Sharpe's Triumph

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by Bernard Cornwell


  "I'll think on it, sir, I'll think on it," McCandless said gloomily. He prayed that the good Lord would restore his own horse to him, along with Lieutenant Dodd, but if that did not happen soon then he knew he would have to buy a decent horse, though the prospect of spending such a vast sum grieved him.

  "You'll take supper with me tonight, McCandless?" Wellesley asked.

  "We have a fine leg of mutton. A rare leg!"

  "I eschew meat, sir," the Scotsman answered.

  "You eschew meat? And chew vegetables?" The General decided this was a splendid joke and frightened his horse by uttering a fierce neigh of a laugh.

  "That's droll! Very. You eschew meat to chew vegetables.

  Never mind, McCandless, we shall find you some chewable shrubs."

  McCandless chewed his vegetables that night, and afterwards, excusing himself, went to the tent that Wellesley had lent to him. He was tired, his leg was throbbing, but there had been no sign of the fever all day and for that he was grateful. He read his Bible, knelt in prayer beside the cot, then blew out the lantern to sleep. An hour later he was woken by the thump of hooves, the sound of suppressed voices, a giggle, and the brush of someone half falling against the tent.

  "Who is it?" McCandless demanded angrily.

  "Colonel?" Sharpe's voice answered.

  "Me, sir. Sorry, sir. Lost my footing, sir."

  "I was sleeping, man."

  "Didn't mean to wake you, sir, sorry, sir. Stand still, you bugger!

  Not you, sir, sorry, sir."

  McCandless, dressed in shirt and breeches, snatched the tent flap open.

  "Are you drunk?" he demanded, then fell silent as he gazed at the horse Sharpe was holding. The horse was a gelding, a splendid bay gelding with pricked ears and a quick, nervous energy.

  "He's six years old, sir," Sharpe said. Daniel Fletcher was trying to hammer in the picket and doing a very bad job because of the drink inside him.

  "He's got a capped hock, sir, whatever that is, but nothing that'll stop him. Comes from Ireland, he does. All that green grass, sir, makes a good horse. Aeolus, he's called."

  "Aeolus," McCandless said, 'the god of the wind."

  "Is he one of those Indian idols, sir? All arms and snake heads?"

  "No, Sharpe, Aeolus is Greek." McCandless took the reins from Sharpe and stroked the gelding's nose.

  "Is Wellesley lending him to me?"

  "Oh no, sir." Sharpe had taken the mallet from the half-drunk

  Fletcher and now banged the picket firmly into the soil.

  "He's yours, sir, all yours."

  "But.. ." McCandless said, then stopped, not understanding the situation at all.

  "He's paid for, sir," Sharpe said.

  "Paid for by whom?" McCandless demanded sternly.

  "Just paid for, sir."

  "You're blithering, Sharpe!"

  "Sorry, sir."

  "Explain yourself!" the Colonel demanded.

  General Wellesley had said much the same thing when, just forty minutes before, an aide had told him that Sergeant Sharpe was begging to see him and the General, who was just bidding goodnight to the last of his supper guests, had reluctantly agreed.

  "Make it quick, Sergeant," he had said, his fine mood disguised by his usual coldness.

  "It's Colonel McCandless, sir," Sharpe said woodenly.

  "He's decided to buy your horse, sir, and he sent me with the money."

  He stepped forward and tipped a bag of gold onto the General's map table. The gold was Indian, from every state and princedom, but it was real gold and it lay shining like butter in the candle flames.

  Wellesley gazed in astonishment at the treasure.

  "He said he didn't have the money!"

  "He's a Scotsman, sir, the Colonel," Sharpe had said, as though that explained everything, 'and he's sorry it ain't real money, sir.

  Guineas.

  But it's the full price, sir. Four hundred."

  "Three hundred and eighty," Wellesley said.

  "Tell the Colonel I'll return some to him. But a note would have done just as well! I'm supposed to carry gold on me?"

  "Sorry, sir," Sharpe had said lamely, but he could never have provided a note for the General, so instead he had sought out one of the bhinjanies who followed the army, and that merchant had exchanged emeralds for gold. Sharpe suspected he had been cheated, but he had wanted to give the Colonel the pleasure of owning a fine horse and so he had accepted the bhinjarrie's price.

