Sharpe 3-Book Collection 7: Sharpe's Revenge, Sharpe's Waterloo, Sharpe's Devil (101 page)

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Authors: Bernard Cornwell

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BOOK: Sharpe 3-Book Collection 7: Sharpe's Revenge, Sharpe's Waterloo, Sharpe's Devil
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PART II
COCHRANE
CHAPTER 5 
The
Espiritu Santo
’s crew, like their Captain, were eager to meet Lord Cochrane. They called him a devil, and crossed themselves when they spoke of him, yet they reckoned they could match this devil gun for gun and cutlass for cutlass and still beat him hollow. The crew might grumble when they were woken to an unexpected gun practice, or to rehearse repelling boarders, but they boasted of what their hardened skills would do to the devilish Cochrane if he dared attack the
Espiritu Santo
. They also boasted of the prize money they would win. Cochrane had captured his fifty-gun flagship, now called the
O’Higgins
, from the Spanish Navy which, stung by the defeat, had promised a fortune to whichever ship recaptured the lost vessel. Ardiles’s men wanted that prize, and were willing to sweat as they practiced for it. Sharpe and Harper, deemed to be unskilled men, were allocated pikes and told that their job would be to stand on deck and be prepared to kill any man foolhardy enough to board the frigate. “Though perhaps it would be better if you did not carry weapons at all?” Captain Ardiles suggested when he heard that Sharpe and Harper were expected to be among the pikemen.
Ardiles, who was so reluctant to show himself to his passengers, proved to be a frequent visitor to the lower decks. He liked to inspect the guns and to smell the powder smoke which soured the ship with its stench after every practice
session. He liked to talk with his men, who returned his interest with a genuine loyalty and devotion. Ardiles, the crew told Sharpe and Harper, was a proper seaman, not some gold-assed officer too high and mighty to duck his head under the beams of the lowest decks.
Ardiles, on one of his very first tours of inspection of the voyage, had taken Sharpe and Harper aside. “I hear you made your mark?” he asked drily.
“You mean Balin?” Sharpe asked.
“I do indeed, so watch your backs in a fight.” Ardiles did not seem in the least upset that one of his prime seamen had been hammered, but he warned Sharpe and Harper that others on board might not be so sanguine. “Balin’s a popular man, and he may have put a price on your heads.” It was just after delivering that warning that Ardiles had wondered aloud whether Sharpe and Harper could be trusted to carry weapons in any fight against Lord Cochrane.
Sharpe ignored the question and Ardiles, who seemed amused at Sharpe’s silent equivocation, perched himself on one of the tables that folded down between the guns. “Not that it’s very likely your loyalty will be put to the test,” Ardiles went on. “Cochrane doesn’t usually sail this far south, so every hour makes it less likely that we’ll meet him. Nevertheless, there’s hope. We’ve assiduously spread rumors about gold, hoping to attract his attention.”
“You mean there isn’t gold on board?” Sharpe asked in astonishment.
“Sir,” Ardiles chided Sharpe softly. So far the Spanish Captain had allowed Sharpe to treat him with a scant respect, but now he suddenly insisted on being addressed properly. Sharpe, prickly with hurt pride, did not instantly respond and Ardiles shrugged, as though the use of the honorific did not really matter to him personally, even though he was going to insist on it. “You’ve been a commanding officer, Sharpe,”
Ardiles spoke softly so that only Sharpe and Harper could hear him, “and you would have demanded the respect of your men, even those who were reluctant to be under your authority, and I demand the same. You might be a Lieutenant-Colonel on land, but here you’re an unskilled seaman and I can have respect thrashed into you at a rope’s end. Unlike General Bautista I’m not fond of witnessing punishment, so I’d rather you volunteered the word.”
“Sir,” Sharpe said.
Ardiles nodded acknowledgment of the reluctant courtesy. “No, there isn’t gold on board. Any gold that we might have been taking home has probably been stolen by Bautista, but we went through the routine of loading boxes filled with rock from the citadel’s wharf. I just hope that charade and the rumors it undoubtedly encouraged are sufficient to persuade Cochrane that we are stuffed with riches, for then he might come south and fight us. We hear that the rebel government owes him money. Much money! So perhaps he’ll try to collect it from me. I’d like that. We’d all like that, wouldn’t we?” Ardiles turned and asked the question of his crewmen who, hanging back in the gundeck’s gloom, now cheered their Captain.
Ardiles, pleased with their enthusiasm, slid his rump off the table, then went back to his earlier question. “So can you be trusted, Sharpe?”
“What I was hoping for, sir,” Sharpe did not reply directly, “was that you might put me aboard a fishing boat?” The
Espiritu Santo
had passed a score of boats that had come far out to sea to search for big tunny fish, and Sharpe had concocted the idea that perhaps one of the boats might carry him back to Chile where, in alliance with the rebels, he might yet retrieve Doña Louisa’s money, exhume Blas Vivar’s body and restore his own pride.
“No,” Ardiles said calmly, “I won’t. I have orders to take
you back to Europe, and I am a man who obeys orders. But are you? Whose side will you be on if we meet Cochrane?”
This time Sharpe did not hesitate. “Cochrane’s side,” he paused, “sir.”
Ardiles was immediately and understandably hostile. “Then you must take the consequences if there’s a fight, mustn’t you?” He stalked away.
“What does that mean?” Harper said.
“It means that if we sight Lord Cochrane then he’ll send Balin and his cronies to slit our throats.”
