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Sharpe 3-Book Collection 1: Sharpe’s Tiger, Sharpe’s Triumph, Sharpe’s Fortress

Год написания книги
2019
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‘Me?’ Sharpe pretended to be astonished at the very idea. ‘My lips are gummed together. Not a word, promise.’

Lawford worried that he was letting his dignity slide, but he did not want to lose Sharpe’s approval. The Lieutenant was becoming fascinated by the younger man’s confidence, and envied the way in which Sharpe so instinctively negotiated a wicked world and he wished he could find the same easy ability in himself. He thought briefly of the Bible waiting back in the barracks, and of his mother’s advice to read it diligently, but then he decided to hell with them both. He drained his arrack, picked up his musket and followed Sharpe into the dusk.

Every house in the city was prepared for the siege. Store-houses were filled with food and valuables were being hastily concealed in case the enemy armies broke through the wall. Holes were dug in gardens and filled with coins and jewellery, and in some of the wealthier houses whole rooms were concealed by false walls so that the women could be hidden away when the invaders rampaged through the streets.

Mary helped General Appah Rao’s household prepare for that ordeal. She felt guilty, not because she came from the army that was imposing this threatened misery on the city, but because she had unexpectedly found herself happy in Rao’s sprawling home.

When General Appah Rao had first taken her away from Sharpe she had been frightened, but the General had taken her to his own house and there reassured her of her safety. ‘We must clean you,’ the General told her, ‘and let that eye heal.’ He treated her gently, but with a measure of reserve that sprang from her dishevelled looks and her presumed history. The General did not believe that Mary was the most suitable addition to his household, but she spoke English and Appah Rao was shrewd enough to reckon that a command of English would be a profitable accomplishment in Mysore’s future and he had three sons who would have to survive in that future. ‘In time,’ Rao told Mary, ‘you can join your man, but it’s best he should settle in first.’

But now, after a week in the General’s household, Mary did not want to leave. For a start the house was filled with women who had taken her into their care and treated her with a kindness that astonished her. The General’s wife, Lakshmi, was a tall plump woman with prematurely grey hair and an infectious laugh. She had two grown unmarried daughters and, though there was a score of female servants, Mary was surprised to discover that Lakshmi and her daughters shared the work of the big house. They did not sweep it or draw water – those tasks were for the lowest of the servants – but Lakshmi loved to be in the kitchen from where her laughter rippled out into the rest of the house.

It had been Lakshmi who had scolded Mary for being so dirty, had stripped her from her western clothes, forced her into a bath and there untangled and washed her filthy hair. ‘You’d be beautiful if you took some trouble,’ Lakshmi had said.

‘I didn’t want to draw attention to myself.’

‘When you’re my age, my dear, no one pays you any attention at all, so you should take all you can get while you’re young. You say you’re a widow?’

‘He was an Englishman,’ Mary said nervously, explaining the lack of the marriage mark on her forehead and worried lest the older woman thought she should have thrown herself onto her husband’s pyre.

‘Well, you’re a free woman now, so let’s make you expensive.’ Lakshmi laughed and then, helped by her daughters, she first brushed and then combed Mary’s hair, drawing it back and then gathering it into a bun at the nape of her neck. A cheerful maid brought in an armful of clothes and the women tossed cholis at her. ‘Choose one,’ Lakshmi said. The choli was a brief blouse that covered Mary’s breasts, shoulders and upper arms, but left most of her back naked and Mary instinctively selected the most modest, but Lakshmi would have none of it. ‘That lovely pale skin of yours, show it off!’ she said, and chose a brief choli patterned in extravagant swirls of scarlet flowers and yellow leaves. Lakshmi tugged the short sleeves straight. ‘So why did you run with those two men?’ Lakshmi asked.

‘There was a man back in the army. A bad man. He wanted to …’ Mary stopped and shrugged. ‘You know.’

‘Soldiers!’ Lakshmi said disapprovingly. ‘But the two men you ran away with, did they treat you well?’

‘Yes, oh yes.’ Mary suddenly wanted Lakshmi’s good opinion, and that opinion would not be good if she thought that Mary had run from the army with a lover. ‘One of them’ – she told the lie shyly – ‘is my half-brother.’