  "Is it all right, sir?" he had asked Wellesley anxiously.

  "Extraordinary way to do business," Wellesley had said, but he had nodded his agreement.

  "A fair sale, Sergeant," he said, and he had almost held out his hand to shake Sharpe's as a man always shook hands on the sale of a horse, then he remembered that Sharpe was a sergeant and so he had hastily converted his gesture into a vague wave.

  And after Sharpe had gone and while he was scooping the coins into their bag, the General also remembered Sergeant Hakeswill. Not that it was any of his business, so perhaps it had been sensible not to mention the Sergeant's presence to Sharpe.

  McCandless now admired the gelding.

  "Who paid for it?"

  "Good-looking horse, ain't he, sir?" Sharpe said.

  "Good as your other, I'd say."

  "Sharpe! You're blithering again. Who paid for it?"

  Sharpe hesitated, but knew he was not going to be spared the interrogation.

  "In a manner of speaking, sir," he said, 'the Tippoo did."

  "The Tippoo? Are you mad?"

  Sharpe blushed.

  "The fellow that killed the Tippoo, sir, he took some jewels off him."

  "A king's ransom, I should imagine," McCandless snorted.

  "So I persuaded the fellow to buy the horse, sir. As a gift for you, sir."

  McCandless stared at Sharpe.

  "It was you."

  "It was me who did what, sir?"

  "You killed the Tippoo." It was almost an accusation.

  "Me, sir?" Sharpe asked innocently.

  "No, sir."

  McCandless stared at the gelding.

  "I can't possibly accept, Sergeant."

  "He's no good to me, sir. A sergeant can't own a horse. Not a proper horse from Ireland, sir. And if I hadn't been day-dreaming in Pohlmann's camp, sir, I might have stopped those thieves, so it's only fair that you should let me get you another."

  "You can't do this, Sharpe!" McCandless protested, embarrassed by the generosity of the gift.

  "Besides, in a day or two I hope to get my own horse back along with Mister Dodd."

  Sharpe had not thought of that, and for a second he cursed himself for throwing away his money. Then he shrugged.

  "It's done anyway, sir. General's got the money and you've got the horse. Besides, sir, you've always been fair to me, so I wanted to do something for you."

  "It's intolerable!" McCandless protested.

  "Uncalled for. I shall have to repay you."

  "Four hundred guineas?" Sharpe asked.

  "That's the price of an ensign's commission, sir."

  "So?" McCandless stared fiercely at Sharpe.

  "So we're going into battle, sir. You on that horse, and me on a Mahratta pony. It's a chance, sir, a chance, but if I do well, sir, real well, I'll need you to talk to the General." Sharpe blushed as he spoke, amazed at his own temerity.

  "That's how you repay me, sir, but that's not why I bought him. I just wanted you to have a proper horse, sir. Colonel like you shouldn't be sitting on a scabby native pony, sir."

  McCandless, appalled at Sharpe's ambition, did not know what to say.

  He stroked the gelding, felt tears in his eyes and could not tell whether they were for Sharpe's impossible dreams or because he had been so touched by the Sergeant's gift.

  "If you do well, Sharpe," he promised, "I'll talk to Colonel Wallace.

  He's a good friend. It's possible he'll have a vacant ensign's post, but don't raise your hopes to
o high!" He paused, wondering if emotion had driven him to promise far too much.

  "How did the Tippoo die?" he asked after a while.

  "And don't lie to me, Sharpe, it must have been you who killed him."

  "Like a man, sir. Bravely. Facing front, he was. Never gave up."

  "He was a good soldier," McCandless said, reflecting that the Tippoo had been beaten by a better one.

  "I trust you've still got some of his jewels?"

  "Jewels, sir?" Sharpe asked.

  "I don't know about jewels, sir."

  "Of course not," McCandless said. If the Company ever heard that Sharpe was carrying the Tippoo's gems their prize agents would descend on the Sergeant like locusts.

  "Thank you, Sharpe," McCandless said fulsomely, 'thank you very much. I shall repay you, of course, but you've touched me.

