‘Well, there’ll be plenty of firewood at least,’ said Armstrong with a grin. ‘I’ve never seen so many trees in all my life!’ Then he looked more serious. ‘If ever it comes to a chase, though, we’ll lose every time.’
‘But what a place it is for ambushing!’ enthused Hervey.
Armstrong nodded. There was no doubting that.
‘Come and have a look at Hopwood’s map. It’s given me an idea.’
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
ATTACK
Mansfield, 1 October
‘Sir! Sir! Beacon’s lit!’
Hervey woke slower than usual. He heard the banging on the door rather than the report. ‘Come in!’
The orderly serjeant held his lantern high. ‘Corporal Evans, sir. We’ve just seen the north beacon light.’
‘Have you roused the out-picket?’
‘Ay, sir, and Mr Canning.’
Serjeant Armstrong was at the door a few seconds later. ‘I’d just begun my rounds. I’ve told Lingard to saddle up for you.’
Hervey pulled on his boots and overalls, cursed as he broke the bar of a spur ramming it into the housing, fastened his jacket, wedged his shako on tight, took his gloves, seized up his swordbelt and carbine – almost forgetting the ready cylinder – and took the stairs at a run. In the grange yard dragoons were already leading out horses under saddle (both outlying and inlying pickets slept dressed), and the lance-corporal was numbering them off.
‘Mr Seton Canning!’
The lieutenant hurried across the yard. ‘Ready, Hervey.’
‘Stand-to second division, and follow on as soon as you can. Have St Oswald stand-by third. I’ll take the picket with Serjeant Armstrong.’
‘Sir!’
‘Trumpeter!’
‘Susan’ Medwell came doubling, followed by Hervey’s coverman.
‘I think this is it, Corporal Troughton. Stick close. Medwell, I’ll want “charge” when we’re near. It could scatter them without a shot.’
‘Sir!’
‘Well done, Lingard. Put this in the bucket.’ He passed the carbine to his stand-in groom as he took Gilbert’s reins and checked the girth.
‘Picket ready, sir,’ called Armstrong from the saddle of his big dapple bay.
‘Very well. Threes advance, at the trot!’
In fewer than ten minutes from first alarm, fifteen dragoons, their captain, coverman, trumpeter and serjeant were leaving the billet for the besieged house.
Hervey’s beacon system was in two lines, one for the houses north of the town, and one for those south. When a house was attacked, the watchmen on the roof were to light the beacon, and the watches on the other houses would relay the alarm by lighting theirs. Videttes, set at last light, observed the centre house of each line, and galloped the alarm back to the grange. The centre house had two beacons, so that if a house on the left of the line were attacked, and later one on the right, it could signal the subsequent attack. But the picket would not know whether the attack were left or right until reaching the centre house.
There was a three-quarter moon, giving enough light to the road to allow the picket a good canter for most of the mile and a half to Warren Hall, centre house of the north beacon line. There were men with torches at the gates as Hervey came up.
‘It’s down the line towards Pleasley, sir!’ they called. Hervey left one man as post and took the rest straight on, increasing the pace once his eyes had recovered from the torches. At each house it was the same: they had relayed the further beacon. As Hervey passed the last house but one he became suspicious of the Luddites’ chance attack on the furthest point of the line.
‘Do you want me to blow the charge yet, sir?’ called ‘Susan’ Medwell.
‘No. Let’s wait and see.’
Hervey’s instinct soon proved right. They galloped up the drive of Pleasley Grange to see torches all over the place, but no Luddites. The roof watch came down the escape ladders in haste and confusion.
‘What’s happening?’ shouted Hervey.
‘It’s queer, sir,’ said the chief watchman. ‘We was attacked for all of ten minutes – shots and all – and then they just went. As if they heard you coming. But that was half an hour ago.’
‘Did you fire the beacon at once?’
‘Ay, sir. I think it were that that frightened ’em off.’
‘Is anyone hurt?’
‘No, sir.’
‘Very well. I’ll leave two dragoons till morning. Threes about, Serjeant Armstrong!’
