Frederickson first led his squad eastwards, then south through the tangle of small meadows. He was drawn by a rhythmic, clanging sound that came from the direction of the watermill.
He paused in the black-shadowed shelter of the byre where Harper had drawn his own tooth. There was the beat of owl-wings overhead, then silence again except for the ring of picks or crowbars on the watermill’s stones.
Frederickson waved his men into hiding, then stared at the mill. There was the faintest glow of light limning the doors and windows, suggesting that men worked inside the big stone building by the light of shielded lanterns.
‘They’re putting guns in there,’ Harper offered his opinion in a hoarse whisper.
‘Probably.’ Artillery placed in the mill would be protected by stone walls from rifle fire, and would be able to rake the southern and eastern flanks of the beleaguered fortress.
Frederickson turned towards the village where the bulk of the enemy forces had gone. More half-shielded lights showed among the small buildings, but he could see no movement between the village and the mill. He wondered how many picquets guarded the big stone building that straddled the stream. ‘Hernandez?’
The Spanish Rifleman from Salamanca appeared beside Frederickson. He moved with an uncanny silence; a stealth learned when he was a
guerrillero
, and a stealth much prized by Captain Frederickson. The Spaniard listened to his Captain’s quick orders, showed a white grin against blackened skin, and went southwards. Hernandez, Frederickson believed, could have picked the devil’s own pockets and got clean away.
The other Riflemen waited for twenty minutes. A French squad fired from the glacis, shouted insults at the ramparts, but no defender fired back. A dog barked in the village, then yelped as it was kicked into silence.
Frederickson smelt Hernandez before he saw him, or rather he smelt blood, then heard two thumps as the Spaniard seemed to materialize out of the shadows. ‘There are four men on the track from the mill to the village,’ Hernandez whispered, ‘and there were two guarding the bridge.’
‘Were?’
‘Si, señor.’
Hernandez gestured to the ground and thus explained the curious double thump that had presaged his return.
Frederickson’s voice was gentle with reproof. ‘You didn’t cut their heads off, did you, Marcos?’
‘Si, señor
. Now they cannot give the alarm.’
‘That’s certainly true.’ Frederickson was glad that the darkness cloaked the horrors at his feet.
He led his squad south, following the path reconnoitred by Hernandez, a path that led to the small bridge beside the mill. Once at the bridge they were close enough to see the shapes of men working inside the building. One group of men, using crowbars, sledgehammers and picks, were making loopholes in the thick outer wall of the mill, while others cleared the mill’s machinery to leave a space for the guns. ‘There were twenty French bastards inside,’ Hernandez whispered.
‘Guns?’
‘I didn’t see them.’
One of the lantern shields was lifted as a man stooped to light a cigar. Frederickson thought he saw the shape of a French field gun in the recesses of the mill, but it was hard to tell exactly what lay in the deep shadows. But Frederickson knew that at least twenty men worked inside, and another four Frenchmen were close to the mill. Sweet William had thirteen men, but his were Riflemen. The odds therefore seemed stacked against the French, in which case there was small point in waiting, so Frederickson, sword drawn, led his men to the attack.
General Calvet was not unduly annoyed, he was even amused. ‘So he’s good! That makes him a worthy foe. I’ll take another egg.’ Another rifle crack and another scream betrayed that some fool had shown himself on the northern edge of the village. ‘Four hundred paces!’ Calvet looked at Favier.
‘They have some marksmen,’ Favier said apologetically.
‘I’ve never understood,’ Calvet broke off a piece of bread with which to mop up his egg-yolk, ‘why the Emperor won’t use rifles. I like them!’
‘Slow to load,’ Favier ventured.
‘Tell that to the poor bugger who’s on his way to the surgeons.’ Calvet grunted scant thanks as his servant tipped another runny egg from the pan on to the plate. ‘Where’s the bacon?’
‘The British took it all to the fort.’
‘So they’re eating bacon for breakfast and I’m not,’ Calvet growled, then looked at Ducos who sat in the corner with a pen and notebook. ‘Tell your master, Ducos, that we lost thirty-four dead, six wounded, and had one twelve-pounder scorched. We lost two limbers of ammunition. That’s not a big loss! I remember a night we got in among the Ivans at Vilna. I had two of them on this sword! One behind the other like chickens on a spit! And the one in front was grinning at me and jabbering away in his heathen language. Remember that?’ He twisted to look at his aide. ‘How many guns did we take?’