Next day there were no more fishing boats, just an empty ocean and a succession of thrashing squalls. Sharpe, under the immense vacancy of sea and sky, felt all hope slide away. He had lost his uniform and sword; things of no value except to himself, but their loss galled him. He had lost Louisa’s money. He had been humiliated and there was nothing he could do about it. He had been fleeced, then ignominiously kicked out of a country with only the clothes on his back. He felt heartsick. He was not used to failure.
But at least he was accustomed to hardship, and had no fears about surviving on board the
Espiritu Santo
. The hard bread, salted meat, dried fish and rancid wine that were the seamen’s rations would have been counted luxuries in Sharpe’s army. The worst part of the life, apart from the damp which permeated every stitch of clothing and bedding, were the Bosun’s mates who, knowing that Sharpe had been a senior army officer, seemed to find a particular pleasure in finding him the dirtiest and most menial jobs on board. Sharpe and Harper mucked out the sheep and pigs that would be slaughtered for fresh meat during the voyage, they scrubbed the poopdeck each morning, they ground the rust off the blades of the boarding pikes that were racked on deck, and each afternoon they collected the latrine buckets from the passenger cabins and scoured them clean. Among
the score of passengers aboard the frigate were seven Spanish army officers, two of whom were sailing with their families, and those army officers, knowing Sharpe’s history, stared at him with frank curiosity. It was, Sharpe thought, going to be a long voyage home.
Yet, like most ordeals, it abated swiftly. The humiliated Balin might bear a grudge, but Harper inevitably discovered a score of fellow Irishmen aboard the
Espiritu Santo
, all of them exiles from British justice, and all of them eager to hear Harper’s news of home, and Sharpe, given temporary and flattering status as an honorary Irishman, felt a good deal safer from the Balin faction. One of the Bosun’s mates was from Donegal and his presence took much of the sting out of Sharpe’s treatment. A week into the voyage and Sharpe was even beginning to enjoy the experience.
The next dawn brought proof that the sea could throw up hardships far worse than anything yet inflicted on Sharpe and Harper. They were scrubbing the poopdeck when the forward lookout hailed the quarterdeck with a cry that a boat was in sight. Ardiles ran on deck and seized the watch officer’s telescope, while the First Lieutenant, Otero, who remembered Sharpe and Harper well from the outward voyage, and who was excruciatingly embarrassed by their change of fortune, climbed to the lookout’s post on the foremast from where he trained his own telescope forward.
“What is she?” Ardiles called.
“A wreck, sir! A dismasted whaler, by the look of her.”
“Goddamn.” Ardiles had been hoping it would prove to be the
O’Higgins
. “Change course to take a look at her, then call me when we’re closer!” Ardiles muttered the instruction to the officer on watch, then, before taking refuge in his cabin, he glowered at the handful of passengers who had come on deck to see what had caused the sudden alarm.
Among the spectators were two army officers’ wives who
were standing at the weather rail to stare at the stricken whaler. Their excited children ran from one side of the deck to the other, playing an involved game of tag. One of the small girls slipped on the wet patch left by Sharpe’s holystone. “Move back! Give the ladies room!” the Bosun ordered Sharpe and Harper. “Just wait forrard! Wait till the passengers have gone below.”
Sharpe and Harper went to the beakhead where, concealed by the forecastle, they could hide from authority and thus stretch their temporary unemployment. They joined a small group of curious men who gazed at the wrecked whaler. She was a small ship, scarcely a third the size of the
Espiritu Santo
, with an ugly squared-off stern and, even uglier, three splintered stumps where her masts had stood. A spar, perhaps a yardarm, had been erected in place of the foremast, and a small sail lashed to that makeshift mast. Despite the jury rig she seemed to be unmanned, but then, in answer to a hail from the Spanish frigate’s masthead, two survivors appeared on the whaler’s deck and began waving frantically toward the
Espiritu Santo
. One of the two unfolded a flag that he held aloft to the wind. “She’s an American,” the First Lieutenant shouted down to the forecastle where a midshipman was deputed to carry the news back to the Captain’s cabin.
Ardiles, though, was not in his cabin, but had instead come forward. He had avoided the inquisitive passengers by using a lower deck, but now he suddenly appeared out of the low door which led to the beakhead. He nodded affably to the men who were perched on the ship’s lavatory bench, then trained his telescope on the whaler.
“She isn’t too badly damaged,” Ardiles spoke to himself, but as Sharpe and Harper were the closest men, they grunted an acknowledgment of his words. “Hardly damaged
at all!” Ardiles continued his assessment of the beleaguered American whaler.
“She looks buggered to me, sir,” Sharpe said.
“She’s floating upright,” Ardiles pointed out, “so, as they say in the Cadiz boatyards, her hull must be as watertight as a duck’s backside. Mind you, the hulls of whaling ships are as strong as anything afloat.” He paused as he stared through the glass. “They’ve lost their rudder, by the look of it. They’re using a steering oar instead.”
“What could have happened to her, sir?” Harper asked.
“A storm? Perhaps she rolled over? That can snap the sticks out of a boat as quick as you like. And she’s lost all her whaleboats, so I suspect her topsides were swept clean when she rolled. That would explain the rudder, too. And I’ll warrant she lost a few souls drowned too, God rest them.” Ardiles crossed himself.
Three men were now visible on the whaler’s deck. Lieutenant Otero, still high on the foremast, read the whaler’s name through his telescope and shouted it down to Captain Ardiles. “She’s called the
Mary Starbuck!

