“It won’t take long,” Stokes said, “not if you take my horse. But keep her to a steady walk, Richard, because she’s tired. And have her rubbed down and watered while you’re sorting out the shits.”
Sharpe was touched by Stokes’s generosity. “Are you sure?”
“What are friends for? Go on, Richard! On horseback you’ll be home for supper. I’ll have my cook brew up one of those mussallas you like so much.”
Sharpe left his pack with Stokes’s baggage. The big ruby and a score of other stones were in the pack, and Sharpe was half tempted to carry it to Deogaum and back, but if he could not trust Stokes, who could he trust? He tried to persuade Ahmed to stay behind and keep an eye on the baggage, but the boy refused to be parted from Sharpe and insisted on trotting along behind the horse. “Stokes won’t hurt you,” Sharpe told Ahmed.
“I’m your havildar,” Ahmed insisted, hefting his musket and peering about the deserted landscape for enemies. There was none in sight, but Ahmed’s gesture reminded Sharpe of Elliott’s death and he wondered if he should have waited for the ox convoy to return to Deogaum, for the convoys all had escorts of sepoys or mercenary horsemen. He was tempted to kick the horse into a trot, but he resisted the impulse.
The danger was more acute once he reached the lower hills, for Mahratta horsemen were forever probing the perimeter of the British camp and being chased away by cavalry patrols. Twice he saw horsemen in the distance, but neither group took any notice of Sharpe who was ready to haul Ahmed up onto the horse and then ride for his life if he was threatened. He did not relax until he met a patrol of Madrassi cavalry under the command of a Company lieutenant who escorted him safely to the encampment.
Deogaum was now surrounded by a great spread of tents and makeshift booths, homes to soldiers and camp followers. A dancing bear was performing for a crowd of infantrymen and the animal reminded Sharpe of Major Stokes’s words about America. Simone! It was his own damn fault. He should never have trusted the woman. The thought of his own foolishness plunged Sharpe into a black mood that was not helped by the sight of two redcoat privates lounging on a bench outside Torrance’s quarters. Neither man moved as Sharpe slid from the horse. He gave the reins to Ahmed and mimed that the boy should rub the gray mare down with straw and then water her.
The two redcoats shifted slightly as if acknowledging Sharpe’s presence, but neither man stood. He knew both of them; indeed, not so very long ago he had marched in the same ranks as these two men whose coats had the red facings of the 33rd. Kendrick and Lowry, they were called, and two worse characters it would have been hard to find in any light company. Both were cronies of Hakeswill’s, and both had been among the small party Hakeswill had brought north in his failed attempt to arrest Sharpe. “On your feet,” Sharpe said.
Kendrick glanced at Lowry, who looked back at Kendrick, and the two made faces at each other as though they were surprised by Sharpe’s demands. They hesitated just long enough to make their insolence plain, but not quite long enough to make it punishable, then stood to attention. “Is that your ’orse, Mr. Sharpe?” Kendrick asked, stressing the “mister.”
Sharpe ignored the question and pushed into the house to find a new clerk sitting behind the table. He was a young, good-looking Indian with oiled hair and a very white robe. He wore an apron to protect the robe from ink spots. “You have business, sahib?” he asked brusquely.
“With Captain Torrance.”
“The Captain is ill.” The Indian, whose English was very good, smiled.
“He’s always bloody ill,” Sharpe said and walked past the protesting clerk to push open the inner door.
Torrance was in his hammock, smoking his hookah, and dressed in an Indian gown embroidered with dragons while Sergeant Hakeswill was sitting at a small table counting a pile of coins. “Sharpe!” Torrance sounded surprised. Hakeswill, looking equally surprised, sullenly stood to attention. “Wasn’t expecting you till this evening,” Torrance said.
“I’m here,” Sharpe said unnecessarily.
“So it is apparent. Unless you’re a specter?”
Sharpe had no time for small talk. “You’ve got a problem with chitties?” he asked abruptly.
“Tiresome, isn’t it?” Torrance seemed uncomfortable. “Very tiresome. Sergeant, you have business elsewhere?”
“I’ve got duties, sir!” Hakeswill snapped.
“Attend to them, dear fellow.”
“Sir!” Hakeswill stiffened, turned to the right, then marched from the room.
“So how are you, Sharpe? Keeping busy?” Torrance had swung himself off the hammock and now scooped the coins into a leather bag. “I hear poor Elliott died?”