‘Four, sir.’
‘I thought it was six.’
‘Six it was,’ the aide said hastily.
‘Six guns!’ the general said happily, ‘and Sharpe didn’t take one last night! Not one! He just scorched a carriage!’
The mill had burned, but the stone walls were still intact and the guns were being emplaced behind the finished, scorched embrasures. Calvet acknowledged that the British troops had done well in the night. They had scoured the mill of its work-party, exploded the limbers, but they could have done much better. Sharpe, in Calvet’s book, had made a mistake. He had only sent out a small force and, though that force had committed butchery, they had done not nearly so much damage as a major sortie from the fortress might have achieved. Calvet chuckled. ‘He thought we were going to pounce, so he kept most of his men at home.’ The general spooned half the fried egg into his mouth, then went on talking despite the mouthful. ‘So we’ll just have to surprise this half-clever bugger, won’t we?’ He wiped egg yolk from his chin with his sleeve, then looked at Favier. ‘Go and have a talk with this Sharpe. You know what to say.’
‘Of course, sir.’
‘And tell him I’d be obliged for some bacon. The fat sort.’
‘Yes, sir.’ Favier paused. ‘He’ll probably want some brandy in return.’
‘Give it to him! I’ll get it back by the end of the day, but I do feel like some fat bacon for lunch. Right, gentlemen,’ Calvet slapped the table to show that the pleasantries were over, and that the siege proper could begin.
CHAPTER 15
The moment Colonel Favier removed his hat, Sharpe recognized the man who had spoken to him at the bridge over the Leyre. Favier smiled. ‘My general sends his congratulations.’
‘Give him my commiserations.’
The French corporal holding the white flag of truce stood miserably beside Favier’s horse, while Favier stared along the ramparts. There was no one but Sharpe to be seen. Favier smiled. ‘My general informs you that you have acquitted yourself nobly and that you may march out with all the honours of war.’ Favier shouted far louder than was necessary for just Sharpe to hear; he wanted the hidden garrison to listen to this offer. ‘You will be imprisoned, of course, but treated as honourable and brave opponents.’
‘I’ll give you my answer,’ Sharpe said, ‘at midday.’
Favier, who knew all the rules of this game, smiled. ‘If your answer is not forthcoming in ten minutes, Major, we shall presume that it is a rejection of our most generous terms. In the meantime may we remove our dead from the north ground?’
‘You can send six men, unarmed, and one light cart. You should know that Captain Mayeron is our prisoner.’
‘Thank you.’ Favier calmed his horse that had suddenly skittered sideways on the road that led through the glacis. ‘And you should know, Major, that your ships believe you to be defeated and captured. They will not return for you.’ He waited for a response, but Sharpe said nothing. Favier smiled. ‘You and your officers are invited to take lunch with General Calvet.’
‘I shall give you that answer with the other,’ Sharpe said.
‘And General Calvet begs a favour of you. He would be appreciative of some fat bacon. He offers this in return.’ Favier held up a black, squat bottle. ‘Brandy!’
Sharpe smiled. ‘Tell the general that we have all the food and drink we need. When you come for your answer I’ll give you the bacon.’
‘It’s a pity for brave men to die!’ Favier was shouting again. ‘For nothing!’
Eight minutes later Sharpe gave Favier the answer that the Frenchman expected, a rejection of the offered terms, and also tossed down a muslin-wrapped leg of bacon that the flag-carrier had to pick up from the broad ledge of the counter-guard. Favier waved a friendly farewell, then turned his horse away.
To the north a small waggon was still picking up the dead left in the dunes by Frederickson’s men. Sharpe wanted the French conscripts to see those corpses and to fear the night. The French could rule the day, but his Riflemen could make the environs of the Teste de Buch into a nightmare.
Yet within minutes of Favier’s departure Sharpe had some evidence that the Frenchman had planted some fear into his own men. Lieutenant Fytch, albeit sheepishly, wanted to know whether there was any hope in a fight.
‘Who rules the waves, Lieutenant?’ Sharpe asked.
‘Britannia?’