“Probably the owner’s wife,” Ardiles guessed. “I hope the poor man has got insurance, or else Mary Starbuck will be making do with last year’s frocks.”
Lieutenant Otero, now that the
Espiritu Santo
was nearing the hulk, slid down the ratlines to leave tar smeared on his white trousers. “Do we rig a towing bridle?” he asked Ardiles.
Ardiles shook his head. “We haven’t time to take them in tow. But prepare to heave to. And fetch me a speaking trumpet from the quarterdeck.” Ardiles still stared at the whaler, his fingers drumming on the beakhead’s low rail. “Perhaps, Sharpe, you’ll find out what the Americans need? I doubt they want us to rescue them. Their hull isn’t broached, and
under that jury rig they could sail from here to the Californias.”
The speaking trumpet was brought to the bows. Ten minutes later the frigate heaved to, backing her square sails so that she rolled and wallowed in the great swells. Sharpe, standing beside one of the long-barreled nine-pounder bow guns that were the frigate’s pursuit weapons, could clearly read the whaler’s name that was painted in gold letters on a black quarterboard across her stern. Beneath that name was written her hailing port, Nantucket. “Tell them who we are,” Ardiles ordered, “then ask them what they want.”
Sharpe raised the trumpet to his mouth. “This is the Spanish frigate
Espiritu Santo
,” he shouted, “What do you want?”
“Water, mister!” One of the Americans cupped his hands. “We lost all our fresh water barrels!”
“Ask what happened.” Ardiles, who spoke reasonable English, had not needed to have the American’s request for water translated.
“What happened?” Sharpe shouted.
“She rolled over! We were close to the ice when a berg broke off!”
Sharpe translated as best he could, for the answer made little sense to him, but Ardiles both understood and explained. “The fools take any risk to chase whales. They got caught by an iceberg calving off the ice mass. The sea churns like a tidal wave when that happens. Still, they’re good seamen to have brought their boat this far. Ask where they’re heading.”
“Valdivia!” came the reply. The whaler was close now, close enough for Sharpe and Ardiles to see how gaunt and bearded were the faces of the three survivors.
“Ask how many there are on board,” Ardiles commanded.
“Four of us, mister! The rest drowned!”
“Tell them to keep away,” Ardiles was worried that the
heavily built whaler might stove in the
Espiritu Santo
’s ribs. “And tell them I’ll float a couple of water barrels to them.” Ardiles saw Sharpe’s puzzlement, and explained. “Barrels of fresh water float in salt water.”
Sharpe leaned over the rail. “Keep away from our side! We’re going to float water barrels to you!”
“We hear you, mister!” One of the Americans dutifully leaned on the makeshift steering oar, though his efforts seemed to have little effect for the clumsy whaler kept heaving herself ever closer to the frigate.
Ardiles had ordered two barrels of water brought onto deck and a sling rove to heave them overboard. Now, while he waited for the barrels to arrive, he frowned at the
Mary Starbuck
’s wallowing hulk. “Ask them where Nantucket is,” he ordered suddenly.
Sharpe obeyed. “Off Cape Cod, mister!” Came back the answer.
Ardiles nodded, but some instinct was still troubling him. “Tell them to sheer away!” he snapped, then, perhaps not trusting Sharpe to deliver the order with sufficient force, he seized the speaking trumpet. “Keep clear! Keep clear!” he shouted in English.
“We’re trying, mister! We’re trying!” The man on the steering oar was desperately pushing against the whaler’s weight.
“Trying?” Ardiles repeated the word, then, still in English, he swore. “The devil! They didn’t lose their tryworks when they rolled!” He turned to shout toward the quarterdeck, but already events were accelerating to combat pace and Ardiles’s warning shout was lost in the sudden chaos.
For just as Ardiles turned, so a massive wave lifted the whaler’s square stern and an officer on the
Espiritu Santo
’s quarterdeck saw that the
Mary Starbuck
’s rudder was not shorn away after all, but was in place and being steered from
a tiller concealed beneath the whaler’s deck. The rudder was bringing the heavy boat toward the Spanish frigate, which meant the steering oar was faked, which meant the shipwreck was faked, a fact that Ardiles had simultaneously guessed when he saw that the whaler’s tryworks, a brick furnace built amidships in which the whale blubber was rendered down into the precious oil, had survived the apparent rolling of a ship that had destroyed three solid masts.
The Spaniards were shouting in warning, but the
Mary Starbuck
was already within ten feet of the frigate. A man aboard the whaler suddenly cut free the American flag and, in its place, unfurled a red, white and blue flag which was unfamiliar to Sharpe, but all too familiar to Ardiles. It was the flag of the Chilean rebel government. “Beat to quarters!” Ardiles shouted, and as he called the order aloud, so the hatch covers on the whaler’s deck were thrust aside and Sharpe, astonished, saw that a huge gun was mounted in the hold. It was a carronade: a squat, wide-mouthed, short-range killer designed to shred men rather then smash the timbers or rigging of a ship. Sharpe also saw, before he and Harper dropped for cover behind the nine-pounder cannon, that a mass of men was seething up onto the whaler’s deck. The men were armed with muskets, pikes, cutlasses, pistols and grapnels.
“Fire!” The order was shouted on board the
Mary Starbuck
, and the carronade belched a bellyful of iron scraps and links of rusted chain up at the
Espiritu Santo
’s waist. Most of the missiles struck the starboard gunwale, but a few Spanish crewmen, helping to lower the first water barrel over the side, were thrown back in a sudden spray of blood. The barrel, holed in a hundred places, sprayed drinking water into the bloody scuppers.