They galloped back down the drive as fast as they could. ‘Do you think what I think?’ shouted Armstrong, closing up.
‘I’ve been humbugged?’
‘I wouldn’t have taken it personal like that, but yes.’
‘How in God’s name did they know?’
They checked to a trot to take the turn back onto the road.
‘Well, they’d easily have known about the beacons. You could hardly keep them a secret. All they have to do is attack one house and then stand back to see how long it takes us to get here. “Sons of Sherwood”, they call themselves? Bloody Robin Hoods!’ Armstrong spat into the hedge at an imagined outlaw.
‘So they’ve watched us all the way here?’
‘Probably.’
‘Shit!’ Hervey felt like spitting too. ‘Surely it’s too much of a coincidence to be all the way this end of the line, though. What if they draw us to one end and then attack the other?’
‘That’s why you’ve got a second beacon.’
‘And what if the other line’s now lit, the south line?’
‘Well, we always knew we couldn’t be everywhere at once. And neither can they!’
‘No. That’s why we had to be at the right place, because they choose the point of attack. What if they’ve decoyed us here, and then St Oswald’s picket to the other line? Canning’s already galloping down here. I bet that second beacon at Warren Hall won’t be lit till he’s passed.’
‘You mean it’ll be lit any minute now if they’re having a go at Clipstone?’
‘Exactly! Come on!’ They pressed back into a canter.
It took the best part of an hour to get within reach of Clipstone. They had turned round Seton Canning’s division within half a mile of Pleasley Grange, which meant to Hervey that the second beacon at Warren Hall could not have been alight a quarter of an hour before. But both beacons were well ablaze when they’d passed the house again, and now they could hear firing towards Clipstone from a mile off. Hervey ordered Medwell to blow for all he was worth as they galloped the last stretch, praying there were no trip ropes across the road.
From the top of the rise they could see the house plainly – more flames than just the beacon. Hervey barely checked to take the graceful curve of the park drive through the gates, his blood boiling at the sight of the flames as well as at his own deception. He shouted no orders, as there could be no plan. Luddites bolted in all directions before him, like rats fleeing a terrier. He chased after one towards the Jacobs’ meadow, knowing he’d run him up against the park wall. A report and powder flash from the beech hedge to his right made him swing his carbine and fire instinctively.
‘Oh sir! Oh God!’
He looked round. ‘Susan’ Medwell was clutching his stomach.
‘Hold up, man,’ called Hervey, circling and seizing Medwell round the shoulders to support him in the saddle. ‘Corporal Troughton!’
His coverman was already on the other side. ‘I’ve got ’im, sir.’
Hervey let go and turned to the beech hedge. ‘Come out at once with your hands up!’ He barely counted to five before firing into the hedge again, four times. A few seconds later a man stumbled out and fell to the ground.
‘Leave ’im, sir,’ shouted Armstrong, jumping from the saddle and running towards the motionless figure, pistol cocked. He turned him over roughly, saw he was dead and spat with the utmost force at the ground. ‘Where’s that other bastard run to, sir?’
‘The field, there,
with the sheep. But the park wall will stop him.’
Armstrong changed hands with the pistol, drew his sabre and took off after him.
‘Go and cover him, Stancliff,’ called Hervey to the nearest dragoon. ‘Come on, Susan, my brave lad, let’s get you down and bandaged.’
But Medwell was dead in the saddle, and his little grey mare was anxious.
‘Sir, he’s gripping my arm so tight I can’t—’
‘Oh Christ! All right, Corporal Troughton. I’ll take his bridle. Morris!’
Another dragoon hurried over. ‘Sir?’
‘Help Corporal Troughton get Medwell down. He’s shot dead.’
It was a struggle, but between the three of them they managed to lay Private Medwell on the ground with a degree of dignity.
Hervey tried now to hold back his disgust – his anger he was past caring about. He was never fool enough to believe that all dragoons were the same to him, and ‘Susan’ Medwell he loved because he was a matchless trumpeter and as smart a man as ever he’d seen in uniform. And Medwell had loved being his trumpeter and never sought to hide it. ‘Jesus Christ!’ cursed Hervey. ‘Shot down in his own country!’