“Shot, sir.”
Torrance shuddered as if the news was personal. “So very sad,” he sighed, then retied the belt of his elaborate gown. “I never did thank you, Sharpe, for being so supportive with Sir Arthur.”
Sharpe had not thought he had been supportive at all. “I just told the truth, sir.”
“My father would be proud of you, and I’m deeply grateful to you. It seems Dilip was in league with Naig.”
“He was?”
Torrance heard the disbelief in Sharpe’s voice. “No other explanation, is there?” he said curtly. “Someone must have been telling Naig which convoys carried the vital supplies, and it had to be Dilip. I must say I thought Wellesley was damned obtuse! There really is no point in having scruples about hanging natives. There isn’t exactly a shortage of them, is there?” He smiled.
“There’s something wrong with the chitties?” Sharpe demanded rudely.
“So there is, Sharpe, so there is. Our new clerk discovered the discrepancies. He’s a smart young fellow. Sajit!”
The young clerk came into the room, clasped his hands and offered Torrance a slight bow. “Sahib?”
“This is Ensign Sharpe, Sajit. He’s by way of being my deputy and thus as much your sahib as I am.”
Sajit offered Sharpe a bow. “I am honored, sahib.”
“Perhaps you could show Mr. Sharpe the problematical chitties, Sajit?” Torrance suggested.
Sajit went back to the outer room and returned a moment later with a pile of the grubby paper slips. He placed them on the table, then invited Sharpe to inspect them. All the chitties had Sharpe’s initials in the bottom right-hand corner, most of them in pencil, but some had been initialed in ink and Sharpe set those aside. “I didn’t sign any of those,” he said confidently. “I don’t have a pen and ink.”
“You were right, Sajit!” Torrance said.
“You honor me, sahib,” Sajit said.
“And every chitty is a stolen anna,” Torrance said, “so we have to discover which bullock men gave us the false ones. That’s the problem, Sharpe.”
“They’ve got names on them,” Sharpe said, pointing at the slips of paper. “You hardly needed to drag me down here to tell you who they were issued to!”
“Please don’t be tedious, Sharpe,” Torrance said plaintively. “Ever since the General put a shot across our bows I am forced to be particular. And the names mean nothing! Nothing! Look”—he scooped up the chitties—“at least a dozen are assigned to Ram, whoever Ram is. There are probably a dozen Rams out there. What I want you to do, Sharpe, is go round the encampment with Sajit and point out which men have visited the road. Sajit can then identify which bullock men are submitting false claims.”
Sharpe frowned. “Why doesn’t Sajit just identify which men were ordered up the mountain? They must have got their chitties from him?”
“I want to be sure, Sharpe, I want to be sure!” Torrance pleaded.
“My testimony, sahib, would not be believed,” Sajit put in, “but no one would doubt the word of an English officer.”
“Bloody hell,” Sharpe said. The last thing he felt like doing was wandering about the bullock camp identifying drivers. He was not sure he could do it anyway. “So why not summon the bullock men here?” he demanded.
“The bad ones would run a
way, sahib, rather than come,” Sajit said.
“Best to ambush them in their encampment, Sharpe,” Torrance said.
“I’ll do my best,” Sharpe grunted.
“I knew you would!” Torrance seemed relieved. “Do it now, Sharpe, and perhaps you could join me for a late dinner? Say at half past one?”
Sharpe nodded, then went back into the sunlight to wait for Sajit. Kendrick and Lowry had vanished, presumably with Hakeswill. Ahmed had found a bucket of water and Stokes’s mare was drinking greedily. “You can stay here, Ahmed,” Sharpe said, but the boy shook his head. “You’re my bleeding shadow,” Sharpe grumbled.
“Shadow?”
Sharpe pointed to his own shadow. “Shadow.”
Ahmed grinned, all white teeth in a grubby face. He liked the word. “Sharpe’s shadow!” he said.
Sajit emerged from the house with a pink silk parasol that he offered to Sharpe. Sharpe refused, and the clerk, who had discarded his apron, gratefully shaded himself from the fierce midday sun. “I am sorry to be troublesome to you, sahib,” he said humbly.
“No trouble,” Sharpe said dourly, following the clerk. Ahmed came behind, leading the Major’s mare.
“The boy need not come,” Sajit insisted, glancing behind at the horse which seemed to alarm him.