Grapnels came soaring across the narrowing gap of water. The metal hooks snagged on rigging or thumped into the
decks. The
Espiritu Santo
’s crew, trained to just such an emergency, reacted fast. Some men started slashing at the ropes attached to the grapnels, while others ran to seize pikes or muskets. “Gun crews! Gun crews!” Ardiles had left the frigate’s bows and was striding back to the quarterdeck where the children were screaming in terror. “Passengers down to the orlop deck!” Ardiles was astonishingly calm. “Quick now! Below!”
Musket balls whiplashed up from the whaler, which suddenly struck the frigate’s side, so hard that some of the
Espiritu Santo
’s crew were knocked down by the force of the collision. The first boarders were already swarming up their ropes. Sharpe, snatching a glance from the beakhead, saw two of the invaders fall back as their rope was cut free. Another, gaining the gunwale, screamed as a pike slammed into his face to blind him and hurl him back to the
Mary Starbuck
’s crowded deck. The attackers, jostling at the ropes, were screaming a war cry that at first sounded jumbled and indistinct to Sharpe, but which now became clear. “Cochrane! Cochrane!” Ardiles, it seemed, was having his dearest wish granted.
A grapnel soared high over the
Espiritu Santo
’s bows to fall and catch on the beakhead. For the moment Sharpe and Harper were alone on the small hidden platform of the beakhead, and neither man moved to cut the rope free. “We’re joining the fight then, are we?” Harper asked.
“I like Ardiles,” Sharpe said, “but I’m damned if I’ll fight for a man on the same side as Bautista.”
“Ah, well. Back to the wars.” Harper grinned, then instinctively ducked as another carronade fired, this one from the forecastle above them. The
Espiritu Santo
’s forecastle carronade, unable to depress its muzzle sufficiently, had not done great damage to the attackers, but its noise alone
seemed to encourage the Spaniards who now began to shout their own war cry, “
Espiritu Santo! Espiritu Santo!

“So what do we do?” Harper asked.
“We start with that big bugger up there.” Sharpe jerked his chin up toward the forecastle carronade. He had to shout, for more big guns were firing, these new ones from down below on the gundeck where the Spanish were evidently firing straight into the
Mary Starbuck
’s upper deck. Sharpe could hear the screams of men being disemboweled and flensed by the close-range horror of the big guns. Sharpe jumped, caught the edge of the forecastle’s deck, and hauled himself up to where three men were serving the carronade. One of them, the gun captain, snapped at Sharpe to fetch some quoins so that the breech of the carronade could be elevated.
“I’m not on your side!” Sharpe yelled at the man. Behind Sharpe, Harper was struggling to haul his huge weight up the sheer face of the forecastle which, though only eight feet high, was too much for a man as heavy as Harper, which meant that Sharpe, for the moment, was alone. He grabbed one of the carronade’s heavy spikes: a six-foot shaft of hardwood tipped with an iron point. The spike was used to aim the heavy gun by levering its trail around, and the wooden deck under the carronade’s tail was pitted with holes left by the sharp iron point. Sharpe now lunged with the spike as though it was a bayonet. He did not want to kill, for his attack was unexpected and unfair, but the gun’s Captain suddenly pulled a pistol from under his coat and Sharpe had no choice but to ram the spike forward with sudden and savage force so that the iron point punctured the man’s belly. The gun Captain dropped his pistol to grip the spike’s shaft. He was moaning sadly. Sharpe, still lunging forward, slammed the wounded man against the rail and, still pushing, heaved him overboard. Sharpe let go the spike so that the gun Captain,
blood cartwheeling away from his wound, fell to the sea with the spike’s shaft still rammed into his belly.
Sharpe turned. He ducked to retrieve the gun Captain’s pistol and the carronade’s rammer, swung with terrible force by one of the two remaining crewmen, slashed just above his head. Sharpe’s right hand closed on the pistol just as he charged forward to ram his left shoulder into the Spaniard’s belly. He heard the man’s breath gasp out, then he brought the heavy pistol up and hammered it onto his attacker’s skull. The third crew member had backed to the inboard edge of the forecastle where he was uselessly shouting for help. Harper, abandoning his attempt to climb the forward face of the forecastle, had ducked through the galley and was now climbing the companionway steps which led from the maindeck. The third crewmember, thinking that help was at last arriving, leaned down to give Harper a helping hand. Harper grabbed the offered hand, tugged, and the crewman tumbled down into the churning mass of men who fought in the ship’s waist.
That larger fight was a gutter brawl of close-quarter horror. Cochrane’s invaders had succeeded in capturing a third of the
Espiritu Santo
’s main deck, but were now faced by a disciplined and spirited crew that fiercely defended their ship. Cochrane’s men, screaming like demons, had achieved an initial surprise, but Ardiles’s hours of practice were beginning to pay dividends as his men forced the invaders back.
Sharpe, seeing his very first sea fight, was horrified by it. The killing was done in the confining space of a ship’s deck which gave neither side room to retreat. On land, when faced by a determined bayonet attack, most soldiers gave ground, but here there was no ground to give, and so the dead and dying were trampled underfoot. The heaving ocean added a horrid air of chance to death. A man might parry a thrust efficiently and be on the point of killing his opponent when
a wave surge might unsteady him and, as he flailed for balance, his belly would be exposed to a steel thrust. One of the Bosun’s mates who had made Sharpe’s first days aboard such misery had been so wounded and was now dying in the scuppers. The man writhed in brief spasms, his hands fluttering and clawing at the broken sword blade that was embedded in his belly. A midshipman was bleeding to death, calling for his mother, which pathetic cry swelled into a shriek of terror as a rebel stepped back on the boy’s sliced belly. That rebel then died with a pistol bullet in his brain, hurled back in a spray of bright blood to slide down beside the Bosun’s mate.