‘Ah!’ Lakshmi said as though everything was clear now. Her husband had told her that Mary had run with her lover, but Lakshmi decided to accept Mary’s story. ‘And the other man?’ she asked.

‘He’s just a friend of my brother’s.’ Mary blushed at the lie, but Lakshmi did not seem to notice. ‘They were both protecting me,’ Mary explained.

‘That’s good. That’s good. Now, this.’ She held out a white petticoat that Mary stepped into. Lakshmi laced it tight at the back, then began hunting through the pile of saris. ‘Green,’ she said, ‘that’ll suit you,’ and she unfolded a vast bolt of green silk that was four feet wide and over twenty feet long. ‘You know how to wear a sari?’ Lakshmi asked.

‘My mother taught me.’

‘In Calcutta?’ Lakshmi hooted. ‘What do they know of saris in Calcutta? Skimpy little northern things, that’s all they are. Here, let me.’ Lakshmi wrapped the first length of sari about Mary’s slender waist and tucked it firmly into the petticoat’s waistband, then she wrapped a further length about the girl, but this she skilfully flicked into pleated folds that were again firmly anchored in the petticoat’s waistband. Mary could easily have done the job herself, but Lakshmi took such pleasure in it that it would have been cruel to have denied her. By the time the pleats were tucked in about half of the sari had been used up, and the rest Lakshmi looped over Mary’s left shoulder, then tugged at the silk so that it fell in graceful folds. Then she stepped back. ‘Perfect! Now you can come and help us in the kitchens. We’ll burn those old clothes.’

In the mornings Mary taught the General’s three small boys English. They were bright children and learned quickly and the hours passed pleasantly enough. In the afternoons she helped in the household chores, but in the early evening it was her job to light the oil lamps about the house and it was that duty that threw Mary into the company of Kunwar Singh who, at about the same time as the lamps were lit, went round the house ensuring that the shutters were barred and the outer doors and gates either locked or guarded. He was the chief of Appah Rao’s bodyguard, but his duties were more concerned with the household than with the General who had enough soldiers surrounding him wherever he went in the city. Kunwar Singh, Mary learned, was a distant relation of the General, but there was something oddly sad about the tall young man whose manners were so courteous but also so distant.

‘We don’t talk about it,’ Lakshmi said to Mary one afternoon when they were both hulling rice.

‘I’m sorry I asked.’

‘His father was disgraced, you see,’ Lakshmi went on enthusiastically. ‘And so the whole family was disgraced. Kunwar’s father managed some of our land near Sedasseer, and he stole from us! Stole! And when he was found out, instead of throwing himself on my husband’s mercy, he became a bandit. The Tippoo’s men caught him in the end and cut his head off. Poor Kunwar. It’s hard to live down that sort of disgrace.’

‘Is it a worse disgrace than having been married to an Englishman?’ Mary asked miserably, for somehow, in this lively house, she did feel obscurely ashamed. She was half English herself, but under Lakshmi’s swamping affection, she kept remembering her mother who had been rejected by her own people for marrying an Englishman.

‘A disgrace? Married to an Englishman? What nonsense you do talk, girl!’ Lakshmi said, and the next day she took care to send Mary to deliver a present of food to the young deposed Rajah of Mysore who survived at the Tippoo’s mercy in a small house just east of the Inner Palace. ‘But you can’t go alone,’ Lakshmi said, ‘not with the streets full of soldiers. Kunwar!’ And Lakshmi saw the blush of happiness on Mary’s face as she set off in the tall Kunwar Singh’s protective company.

Mary was happy, but she felt guilty. She knew she ought to try and find Sharpe for she suspected he must be missing her, but she was suddenly so content in Appah Rao’s household that she did not want to disturb that happiness by returning to her old world. She felt at home and, though the city was surrounded by enemies, she felt oddly safe. One day, she supposed, she would have to find Sharpe, and perhaps everything would turn out well on that day, but Mary did nothing to hasten it. She just felt guilty and made sure that she did not start lighting the lamps until she heard the first shutter bar fall.