  "Pon my soul, you have touched me." He insisted upon shaking Sharpe's hand, then watched the Sergeant walk away with the General's orderly.

  So much sin there, McCandless thought, and so much goodness. But why had Pohknann ever put the idea of a commission into Sharpe's head? It was an impossible dream, doomed to disappointment.

  Another man also watched Sharpe walk away. It was Private Lowry, of the King's 33rd, who now hurried back to the baggage camp. Tt was him, Sergeant," he told Hakeswill.

  "You sure?"

  "Large as life."

  "God bless you, Lowry, God bless you." And God, Hakeswill thought, had certainly blessed him. He had feared that he would have to endure a battle, but now Sharpe had come and Hakeswill could produce his precious warrant and be on his way south. Let the army fight its battle, and let it win or lose, Hakeswill did not care, for Sergeant Hakeswill had what he wanted and he would be rich.

  Chapter 8

  General Wellesley was like a gambler who had emptied his purse onto the table and now had to wait for the cards to fall. There was still time to scoop the money back and walk away from the game, but if he ever felt that temptation, he did not betray it to his aides, nor to any of the army's senior officers. The colonels in his army were all older than Wellesley, some much older, and Wellesley courteously sought their advice, though he largely ignored it. Orrock, a Company colonel and commander of the 78th Madras Infantry, recommended an extravagant outflanking march to the east, though so far as Wellesley could determine the only ambition of such a manoeuvre was to remove the army as far as possible from the enemy horde. The General was forced to pay more attention to his two Williams, Wallace and Harness, the commanding officers of his two Scottish battalions who were also his brigade leaders.

  "If we join Stevenson, sir, we might manage the business," Wallace opined, his tone making it clear that, even combined, the two British armies would be dangerously outnumbered.

  "I've no doubt Harness will agree with me, sir," Wallace added, though William Harness, the commander of the 778th, seemed surprised to have his opinion sought.

  "Your business how you fight them, Wellesley," he growled.

  "Point my men and I warrant they'll fight. The bastards had better fight. I'll flog the scum witless if they don't."

  Wellesley forbore to point out that if the 778th refused to fight then there would be no one left to flog, for there would be no army. Harness would not have listened anyway, for he had taken the opportunity to lecture the General on the ameliorative effects of a flogging.

  "My first colonel liked to see one well-scourged back a week, Wellesley," he said.

  "He reckoned it kept the men to their duty. He once flogged a sergeant's wife, I recall. He wanted to know if a woman could take the pain, you see, and she couldn't. The lass was fair wriggling." Harness sighed, recalling happier days.

  "D'you dream, Wellesley?"

  "Dream, Harness?"

  "When you sleep."

  "At times."

  "A flogging will stop it. Nothing to bring on a good night's sleep like a well-whipped back." Harness, a tall black-browed man who seemed to wear a constant expression of wide-eyed disapproval, shook his head sadly.

  "A dreamless sleep, that's what I dream of! Loosens the bowels too, y'know?"

  "Sleep?"

  "A flogging!" Harness snapped angrily.

  "Stimulates the blood, y'see?"

  Wellesley disliked making enquiries about senior officers, but he took care to ride alongside his new aide, Colin Campbell.

  "Was there much flogging in the ySth?" he asked the aide who, until the siege of Ahmednuggur, had served under Harness.

  "There's been much recent talk of it, sir, but not in practice."

  "Your Colonel seems much enamoured of the practice."

  "His enthusiasms come and go," Campbell said blandly.

  "But until a few weeks ago, sir, he was not a man for enthusiasms. Now, suddenly, he is. He encouraged us to eat snakes in July, though he didn't insist on it.

  I gather he tried some cobra seethed in milk, but it didn't agree with him."

  "Ah!" the General said, understanding the carefully phrased message.

  So Harness was going out of his wits? Wellesley chided himself for not guessing as much from the Colonel's fixed glare.

  "The battalion has a doctor?"

  "You can take a horse to water, sir," Campbell said carefully.

  "Indeed, indeed." Not that the General could do anything about Harness's incipient madness now, nor had the Colonel done anything that deserved dismissal. Indeed, mad or not, he led a fine battalion and Wellesley would need the Scotsmen when he came to Borkardan.