“God save Ireland,” Harper muttered.
“Is the gun loaded?” Sharpe slapped the carronade, then ducked as a stray musket bullet slapped over his head.
“Looks like it!”
Sharpe found another spike which he used to lever the gun’s trail around so that the carronade faced straight down the
Espiritu Santo
’s length to menace the quarterdeck, where Ardiles was assembling a group of seamen. Those seamen were undoubtedly intended to be the counterattack that would finish off Cochrane’s assault. Sharpe hammered a quoin out from under the carronade’s breech, thus raising the muzzle so that the dreadful weapon was pointing straight at the quarterdeck. The carronade was a pot of a gun, not a long, elegant and accurate cannon, but a squat cauldron to be charged with powder and metal scraps that flayed out like buckshot. A carronade’s range was short, but inside that brief range it was foully lethal.
The whole ship quivered as another broadside slammed from the frigate’s gundeck to shatter the heavy timbers of the whaler. Most of Cochrane’s men were off the whaler now and crammed onto the Spaniard’s deck where they were hemmed in by bloody pikes and bayonets. Ardiles, preparing his reserves to slam into the left flank of the invaders, was
making things worse for Cochrane by destroying his only chance of escape by pounding the whaler into matchwood. Smoke was sifting from the open hold of the
Mary Starbuck
. Presumably some of the wadding from one of the
Espiritu Santo
’s cannons had set fire to a splintered timber inside the attacking ship.
Harper cocked the flintlock that was soldered onto the carronade’s touchhole. Naval guns did not use linstocks, for the spluttering sparks of an open match were too dangerous on board a wooden ship crammed with gunpowder. Instead, just like a musket, the gun was fired by a spring-tensioned flint that was released by a lanyard. “Are you ready?” Sharpe gripped the lanyard and scuttled to one side of the gun to escape its recoil.
“Get down!” Harper shouted. Ardiles’s men on the quarterdeck had at last seen the threat of the forecastle carronade and a dozen muskets were leveled. Sharpe dropped just as the volley fired. The sound of a musket volley, so achingly familiar, crackled about the ship as the balls whipsawed overhead. Sharpe answered the volley by yanking the carronade’s lanyard.
The world hammered apart in thunder, in an explosion so close and hot and violent that Sharpe thought he was surely dead as the frigate shivered and dust spurted out of the cracks between her deck planks. Sharpe’s second and more realistic thought was that the barrel of the carronade had burst, but then he saw that the gun, recoiling on its huge carriage, was undamaged.
The explosion had been aboard the
Mary Starbuck
. A store of gunpowder in the whaler’s hull had ripped itself apart in a moment’s blinding horror, tearing her deck into shards and exploding the wounded into the sea. Now what remained of the whaler was ablaze. The dark red flames
leaped voraciously from her oil-soaked planks to flare as high as the
Espiritu Santo
’s topmasts.
“Mary, Mother of God,” Harper said in awe, not at the incandescent whaler, but rather because the
Espiritu Santo
’s mainmast was toppling. The explosion had ripped out the frigate’s chainplates and now the great mast swayed. Some men, now recovering their wits after being stunned by the concussion of the explosion, shouted in warning, while others, from both sides of the fight, were desperately slashing at the remaining grapnels so that the roaring blaze on the whaler would not leap across to destroy the frigate. Beyond that chaos Sharpe could see a red horror on the poop- and quarterdecks where the blast of his carronade had taken a terrible toll among Ardiles’s men.
A rebel officer shouted a piercing warning. The swaying mainmast splintered and cracked. Canvas billowed down onto the deck and into the sea. The collapsing mast dragged in its wake the fore topmast and a nightmarish tangle of yards, halyards, lines and sails.
“Come on, Patrick!” Sharpe cocked the pistol and jumped down from the forecastle. A Spanish sailor, groggy from the explosion, tried to stand in Sharpe’s way so he thumped the man on the side of his head with the pistol’s heavy barrel. A Spanish army officer lunged at Sharpe with a long, narrow sword. Sharpe turned, straightened his right arm and pulled the trigger. The officer seemed to be snatched backward with a halo of exploding blood about his face. Smoke from the burning whaler whirled thick and black and choking across the deck. Sharpe hurled the pistol away and snatched up a fallen cutlass. “Cochrane!” he shouted, “Cochrane!” A mass of Cochrane’s men were swarming toward the frigate’s stern. The explosion and the subsequent fall of the mast had torn the heart out of the frigate’s defenders, though a stubborn
rear guard, under an unwounded Ardiles, gathered for a last stand on the quarterdeck.
To Sharpe’s left was a tall man with red hair who carried a long and heavy-bladed sword. “To me! To me!” The red-haired man was wearing a green naval coat with two gold epaulettes and was the man the rebels were looking to for orders and inspiration. The man had to be Lord Cochrane. Sharpe turned away as a swarm of Spanish fighters came streaming up from the gundeck below. These new attackers were the frigate’s guncrews who, their target destroyed, had come to recapture their maindeck.