And Lakshmi, who had been wondering just where she might find poor disgraced Kunwar Singh a suitable bride, chuckled.

Once the British and Hyderabad armies had made their permanent encampment to the west of Seringapatam the siege settled into a pattern that both sides recognized. The allied armies stayed well out of the range of even the largest cannon on the city’s wall and far beyond the reach of any rocket, but they established a picquet line facing an earth-banked aqueduct that wended its way through the fields about a mile west of the city and there they posted some field artillery and infantry to cover the land across which they would dig their approach ditches. The sooner those ditches were begun the sooner the breaching batteries could be built, but to the south of that chosen ground the steeply banked aqueduct made a deep loop that penetrated a half-mile westwards and the inside of that bend was filled by a tope, a thick wood, and from its leafy cover the Tippoo’s men kept up a galling musket fire on the British picquet line, while his rocketmen rained an erratic but troublesome barrage of missiles onto the forward British works. One lucky rocket streaked a thousand yards to hit an ammunition limber and the resultant explosion caused a cheer to sound from the distant walls of the city.

General Harris endured the rocket bombardment for two days, then decided it was time to capture the whole length of the aqueduct and clear the tope. Orders were written and trickled down from general to colonel to captains, and the captains sought out their sergeants. ‘Get the men ready, Sergeant,’ Morris told Hakeswill.

Hakeswill was sitting in his own tent, a luxury he alone enjoyed among the 33rd’s sergeants. The tent had belonged to Captain Hughes and should have been auctioned with the rest of the Captain’s belongings after Hughes died of the fever, but Hakeswill had simply claimed the tent and no one had liked to cross him. His servant Raziv, a miserable half-witted creature from Calcutta, was polishing Hakeswill’s boots so the Sergeant had to come bare-footed from his tent to face Morris. ‘Ready, sir?’ he said. ‘They are ready, sir.’ He stared suspiciously about the Light Company’s lines. ‘Better be ready, sir, or we’ll have the skin off the lot of them.’ His face jerked.

‘Sixty rounds of ammunition,’ Morris said.

‘Always carry it, sir! Regulations, sir!’

Morris had drunk the best part of three bottles of wine at luncheon and was in no mood to deal with Hakeswill’s equivocations. He swore at the Sergeant, then pointed south to where another rocket was smoking up from the tope. ‘Tonight, you idiot, we’re cleaning those bastards out of those trees.’

‘Us, sir?’ Hakeswill was alarmed at the prospect. ‘Just us, sir?’

‘The whole battalion. Night attack. Inspection at sundown. Any man who looks drunk gets flogged.’

Officers excepted, Hakeswill thought, then quivered as he offered Morris a cracking salute. ‘Sir! Inspection at sundown, sir. Permission to carry on, sir?’ He did not wait for Morris’s permission, but turned back into his tent. ‘Boots! Give ’em here! Come on, you black bastard!’ He gave Raziv a cuff round the ear and snatched his half-cleaned boots. He tugged them on, then dragged Raziv by the ear to where the halberd was planted like a banner in front of the tent. ‘Sharpen!’ Hakeswill bawled in the unfortunate boy’s bruised ear. ‘Sharpen! Understand, you toad-witted heathen? I want it sharp!’ Hakeswill gave the boy a parting slap as an encouragement, then stumped off through the lines. ‘On your bleeding feet!’ he shouted. ‘Look lively now! Time to earn your miserable pay. Are you drunk, Garrard? If you’re drunk, boy, I’ll have your bones given a stroking.’

The battalion paraded at dusk and, to its surprise, found itself being inspected by its Colonel, Arthur Wellesley. There was a feeling of relief in the ranks when Wellesley appeared, for by now every man knew that they were due for a fight and none wished to go into battle under the uncertain leadership of Major Shee who had drunk so much arrack that he was visibly swaying on his horse. Wellesley might be a cold-hearted bastard, but the men knew he was a careful soldier and they even looked cheerful as he trotted down their ranks on his white horse. Each man had to demonstrate possession of sixty cartridges, and those who failed had their names taken for punishment. Two sepoy battalions from the East India Company’s forces paraded behind the 33rd and, just as the sun disappeared behind them, all three battalions marched south-eastwards towards the aqueduct. Their colours were flying and Colonel Wellesley led them on horseback. Other King’s battalions marched to their left, going to attack the northern stretch of the aqueduct.