“You tell him that,” Sharpe said, “but don’t blame me if he shoots you. He’s very fond of shooting people.”
Sajit hurried on. “I think I know, sahib, which is the bad man who is cheating us. He is a fellow from Mysore. He gave me many chitties and swore you signed them in front of him. If you would be so kind as to confirm or deny his story, we shall be finished.”
“Then let’s find the bugger and be done with it.”
Sajit led Sharpe through the bullock lines where the wealthier herdsmen had erected vast dark and sagging tents. Women slapped bread dough beside small ox-dung fires, and more piles of the fuel dried in the sun beside each tent entrance. Sharpe looked for Naig’s big green tents, but he could not see them and he assumed that whoever had inherited Naig’s business had packed up and gone.
“There, sahib, that is the bad man’s tent.” Sajit nervously led Sharpe toward a brown tent that stood slightly apart from the others. He stopped a few paces from the entrance and lowered his voice. “He is called Ranjit, sahib.”
“So fetch the bugger,” Sharpe said, “and I’ll tell you if he’s lying or not.”
Sajit seemed nervous of confronting Ranjit for he hesitated, but then plucked up his courage, collapsed the parasol and dropped to the ground to crawl into the tent which sagged so deeply that the doorway was scarce higher than a man’s knee. Sharpe heard the murmur of voices, then Sajit backed hurriedly out of the low fringed entrance. He slapped at the dust on his white robes, then looked at Sharpe with a face close to tears. “He is a bad man, sahib. He will not come out. I told him a sahib was here to see him, but he used rude words!”
“I’ll take a look at the bastard,” Sharpe said. “That’s all you need, isn’t it? For me to say whether I’ve seen him or not?”
“Please, sahib,” Sajit said, and gestured at the tent’s entrance.
Sharpe took off his hat so it would not tangle with the canvas, hoisted the tent’s entrance as high as he could, then ducked low under the heavy brown cloth.
And knew instantly that it was a trap.
And understood, almost in the same instant, that he could do nothing about it.
The first blow struck his forehead, and his vision exploded in streaks of lightning and shuddering stars. He fell backward, out into the sunlight, and someone instantly grabbed one of his ankles and began pulling him into the deep shadow. He tried to kick, tried to push himself against the tent’s sides, but another hand seized his second leg, another blow hammered the side of his skull and, mercifully, he knew nothing more.
“He’s got a thick skull, our Sharpie,” Hakeswill said with a grin. He prodded Sharpe’s prone body and got no reaction. “Fast asleep, he is.” The Sergeant’s face twitched. He had hit Sharpe with the heavy brass-bound butt of a musket and he was amazed that Sharpe’s skull was not broken. There was plenty of blood in his black hair, and he would have a bruise the size of a mango by nightfall, but his skull seemed to have taken the two blows without splintering. “He always was a thick-headed bugger,” Hakeswill said. “Now strip him.”
“Strip him?” Kendrick asked.
“When his body is found,” Hakeswill explained patiently, “if it is found, and you can’t rely on bleeding blackamoors to do a proper job and hide it, we don’t want no one seeing he’s a British officer, do we? Not that he is an officer. He’s just a jumped-up bit of muck. So strip him, then tie his hands and feet and cover his eyeballs.”
Kendrick and Lowry jerked and tugged Sharpe’s coat free, then handed the garment to Hakeswill who ran his fingers along the hems. “Got it!” he exulted when he felt the lumps in the cloth. He took out a knife, slit the coat and the two privates stared in awe as he eased the glittering jewels out of the tightly sewn seam. It was dark in the shadowed tent, but the stones gleamed bright. “Get on with it!” Hakeswill said. “The rest of his clothes off!”
“What are you doing?” Sajit had sidled into the tent and now stared at the jewels.
“None of your bleeding business,” Hakeswill said.
“You have jewels?” Sajit asked.
Hakeswill slid out his bayonet and stabbed it at Sajit, checking the lunge a fraction before the blade would have punctured the clerk’s neck. “The jewels ain’t your business, Sajit. The jewels are my business. Your business is Sharpie, got it? I agreed to give him to your bleeding uncle, but I gets what he carries.”
“My uncle will pay well for good stones,” Sajit said.