Sharpe fought hand to hand, without room to swing a blade, only to stab it forward in short, hard strokes. He was close enough to see the fear in the eyes of the men he killed, or to smell the garlic and tobacco on their breath. He knew some of the men, but he felt no compunction about killing them. He had declared his allegiance to Ardiles, and Ardiles could have no complaint that Sharpe had changed sides without warning. Nor could Sharpe complain if, this fight lost, he was hung from whatever yardarm was left of the Spanish frigate. Which made it important not to lose, but instead to beat the Spaniards back in blood and terror.
Harper climbed the fallen trunk of the mainmast. He carried a boarding pike that he swung in a huge and terrifying arc. One of the Irish crew members, having decided to change sides, was fighting alongside Harper. Both men were screaming in Gaelic, inviting their enemies to come and be killed. A musket crashed near Sharpe, who flinched aside from its flame. He ripped the cutlass blade up to throw back an enemy. The cutlass was a clumsy weapon, but sea fighting was hardly a fine art. It was more like a gutter brawl, and Sharpe had grown up with such fighting. He slipped, fell hard on his right knee, then clawed himself up to ram the blade forward again. Blood whipped across a fallen sail. A
sailor trapped beneath a fallen yard shrieked as a wave surge shifted the timber balk across his crushed ribs. Balin, his face and hand still bandaged, lay dead in the portside scuppers which now ran with the blood from his crushed skull. A group of rebels had found room to use their pikes. They lunged forward, hooking men with the crooked blade on the pike’s reverse, then pulling their victims out of the
Espiritu Santo
’s ranks so that another pikeman, using the weapon’s broad axe-head, could slash down hard. The pikemen were driving the frigate’s guncrews back to the poopdeck where a rear guard waited with Ardiles and Lieutenant Otero.
The ship lurched on the swell, staggering Sharpe sideways. A bleeding man screamed and fell into the sea. It seemed that the
Espiritu Santo
must have taken on water for she did not come fully upright, but stayed listed to starboard. A volley of musket fire from Ardiles’s group on the quarterdeck punched a hole in the rebels’ ranks, but Cochrane, seeing the danger, had led a rampaging attack up to the poopdeck and now his men clawed and scrabbled up the last companionway to attack Ardiles and his men on the quarterdeck. Royalist Captain faced rebel Admiral. Their two swords clashed and scraped. More rebels were running past their leader, swarming up to the quarterdeck where a final, fanatic group of Spaniards, including most of the army officers, stood to protect their royal ensign.
A few despairing men still fought on the main deck. Sharpe kicked a man in the ankle, then hammered down the cutlass hilt as the man fell. Two men slashed at him, but Sharpe stepped back from their clumsy blades, then sliced his own forward. A rebel joined him, stabbing forward with a bayonet, and suddenly the portside steps to the poopdeck were open. Sharpe ran up. Above him, on the quarterdeck, Ardiles was pressed back by the man Sharpe supposed was Cochrane. Ardiles was no mean swordsman, but he was no
match for the red-haired rebel who was taller, heavier and quicker. Ardiles lunged, missed, retreated and was toppled over the railing by a sudden thrust of his opponent’s sword. The Spanish Captain fell onto the poopdeck at Sharpe’s feet. Sharpe stooped and took his sword.
“You,” Ardiles said bleakly.
“I’m sorry,” Sharpe said.
“Who the hell are you?” the red-haired man asked from above Sharpe.
“A friend! Are you Cochrane?”
“I am, friend, indeed I am.” Cochrane sketched a salute with his sword, then turned to lead the attack on the desperate group that waited to defend their flag. On the poop and main decks the victorious rebels disarmed Spaniards, but about the great gaudy ensign a terrible battle still waged. Pistols flared, muskets crashed smoke. A rebel squirmed in awful pain in the scuppers. Other rebels, trying to fire down at the stubborn stern guard, climbed the mizzen rigging, but Lieutenant Otero, seeing the danger, ordered a group of the frigate’s marines to fire upward. One of the rebels screamed as a bullet thudded into his belly. For a second he hung from the ratlines, his blood spraying bright across the driver-sail, then he fell to crash down into the sea. Another rebel, losing his nerve, leaped after his dying colleague. The horror was not all visited on the attackers. One of the
Espiritu Santo
’s midshipmen, no more than eleven years old, was clutching his groin from which blood seeped to spread along a seam between two scrubbed planks of the quarterdeck. The boy was weeping and on his face was a look of utter astonishment. The
Mary Starbuck
, her fire roaring like a blast furnace, had drifted away from the frigate. The sea between the two ships was littered with wreckage and dead and drowning men.
Lieutenant Otero ordered a final quixotic charge, perhaps
hoping to kill Lord Cochrane, but his men would not obey. A rebel officer shouted at the stern guard to surrender. Sharpe, the handle of his cutlass slippery with blood, climbed to thicken the ranks of the rebels who now made a threatening semicircle about the frigate’s last defenders.
“Surrender, sir!” Lord Cochrane called. “You’ve done well! I salute you! Now, I beg you, no more killing!”
Lieutenant Otero crossed himself then, bitterly, threw down his sword. There was a clatter of falling guns and blades as his men followed his example. An army officer, disgusted, hurled his own sword overboard so he would not have to surrender it to rebels. A ship’s boy wept, not because he was wounded, but because of the shame of losing the fight. A rebel slashed at the ensign’s halyard and the bright flag of Spain fluttered down.
“Where are the pumps?” Cochrane shouted in urgent and execrable Spanish. It seemed an odd way to celebrate victory, but then the frigate lurched, and Sharpe, to his horror, realized that the
Espiritu Santo
, just like the burning
Mary Starbuck
, was sinking. “The pumps!” Cochrane shouted.