Seton Canning came running. ‘Hervey, the house is well ablaze. We’ll need help from the village.’
‘Send for it then. And tell whoever not to take no for an answer! Is Sir Abraham safe?’
‘Ay, they all are – except one of the watch has a flesh wound.’
‘I’ll come in a minute.’ He took Medwell’s cloak from the saddle arch and laid it over him. ‘Stand with him, Stancliff. I don’t want anyone riding over him.’
‘Ay, sir,’ said the dragoon, taking the grey’s reins.
Hervey and his coverman ran to the front of the house, where Sir Abraham and the watch were huddled. By the light of the flames he could see the dismay in the magistrate’s face. ‘Sir Abraham, I’m so very sorry we were not here quicker.’
‘We held them off a full half-hour. Kept firing above their heads. But they were determined to break in. They managed to prise off the shutters at the east side, though we threw bricks down at them the while. And then they fired the place – without a thought for who was inside, or how we might get down from the roof.’
Hervey glanced at the line of gardeners and indoor servants passing buckets to the house. It seemed to him a forlorn hope. ‘Is there a fire engine in Clipstone, Sir Abraham?’
‘There is. I paid for it myself.’
‘Then we shall have it soon.’
Sir Abraham seemed reassured.
Hervey glanced over to the house again. ‘Corporal Troughton, get as many men as you can to the front doors. We can at least get some of Sir Abraham’s things out.’
‘No, Hervey, no,’ Sir Abraham shouted. ‘I shan’t have the deaths of any more men on my hands. Leave it. Leave it all.’
Hervey motioned Troughton to do his bidding anyway. ‘With your leave, sir,’ he said quietly, and then ran towards the house, calling to Seton Canning to follow him.
The doors were wide open, and the gardeners were managing to play a stirrup pump to some effect over the stairs. The fire was still in the right wing, and there was as yet no smoke in the left, where Sir Abraham’s porcelain collection was displayed. The study adjoined the main drawing room, which was well alight, so Hervey took Seton Canning and some of the servants straight to the china. In a very little time they had a chain bringing it out. The study was another matter. It took him several minutes to find the right doors – it was surprisingly dark – and when he had, the smoke issuing from beneath them suggested the study was gone. But Hervey couldn’t turn his back on years of scholarship, not without trying. He felt the door panels: they were cool enough. He touched the gilt handles: they didn’t burn him. He took a deep breath and opened one of the double doors a little way. The smoke swirled backwards with the draught from outside, giving him a clear enough view of Sir Abraham’s desk. He knew the folios were in its drawers, only two dozen feet from him, but with so much smoke he needed a clew to be safe. Curtain ties provided the means.
He made three forays into the study. With the last he was forced to the floor as smoke swirled back with the shattering of one of the clerestories. Coughing badly, he managed to close the doors, however, and get Seton Canning’s chain to pass out the ledgers – all of them.
The Clipstone engine and its crew fought the flames tenaciously, but the battle was uneven. By dawn the house was burned out. On the lawns were a good quantity of Sir Abraham’s pictures and furniture, all his Chinese porcelain, and his Old Testament scholarship. The man shot dead by Hervey was recognized at once by Sir Abraham when daylight came – one of his own workshop foremen. Serjeant Armstrong had taken the other fugitive alive after a savage fight which had left both of them bruised about the face. And Corporal Harris had taken two more in Clipstone churchyard as he went for the fire engine.
Sir Abraham’s first thought on seeing the extent of his loss was the condition of his servants. He gathered them together, indoor and outdoor alike, asked the housemaids very politely to stop crying, and assured them all that they would not lose a single penny of their wages while the house was rebuilt, and that they would have a roof over their head, somehow, by that very evening.
‘A man that men would follow willingly,’ said Serjeant Armstrong, hearing it. ‘Some of these folk don’t know they’re born!’
There was an emergency meeting of the bench at midday. ‘Sir Abraham Cole presided with remarkable composure,’ Hervey told Seton Canning as they rode back to the grange afterwards. ‘The other magistrates looked decidedly shaky. They took a lot of persuading their duties must continue as before.’
