodd spurred his horse southwards in an attempt to make some sense of the battle. Dupont’s compoo next to him had lost one regiment to the sabers, but the next three regiments were intact and the Dutchman was now turning those units to face southwards. Dodd could see Pohlmann riding along the back of those wheeling regiments and he suspected that the Hanoverian would now turn his whole line to face south. The British had broken the far end of the line, but they had still not broken the army.

  Yet the possibility of annihilation existed. Dodd fidgeted with the elephant hilt of his sword and contemplated what less than an hour before had seemed an impossibility: defeat. God damn Wellesley, he thought, but this was no time for anger, just for calculation. Dodd could not afford to be captured and he had no mind to die for Scindia and so he must secure his line of retreat. He would fight to the end, he decided, then run like the wind. “Captain Joubert?”

  The long-suffering Joubert trotted his horse to Dodd’s side. “Monsieur?”

  Dodd did not speak at once, for he was watching Pohlmann come nearer. It was clear now that the Hanoverian was making a new battle line, and one, moreover, that would lie to the west of Assaye with its back against the river. The regiments to Dodd’s right, which had yet to be attacked, were now pulling back and the guns were going with them. The whole line was being redeployed, and Dodd guessed the Cobras would move from the east side of the mud walls to the west, but that was no matter. The best ford across the Juah ran out of the village itself, and it was that ford Dodd wanted. “Take two companies, Joubert,” he ordered, “and march them into the village to guard this side of the ford.”

  Joubert frowned. “The Rajah’s troops, surely . . .” he began to protest.

  “The Rajah of Berar’s troops are useless!” Dodd snapped. “If we need to use the ford, then I want it secured by our men. You secure it.” He jabbed at the Frenchman with a finger. “Is your wife in the village?”

  “Oui, Monsieur.”

  “Then now’s your chance to impress her, Monsewer. Go and protect her. And make sure the damn ford isn’t captured or clogged up with fugitives.”

  Joubert was not unhappy to be sent away from the fighting, but he was dismayed by Dodd’s evident defeatism. Nevertheless he took two companies, marched into the village, and posted his men to guard the ford so that if all was lost, there would still be a way out.

  Wellesley had ridden north to investigate the furious fighting that had erupted close to the village of Assaye. He rode with a half-dozen aides and with Sharpe trailing behind on the last of the General’s horses, the roan mare. It was a furious ride, for the area east of the infantry was infested with Mahratta horsemen, but the General had faith in the size and speed of his big English and Irish horses and the enemy was easily outgalloped. Wellesley came within sight of the beleaguered 74th just as the dragoons crashed in on their besiegers from the south. “Well done, Maxwell!” Wellesley shouted aloud, though he was far out of earshot of the cavalry’s leader, and then he curbed his horse to watch the dragoons at work.

  The mass of the Mahratta horsemen who had been waiting for the 74th’s square to collapse, now fled northwards and the British cavalry, having hacked the best part of an enemy infantry regiment into ruin, pursued them. The cavalry’s good order was gone now, for the blue-coated troopers were spurring their horses to chase their broken enemy across country. Men whooped like fox hunters, closed on their quarry, slashed with saber, then spurred on to the next victim. The Ma
hratta horsemen were not even checked by the River Juah, but just plunged in and spurred their horses through the water and up the northern bank. The British and Indian cavalry followed so that the pursuit vanished in the north. The 74th, who had fought so hard to stay alive, now marched out of range of the cannon by the village and Wellesley, who had smelled disaster just a few minutes before, breathed a great sigh of relief. “I told them to stay clear of the village, did I not?” he demanded of his aides, but before anyone could answer, new cannon fire sounded from the south. “What the devil?” Wellesley said, turning to see what the gunfire meant.

  The remaining infantry of the Mahratta line were pulling back, taking their guns with them, but the artillery which had stood in front of the enemy’s defeated right wing, the same guns that had been overrun by the red-coated infantry, were now coming alive again. The weapons had been turned and were crashing back on their trails and jetting smoke from their muzzles, and behind the guns was a mass of enemy cavalry ready to protect the gunners who were flaying the five battalions that had defeated the enemy infantry. “Barclay?” Wellesley called.

  “Sir?” The aide spurred forward.

  “Can you reach Colonel Harness?”

  The aide looked at the southern part of the battlefield. A moment before it had been thick with Mahratta horsemen, but those men had now withdrawn behind the revived guns and there was a space in front of those guns, a horribly narrow space, but the only area of the battlefield that was now free of enemy cavalry. If Barclay was to reach Harness then he would have to risk that narrow passage and, if he was very lucky, he might even survive the canister. And dead or alive, Barclay thought, he would win the lottery of bullet holes in his coat. The aide took a deep breath. “Yes, sir.”

  “My compliments to Colonel Harness, and ask him to retake the guns with his Highlanders. The rest of his brigade will stay where they are to keep the cavalry at bay.” The General was referring to the mass of cavalry that still threatened from the west, none of which had yet entered the battle. “And my compliments to Colonel Wallace,” the General went on, “and his sepoy battalions are to move northwards, but are not to engage the enemy until I reach them. Go!” He waved Barclay away, then twisted in his saddle. “Campbell?”

 

‹ Prev