“This way!” Sharpe jumped down to the poop, then to the waist. From there he slithered down a rope to the gundeck where the main pumps were situated. He saw that the explosion of the
Mary Starbuck
had made a terrible slaughter on the gundeck. Until the moment the whaler blew up, the frigate’s gunners had been firing point-blank through open hatches into the wooden hull that had been grinding against the Spanish warship, but the explosion had speared flame and debris through the open gun hatches to fan slaughter through the low-beamed deck. Two of the frigate’s guns had been blown clean off their carriages. One dismounted gun was lying atop a dying, screaming man. Cochrane killed the man with an efficient slice of his sword, then shouted at his men to start the pumps working.
“Chippy! Find me the chippy!” Cochrane roared. The carpenter was fetched and ordered to discover the extent of the damage to the frigate’s hull, then to start immediate repairs. The wounded Spanish gunners moaned. The frigate was already listing so far over that roundshot were rolling across her deck. “Can’t talk now, bloody boat’s sinking,” Cochrane said to Sharpe. “We’ll all be dead if we don’t watch it. Pump, you bastards! Pump! Put the prisoners to work! Pump! Well done, Jorge! Well fought, Liam! But start pumping or we’ll all be sucking the devil’s tits before this day’s done!” Cochrane, ducking under the gundeck’s beams, scattered praise and humor among his victorious men. He set the rear pump working and peered down into the orlop deck where the women and children cowered. “Not flooded yet, good! Maybe there’s hope. Christ, but that bugger should never have exploded. Are you Spanish?” This last question was addressed to Sharpe, shouted as Cochrane climbed nimbly back up to the bloody and wreckage-strewn main deck.
“English.”
“Are you now?” Cochrane brushed ineffectively at the powder stains on his green uniform coat. “I suppose I’ve got to take the proper surrender from their poor bastard of a Captain. Rotten luck for him. He fought well. Ardiles, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” Sharpe said, “he’s a good man,” then took a pace backward as Captain Ardiles, his face stricken, walked with fragile dignity toward Lord Cochrane. The Spanish Captain had retrieved his sword, but only so that he could offer it in surrender to his victor. Ardiles held the sword hilt forward, the gesture of surrender, but he could not bring himself to speak the proper words.
Cochrane touched the hilt, his gesture of acceptance, then pushed the weapon back to Ardiles. “Keep it, Captain. Your men fought well, damned well.” His Spanish was enthusias
tic, but clumsy. “I also need your help if we’re to save the ship. I’ve sent a carpenter down to the bilge, but your man will know the timbers better than he will. The pumps are going. That damned explosion must have sprung some of the timbers! Would you fetch your ladies up? They’ll not be harmed, I give you my word. And where’s the gold?”
“There is no gold,” Ardiles said very stiffly.
Cochrane, who had been speaking and moving with a frenetic energy, now stopped still as a statue and stared openmouthed at Ardiles. Then, a second later, he looked quizzically at Sharpe who confirmed the bad news with a nod. “Goddamn!” Cochrane said, though without any real bitterness. “No gold? You mean I just blunted a sword for nothing!” He gave a great billow of laughter that turned into a whoop of alarm as the
Espiritu Santo
gave another creaking jolt to starboard. A cutlass slid down the canted deck to clash into the scuppers. “Help me!” Cochrane said to Ardiles, and suddenly the two men disappeared, lost in technical discussion, while beneath Sharpe’s feet the pumps clattered to pulse puny jets of water over the side.
Somehow they stopped the ship from sinking, though it took the best part of that day to do it. Cochrane’s men salvaged the mainsail that had fallen overboard when the mainmast fell and from it cut great squares of canvas. They sewed the squares together to make a huge pad that was then dragged under the ship by means of cables which were first looped under the frigate’s bows, then dragged back under her hull till the huge pad of material was fothered up against the sprung timbers. The explosion on board the whaler had driven in a section of the frigate’s hull, but once the canvas fother was in place the pumps at last could begin to win the battle. Behind them, on an ocean scattered with the flotsam of battle, the
Mary Starbuck
gave a last hiss of steam as she sank.
On board the captured
Espiritu Santo
the wounded were treated. The surgeon worked on deck, tossing the amputated limbs overboard. A step behind the surgeon was the
Espiritu Santo
’s Chaplain, who gave the final unction to dying seamen. To those who were dying in too much pain the Chaplain gave a quietus with a narrow blade. Once dead, the shriven sailors were sewn into hammocks weighted with roundshot. The last stitch, by custom, was forced through the corpse’s nose to make certain he was truly dead. None of the corpses twitched in protest. Instead, after a muttered prayer, they were all slid down to the sea’s bed.
“What a resurrection there’ll be on the Day of Judgment!” Cochrane, his emergency work done, had asked Sharpe and Harper to join him on the frigate’s quarterdeck from where they watched the miserable procession of dead splashing over the side. “Just think of Judgment Day,” Cochrane said exuberantly, “when the sea gives up its dead and all those sailormen pop out of the waves and start hollering for a tot of rum and a heavenly whore.” His Lordship had protuberant eyes, a strong nose, full lips and an excited, energetic manner. “Christ,” he hit Sharpe on the back, “but that was a close thing! They’re the best fighters I’ve ever seen on a Spanish ship!”
“Ardiles’s great ambition was to fight you,” Sharpe explained. “He trained his men for years. All he wanted to do was to fight and beat you.”
