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Sharpe 3-Book Collection 7: Sharpe’s Revenge, Sharpe’s Waterloo, Sharpe’s Devil

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2018
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This novel is a work of fiction. The incidents and some of the characters portrayed in it, while based on real historical events and figures, are the work of the author’s imagination.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

For Whiskey

‘The Richard Sharpe novels are notable for their wonderfully astringent view of history. Sharpe is a man first and a patriot second: he is as likely to pick a fight with one of his own side as charge blindly towards the enemy’

Sunday Telegraph

Table of Contents

Title Page (#u19268630-7231-5be5-8707-ab15bd550e40)

Copyright (#uee4ff0bf-ead2-575b-ab5a-9f4c0d9fedd5)

Dedication (#uee02ee53-51b1-5649-8a3f-3dfb11717b6b)

Epigraph (#u3091466a-9b6c-558b-a3ad-74e9743bdc6e)

Map (#u26c96bf5-55be-5d6d-951e-62d7beb09ecb)

Part One (#ua49f8685-5fd0-55df-b7dc-0303985032d7)

Prologue (#u8ac4b303-58a3-5649-aa0f-7f8b07a8194e)

Chapter One (#u612d083d-eeb1-5412-ad16-f755b0d7a189)

Chapter Two (#ubf4f7f28-c5ea-5ecd-b6d8-7be46d985de7)

Chapter Three (#udcf19906-cea3-57f9-95b6-6a857814c777)

Part Two (#uf6baa4bc-4d76-55d6-aabd-d58c265cee70)

Chapter Four (#uc82cba8e-4df1-55f9-99b3-458cfa03eb53)

Chapter Five (#ua652863c-ee25-5e0b-9e97-5450bd898a9b)

Chapter Six (#u2bd7e049-f722-5a40-943c-9267c1862d35)

Chapter Seven (#u43c4cba3-6ac6-5e12-ba6d-6a64e205c97b)

Chapter Eight (#u2467c425-389a-56d4-bc75-ce2d63ed8d39)

Chapter Nine (#ud30dc529-f54f-555f-b032-a6508863bcef)

Part Three (#u7fa8f2b9-aa78-5f71-bf33-e495f44037ef)

Chapter Ten (#ue1f71734-84eb-5af6-a2d9-f8dc835a3e44)

Chapter Eleven (#ubd4d0194-8885-59a6-b42f-8906b20bdafe)

Chapter Twelve (#u45c82c4d-835f-5716-b123-537e31b689be)

Part Four (#u06a66ab3-e465-5a9f-b6af-1feb1f690e59)

Chapter Thirteen (#u1bed1a47-f918-58fb-985e-c8277c6a99e8)

Chapter Fourteen (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Fifteen (#litres_trial_promo)

Epilogue (#litres_trial_promo)

Historical Note (#litres_trial_promo)

Sharpe’s Story (#litres_trial_promo)

The SHARPE Series (in chronological order) (#litres_trial_promo)

The SHARPE Series (in order of publication) (#litres_trial_promo)

PART ONE

PROLOGUE

Major Richard Sharpe had made every preparation for his own death. His horse, Sycorax, and his fine French telescope would go to Captain William Frederickson, his weapons would become the property of Sergeant Patrick Harper, while everything else would belong to his wife Jane. Everything, that was, except for the uniform in which Sharpe always fought. That uniform consisted of knee-high riding boots, French cavalry overalls, and a faded green jacket of the 95th Rifles. Sharpe had asked to be buried in that uniform.

‘If you weren’t buried in those rags,’ Frederickson observed disdainfully, ‘they’d be burned anyway.’

It was true that the leather boots had been deeply scarred by knives, bayonets and sabres, and that the overalls were so patched with brown homespun that they looked more like a ploughman’s cast-off breeches than the plundered uniform of a Chasseur Colonel of Napoleon’s Imperial Guard, and that the green jacket was so faded and threadbare that even a moth could not have made a decent meal from it, but the clothes were still those in which Sharpe fought and were therefore dear to him. He might have looked like a scarecrow in the old uniform, but wearing it for battle was one of his obsessive superstitions, which was why, on a cold March morning in 1814, and despite being miles from any enemy soldier, Sharpe wore the old clothes.

‘You’ll have to take off the jacket,’ Frederickson, who understood Sharpe’s superstitious attachment to the uniform, warned his friend.

‘I know.’ There was no detail of this morning that Sharpe had not rehearsed again and again in his mind. What would happen this morning was called ‘grass before breakfast’. It sounded innocuous, but it could well mean death.

The two men stood on a low grassy bluff above a grey and sullen Atlantic. A long and heaving swell was running from the west to break against the rocks beneath. To the north of the bluff was the French port of St Jean de Luz that was crammed with merchant shipping and fishing boats, while in the harbour’s outer roads a small Royal Navy flotilla lay at anchor. The flotilla consisted of three sloops, two frigates, and a great chequer-sided battleship, the Vengeance.

It was a shivering dawn, yet spring was coming and with the spring would come a resurgence of battle. The Emperor Napoleon had refused the peace terms offered by his enemies, so now the French armies would have to fight to defend their homeland. Their enemies were now all Europe. Wellington’s army of Britons, Spaniards and Portuguese had captured the south-western corner of France and would soon strike yet further into the heartland, while, far to the north, the Prussians, Austrians and Russians skirmished across Napoleon’s northern frontiers.

None of which seemed immediately important to Major Richard Sharpe as he began to pace the frosted grass on the bluff’s flat summit. A cold wind was gusting from the ocean and William Frederickson took shelter from it in the lee of some bent and stunted pines. Sharpe, pacing up and down, was oblivious of the wind, obsessed instead with the thought of his own death. The most important thing, he decided, was that Jane was well taken care of. She already had the piece of paper which gave her authority over Sharpe’s money; which money was the profit of the plunder he had taken from the French baggage after the battle at Vitoria. Many soldiers had become rich that day, but few as rich as Major Richard Sharpe or Sergeant Patrick Harper.

Sharpe paced close to Frederickson. ‘Time?’

Frederickson fumbled with gloved hands to open his watch’s lid. ‘Twenty minutes past six.’

Sharpe grunted and turned away. The dawn had made the grey clouds palely luminous, while the sea was so dark that it seemed to be made of a liquid and sluggish slate. A small, high-prowed fishing boat was perilously close to the rocks beneath Sharpe. The fishermen were heaving lobster-pots overboard. Perhaps, Sharpe thought, his enemy would be eating one of those lobsters this very night, while Sharpe would already be as cold as stone and lying six feet under French soil. Grass before breakfast.

‘God damn it,’ he said in sudden irritation, ‘why can’t we fight with swords?’
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