“Your Uncle Jama’s a bleeding monkey who’d cheat me soon as fart at me, so forget the bleeding stones. They’re mine.” Hakeswill thrust the first handful into a pocket and started searching the rest of Sharpe’s clothes. He slit open all the seams, then cut Sharpe’s boots apart to discover a score of rubies hidden in the folded boot-tops. They were small rubies, scarce bigger than peas, and Hakeswill was looking for one large ruby. “I saw it, I did. The bloody Tippoo had it on his hat. Large as life! Look in his hair.”
Kendrick obediently ran his fingers through Sharpe’s blood-encrusted hair. “Nothing there, Sarge.”
“Turn the bugger over and have a look you know where.”
“Not me!”
“Don’t be so bloody squeamish! And tie his hands. Fast now! You don’t want the sod waking up, do you?”
The clothes and boots yielded sixty-three stones. There were rubies, emeralds, sapphires and four small diamonds, but no large ruby. Hakeswill frowned. Surely Sharpe would not have sold the ruby? Still, he consoled himself, there was a fortune here, and he could not resist putting all the stones together on a mat and staring at them. “I do like a bit of glitter,” he breathed as his fingers greedily touched the jewels. He put ten of the smaller stones in one pile, another ten in a second, and pushed the two piles toward Kendrick and Lowry. “That’s your cut, boys. Keep you in whores for the rest of your lives, that will.”
“Perhaps I will tell my uncle about your stones,” Sajit said, staring at the jewels.
“I expect you will,” Hakeswill said, “and so bleeding what? I ain’t as dozy as Sharpie. You won’t catch me.”
“Then maybe I shall tell Captain Torrance.” Sajit had positioned himself close to the entrance so that he could flee if Hakeswill attacked him. “Captain Torrance likes wealth.”
Likes it too much, Hakeswill thought, and if Torrance knew about the stones he would make Hakeswill’s life hell until he yielded a share. The Sergeant’s face juddered in a series of uncontrollable twitches. “You’re a bright lad, Sajit, ain’t you?” he said. “You might be nothing but a bleeding heathen blackamoor but you’ve got more than bullock dung for brains, ain’t you? Here.” He tossed Sajit three of the stones. “That keeps your tongue quiet, and
if it don’t, I’ll cut it out and have a feed on it. Partial to a plate of tongue, I am. Nice piece of tongue, knob of butter and some gravy. Proper food, that.” He pushed the rest of the stones into his pocket, then stared broodingly at Sharpe’s naked trussed body. “He had more,” Hakeswill said with a frown, “I know he had more.” The Sergeant suddenly clicked His fingers. “What about his pack?”
“What pack?” Lowry asked.
“The bleeding pack he carries, which he shouldn’t, being an officer, which he ain’t. Where’s his pack?”
The privates shrugged. Sajit frowned. “He had no pack when he came to the Captain’s house.”
“You’re sure?”
“He came on a horse,” Lowry said helpfully. “It were a gray horse, and he didn’t have no pack.”
“So where’s the horse?” Hakeswill demanded angrily. “We should look in its saddlebags!”
Lowry frowned, trying to remember. “A bleeding kid had it,” he said at last.
“So where’s the kid?”
“He ran off,” Sajit said.
“Ran off?” Hakeswill said threateningly. “Why?”
“He saw you hit him,” Sajit said. “I saw it. He fell out of the tent. There was blood on his face.”
“You shouldn’t have hit him till he was right inside the tent,” Kendrick said chidingly.
“Shut your bloody face,” Hakeswill said, then frowned. “So where did the kid run?”
“Away,” Sajit said. “I chased him, but he climbed onto the horse.”
“Kid don’t speak English,” Kendrick said helpfully.
“How the hell do you know that?”
“’Cos I talked to him!”
“And who’s going to believe a heathen black kid what don’t speak English?” Lowry asked.
Hakeswill’s face was racked by a quick series of twitches. He suspected he was safe. Lowry was right. Who would believe the kid? Even so the Sergeant wished that Jama’s men were coming earlier to fetch Sharpe. Jama himself had gone away from the camp, reckoning that if he was going to murder a British officer then it was best done a long way from the British army. Hakeswill had warned Jama not to expect Sharpe until the evening, and now he had to guard him until dusk. “I told you to put a bandage on his eyes,” Hakeswill snapped. “Don’t want him to see us!”
Sharpe 3-Book Collection 1: Sharpe's Tiger, Sharpe's Triumph, Sharpe's Fortress Page 90