“Poor bastard. I sneak up on him like a rat, and he was dreaming of an honest broadside-to-broadside battle, eh?” Cochrane seemed genuinely sympathetic, “but a broadside pounding match was exactly what I wanted to avoid! I thought that sneaking up like a rat would do less damage to this ship, now look at it! No mainmast and half a bottom blown away!” He sounded remarkably cheerful despite the appalling damage. “You didn’t give me the honor of your
name, sir,” he said to Sharpe, whereas the truth was that he had not given Sharpe a moment of time to make any kind of introduction.
“Lieutenant Colonel Richard Sharpe.” Sharpe decided to go full fig with his introduction. “And this is my particular friend, Regimental Sergeant Major Patrick Harper.”
Cochrane stared at both men with a moment’s disbelief that vanished as he decided Sharpe must be telling the truth. “Are you, by God?” Cochrane, flatteringly, had evidently heard of the Rifleman. “You are?”
“Yes, my Lord, I am.”
“And I’m Thomas, Tommy, or Cochrane, and not ‘my Lord.’ I was once a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath, till the buggers couldn’t stand my company so they turfed me out. I also had the honor of being held prisoner in the Fleet prison, and I was once a member of Parliament, and let me tell you, Sharpe, that the company in prison is a damned sight more rewarding than that available in His Fat Majesty’s House of Commons which is packed full of farting lawyers. I also once had the honor of being a Rear Admiral in His Fat Majesty’s Navy, but they didn’t like my opinions any more than the Order of the Bath liked my company, so they threw me out of the navy too, so now I have the signal honor to be Supreme Admiral, Great Lord, and chief troublemaker of the Navy of the Independent Republic of Chile.” He gave Sharpe and Harper an elaborate bow. “Pity about the
Mary Starbuck
. I bought her off a couple of Nantucket Yankees with the very last cash I possessed. I thought I’d get my money back by capturing the
Holy Spirit
. Awful damned name for a ship. Why do the dagoes choose such names? You might as well call a ship Angel-Fart. They should give their boats real names, like
Revenge
or
Arse-Kicker
or
Victory
. Are you really Richard Sharpe?”
“I truly am,” Sharpe confessed.
“Then just what the hell are the two of you doing on this ship?”
“We were thrown out of Chile. By a man called Bautista.”
“Oh, well done!” Cochrane said happily. “First class! Well done! You must be on the side of the angels if that piece of half-digested gristle doesn’t like you. But what about that sniveling turd Blair? Didn’t he try to protect you?”
“He seemed to be on Bautista’s side.”
“Blair’s a greedy bastard,” Cochrane observed gloomily. “If we ever get off this ship alive you should look him up and give him a damned good thrashing.” His Lordship’s gloom seemed justified for, despite the fothering and the pumping, the condition of the damaged frigate seemed to be suddenly worsening. The wind was rising and the seas were steeper, conditions that made the damaged hull pound ever harder into the waves. “The fother’s shifting,” Cochrane guessed. He had turned the
Espiritu Santo
northward and the captured frigate was running before the wind and current, yet even so her progress was painfully slow because of the damaged hull and the amount of wreckage that still trailed overboard.
Cochrane’s sailing master, an elderly and lugubrious Scot named Fraser, threw a trailing log overboard. The log was attached to a long piece of twine which was knotted at regular intervals. Fraser let the twine run through his hands and counted the knots as they whipped past his fingers, timing them all the while on a big pocket watch. He finally snapped the watch shut and began hauling the log back. “Three knots, my Lord, that’s all.”
“Christ help us,” Cochrane said. He frowned at the sea, then at the rigging. “But we’ll speed up as we get the damage cleared. Eight days, say?”
“Ten,” the sailing master said doubtfully, “maybe twelve,
but more probably never, my Lord, because she’s taking water like a colander.”
“Five guineas says we’ll make it in eight days,” Cochrane said cheerfully.
“Eight days to what?” Sharpe asked.
“To Valdivia, of course,” Cochrane exclaimed.
“Valdivia?” Sharpe was astonished that Cochrane was trying to reach an enemy haven. “You mean there isn’t a harbor closer than that?”
“There are hundreds of closer harbors,” Cochrane said blithely, “thousands of harbors. Millions! There are some of the best natural harbors in the world on this coast, Sharpe, and they’re all closer than Valdivia. The damned coast is thick with harbors. There are more harbors here than a man could wish for in a thousand storms! Isn’t that so, Fraser?”
“Aye, it is, my Lord.”
“Then why go to an enemy harbor?” Sharpe asked.
“To capture it, of course, why else?” Cochrane looked at Sharpe as though the Rifleman was mad. “We’ve got a ship, we’ve got men, we’ve got weapons, so what the hell else should we be doing?”
“But the ship’s sinking!”
“Then the bloody ship might as well do something useful before it vanishes.” Cochrane, delighted with having surprised Sharpe, whooped with laughter. “Enjoy yourself, Sharpe. If we take Valdivia, all Chile is ours! We’re launched for death or victory, we’re sailing for glory, and may the Devil take the hindmost!” He rattled off the old clichés of the French wars in a mocking tone, but there was a genuine enthusiasm on his face as he spoke. Here was a man, Sharpe thought, who had never tired of battle, but reveled in it, and perhaps only felt truly alive when the powder was stinking and the swords were clashing. “We’re sailing for glory!”
Cochrane whooped again, and Sharpe knew he was under the command of a genial maniac who planned to capture a whole country with nothing but a broken ship and a wounded crew.
Sharpe had met Spain’s devil, and his name was Cochrane.

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