‘I would that they’d make a start with those two we caught in the churchyard.’
‘They’ll be remanded to the assizes this afternoon,’ Hervey assured him. ‘Besides aught else, Sir Abraham wants them out of the borough as soon as possible.’
Seton Canning nodded. ‘I’m surprised the bench assembled at all. I imagined they’d have barricaded themselves in after last night.’
‘I think it was the Bow Street men who put the resolve in them. They’ve a string of agents now, and it seems their questioning of the churchyard men this morning rendered very serviceable intelligence.’
‘What about the one that Serjeant Armstrong took?’
‘Oh, they’ve even higher hopes there. He was found with a pistol on him, which means he could be charged with at least one capital offence. They believe he’ll turn King’s evidence.’
Just as they were approaching the grange, there was a noise of galloping on the road behind them. They turned to see Sir Francis Evans at full stretch. ‘Good Lord,’ said Hervey, reining his horse about. ‘What alarm’s this?’
Sir Francis’s horse was in as great a lather as Hervey had seen, but the general looked invigorated. ‘Heard about the night’s trouble via the Mercury offices this morning,’ he called, springing from the saddle like a man half his age. ‘Came at once. Just seen Sir Abraham Cole and his justices. Promised ’em more troops as long as they maintain the posse in being. Urged ’em not to swing to repressive measures. I don’t want my cavalry drawn into controlling crowds. I don’t want them dissipating their strength when it’s needed to fight the hard core of these Luddites!’
Grooms rushed to take the reins of the dozen or so horses now snorting and blowing by the gates of the grange.
‘Come then,’ said Sir Francis, clapping a hand on Hervey’s shoulder. ‘A full and frank account of the past week, if you will.’
Hervey began at once as they made their way across the courtyard to the grange house.
Serjeant Armstrong had hastily arranged for coffee. Coffee could allay a great many general officers’ complaints, in Armstrong’s experience, and the state of the quarter guard, which had turned out for him in cloaks because their tunics were still sodden from fire-fighting, would be bound to provoke a general’s displeasure.
But no, Sir Francis
appeared to have no cause for complaint. He took the coffee gladly, sank into a chair, and bid Hervey to do the same. ‘Tell me of those Bow Street men, Hervey. When did they come?’
Hervey explained the background a little warily still, for the general’s tone could have implied disapproval as well as curiosity.
He need not have worried on this account either, however. Sir Francis thought it the very model of assistance to the civil powers. ‘I truly believe that it’s the fear of being taken in their own homes, with evidence for conviction, which will stop this criminality – for that’s what it is, no more, no less. It’s the same with the insurrectionists. It’s not the plotters and ringleaders that get chopped down by the yeomanry. We can hang and transport all we like, but rooting out them that’s scheming should be the priority. I met with the sheriff again yesterday, and he is ruing the dearth of intelligence from his own sources. I congratulate you, therefore, Hervey!’
‘Thank you, sir,’ said Hervey. How easy it was to serve a man like this, a man to place one’s trust in. ‘But I have to say I take no delight in last evening. I was humbugged, and I should have seen it before I did.’
Sir Francis looked at him sceptically. ‘Captain Hervey, a word of advice. Do not be too ready to volunteer your failings to authority. You may find it is too convenient, sometimes, for superiors to accept them in lieu of their own.’
Hervey nodded. ‘I’m sorry, sir. I confess to feeling the loss of my trumpeter rather more than I should if this were France.’
‘Indeed, indeed. It is bound to go heavy with you. And you are aware, of course, that you will have to answer to the courts for the man you killed?’
‘I know it, Sir Francis. Sir Abraham Cole said that I should engage an attorney at once, though he supposed it would amount to no great affair.’
‘I should damn well hope not!’ Sir Francis drained his coffee cup, and then a thought seemed to occur to him. ‘Where is Lord Towcester? I haven’t seen him in days.’
Hervey explained that the lieutenant colonel had visited only recently, having been paying his respects to the greater landowners of the district.
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