Sharpe pointed to the sea. ‘So that’s our territory. Any moment, Lieutenant, a ship could appear. When it does, we’re safe. How would you feel if we surrendered and a naval squadron appeared an hour later?’ The very fact that the question had been asked was cause for worry. Sharpe did not fear for the morale of his Riflemen, but the Marines had not been fighting the French so consistently and, bereft of their ships, they felt the flickers of fear that could gnaw into a man’s confidence. ‘We’ve sent a message south, the Navy patrols this coast, we only have to hold on.’
‘Yes, sir.’
Yet, in truth, Sharpe might have shared the tremor of despair that the lieutenant’s question had shown. There were no ships in sight, even though the waters beyond Cap Ferrat had settled to a gentle, sun-glittering chop. He waited on the ramparts, wondering what surprises the French general planned, and found himself contemplating the very thing Favier had encouraged; surrender.
Sharpe told himself that he was trapped, out-numbered, and with limited supplies of food, water and ammunition. When one of those things gave out, he was doomed.
Yet to be made a prisoner was to be taken far away from this part of France, to be marched north to the grim fortress town of Verdun and he would be even further from Jane. He had told his men they fought in hope of rescue, but he had lied.
Sharpe’s troubled thoughts were interrupted by Frederickson climbing the ramp. ‘I thought you were sleeping,’ Sharpe said.
‘I slept for three hours.’ Frederickson stared out to sea. These western ramparts were the safest, the only wall not covered by the French forces, and the two officers could lean in a gun embrasure and stare at‘the waves.
‘There’s something I should have told you,’ Sharpe said uncertainly.
‘You have an unnatural passion for my beauty.’ Frederickson blew steam from a mug of tea. ‘I understand it.’
Sharpe smiled a dutiful appreciation. ‘Jane.’
‘Ah.’ Frederickson, abandoning jest, turned and leaned his rump on the stone. ‘Well?’
‘She has the fever.’
Frederickson’s one eye considered Sharpe. ‘She was well the night before ...’
‘The symptoms appeared next morning.’
Frederickson sighed. ‘I wish I could express my sorrow properly, sir.’
‘It’s not that.’ Sharpe was embarrassed into incoherence. ‘I just think I’m fighting here because I can’t bear to leave her. If she dies, and I’m not there. You understand? If I surrender,’ he waved feebly towards the north, ‘I’ll be taken away from her.’
‘I understand.’ Frederickson took a cheroot from his pocket. He only had six left and had rationed himself to one a day. He lit it, and drew the smoke into his lungs. He watched Sharpe, knowing what Sharpe wanted to hear, but unable and unwilling to express it. He was saved an immediate reply by the presence of three Riflemen carrying a barrel of lime to one of the citadels.
Frederickson did not know Jane. He had met her just once, and he had discovered a girl of startling prettiness, but that did not make her special. Many girls, to one degree or another, were pretty. Marine Robinson’s green-eyed drab, for whom Robinson risked a deserter’s death, would be as pretty as any society girl if she was washed, dressed properly, and taught the monkey-antics of the salon. Frederickson had noted that Jane had a sweet-natured smile and a pleasant, vivacious personality, but such things were the stock-in-trade of the young woman seeking matrimony. Any father from the middling sort in Britain, and hopeful of marrying his daughter into the better classes, made sure his child was tricked out with such allurements. And as for intelligence, which Jane seemed to have, in Frederickson’s view the largest part of female humanity so blessed inevitably wasted the gift on cheap novels, gossip, or evangelical religion.
So to suffer for such a girl, as Sharpe was evidently suffering, did not touch a nerve in Frederickson’s soul. He allowed that Jane Sharpe might one day prove to be above the common ruck, might even prove to have a distinction and character that would outlast the fading of her beauty, and doubtless Sharpe saw those possibilities within her, but Frederickson, not knowing her, did not. To agonize over a wife was therefore beyond Sweet William’s comprehension; indeed for a soldier to take a wife was beyond his comprehension. Whores could scratch that itch, and so Frederickson found he could say nothing that would be of comfort to his friend. Instead, abandoning sympathy, he posed a question. ‘If you died this morning, God forbid, then I’d take over?’
‘Yes.’ Sharpe knew that Frederickson’s commission was senior to Palmer’s.
‘Then I,’ Frederickson said stonily, ‘would fight the bastards.’