  He thought constantly of Borkardan, though what that place was other than a mark on the map, he did not know. He simply imagined the village as swirls of dust and bellowing noise, a place of galloping horses where big guns would flatten the air with their hot thumps and the sky would be ripped apart with shrieking metal and murderous volleys. It would be Wellesley's first field battle. He had fought skirmishes enough, and led a cavalry charge that rode a bandit army into bloody oblivion, but he had never commanded guns and horse and infantry together, and he had never tried to impose his own will on an enemy general. He did not doubt his ability, nor did he doubt that he would stay calm amidst the dust and smoke and flame and blood, but he did fear that some unlucky shot would kill or maim him and the army would then be in the hands of a man without a vision of victory.

  Stevenson or Wallace would be competent enough, though Wellesley privately thought them both too cautious, but God help an army guided by Harness's enthusiasms.

  The other colonels, all Company men, echoed Wallace's advice to make sure of the junction with Stevenson before battle was joined, and Wellesley recognized the wisdom of that opinion, even while he refused to deflect his army to join Stevenson before they both reached Borkar-dan.

  There was no time for such a nicety, so instead whichever army first came to the enemy must engage him first, and the other must join the battle, to which end Wellesley knew he must keep his left flank open, for that was where Stevenson's men would join his own. The General reckoned he must put the bulk of his cavalry on the left and station one of his two Highland regiments to serve as a bulwark on that flank, but beyond that he did not know what he would do once he reached Borkardan except attack, attack and attack again. He reasoned that when a small army faced a great horde then the small army had better keep moving and so destroy the enemy piece by piece, but if the small army stayed still then it risked being surrounded and pulverized into surrender.

  Borkardan on the twenty-fourth day of September, that was the goal, and Wellesley marched his men hard. The cavalry vanguard and the infantry picquets of the day were roused at midnight and, an hour later, just as the rest of the army was being stirred into sullen wakefulness, those men would start the northwards march. By two o'clock the whole army was moving. Dogs barked as the cavalry vanguard clattered through the villages, and after the horsemen came heavy guns hauled by oxen, marching Highlanders and long ranks of sepoys under their leather-cased colours. Ten miles to the west Stevenson's arm
y marched parallel to Wellesley's, but ten miles was a half-day's march and if either force was confronted by the enemy then the other could do nothing to help.

  Everything hinged on their meeting at Borkardan.

  Most of the men had little idea of what waited for them. They sensed the sudden urgency and guessed it presaged battle, but though the rumours spoke of the enemy as a numberless horde, they marched confidently. They grumbled, of course, for all soldiers grumble. They complained about being hungry, they swore at being made to tramp through the cavalry's manure, and they cursed the oppressive heat that seemed scarcely alleviated by marching at night. Each march finished by midday when the men would rig their tents and sprawl in the shade while the picquets set guards, the cavalry watered horses and the commissary butchered bullocks to provide ration meat.

  The cavalry were the busiest men. Their job was to ride ahead and to the flanks of the army to drive any enemy scouts far away so that Scindia would not know that the two red-coated armies marched to trap him, but each morning, as the eastern horizon turned grey, then flushed with pink, then glowed gold and red before finally exploding into light, the patrols searched in vain for any enemies. The Mahratta horse seemed to be staying home, and some of the cavalry officers feared that their enemy might have slipped away again.

  As they were nearing Naulniah which would be Wellesley's last resting place before he marched through the night to Borkardan, the General called his patrols closer to the army, ordering them to ride just a mile or two in front of his column. If the enemy was asleep, he explained to his aides, then it was best to do nothing to wake him. It was Sunday, and if the enemy was still engaged in its durbar, then the next day would bring battle. One day to let fears harass hope, though Wellesley's aides seemed careless enough as they marched the last few miles to Naulniah. Major John Blackiston, an engineer on Wellesley's staff, was needling Captain Campbell by saying that the Scots had no harvest to speak of.

  "Oats alone, isn't that it, Captain?"

  "You've not seen barley, Major, till you've been to Scotland," Campbell declared.

 

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