‘So what are we doing, Lieutenant?’ Tom Garrard asked the newly promoted Lieutenant Fitzgerald.

‘Silence in the ranks!’ Hakeswill bawled.

‘He was talking to me, Sergeant,’ Fitzgerald said, ‘and you will do me the honour of not interfering in my private conversations.’ Fitzgerald’s retort improved the Irishman’s stock with the company twentyfold. He was popular anyway, for he was a cheerful and easy-going young man.

Hakeswill growled. Fitzgerald claimed his brother was the Knight of Kerry, whatever the holy hell that was, but the claim did not impress Sergeant Obadiah Hakeswill. Proper officers left discipline to sergeants, they did not curry favour with the men by telling jokes and chatting away like magpies. It was also plain that Brevet-Lieutenant bloody Fitzgerald did not like Sergeant Hakeswill for he took every chance he could to countermand Hakeswill’s authority, and Hakeswill was determined to change that. The Sergeant’s face twitched. There was nothing he could do at this moment, but Mister Fitzgerald, he told himself, would be taught his lesson, and the sooner it was taught the better.

‘You see those trees ahead?’ Fitzgerald explained to Garrard. ‘We’re going to clear the Tippoo’s boys out of them.’

‘How many of the bastards, sir?’

‘Hundreds!’ Fitzgerald answered cheerfully. ‘And all of them quaking at the knees to think that the Havercakes are coming to give them a thrashing.’

The Tippoo’s boys might be quaking, but they could clearly see the three battalions approaching and their rocketmen sent up a fiery barrage in greeting. The missiles climbed through the darkening sky, their exhaust flames unnaturally bright as they spewed volcanoes of sparks into the smoke trails that mingled as the rockets reached their apogee and then plunged towards the British and Indian infantry. ‘No breaking ranks!’ an officer shouted, and the three battalions marched stolidly on as the opening barrage plunged down to explode all around them. Some jeers greeted the barrage’s inaccuracy, but the officers and sergeants shouted for silence. More rockets climbed and fell. Most screamed erratically off course, but a few came close enough to make men duck, and one exploded just a few feet from the 33rd’s Light Company so that the sharp-edged scraps of its shattered tin nose cone whistled about their ears. Men laughed at their narrow escape, then someone saw that Lieutenant Fitzgerald was staggering. ‘Sir!’

‘It’s nothing, boys, nothing,’ Fitzgerald called. A scrap of the rocket’s cylinder had torn open his left arm, and there was a gash on the back of his head that was dripping blood from the ends of his hair, but he shook off any help. ‘Takes more than a black man’s rocket to knock down an Irishman,’ he said happily. ‘Ain’t that right, O’Reilly?’

‘It is, sir,’ the Irish Private answered.

‘Got skulls like bloody buckets, we have,’ Fitzgerald said, and crammed his tattered shako back on his head. His left arm was numb, and blood had soaked his sleeve to the wrist, but he was determined to keep going. He had taken worse injuries on the hunting field and still been in his saddle at the death of the fox.

Hakeswill’s resentment of Fitzgerald seethed. How dare a mere lieutenant overrule him? A bloody child! Not nineteen years old yet, and still with the bog water wet behind his ears. Hakeswill slashed at a cactus with his halberd, and the savagery of the gesture dislodged the musket that was slung on his left shoulder. The Sergeant never usually carried a musket, but tonight he was armed with the halberd, the musket, a bayonet and a brace of pistols. Except for the brief fight at Malavelly it had been years since Hakeswill had been in a battle and he was not sure he wanted to fight another this night, but if he did then he would make damned sure that he carried more weapons than any heathen enemy he might meet.

The sun had long gone by the time Wellesley halted the three battalions, though a lambent light still suffused the western sky and, under its pale glow, the 33rd formed line. The two sepoy battalions waited a quarter of a mile behind the 33rd. The rocket trails seemed brighter now as they climbed into a cloudless twilight sky where the first few stars pricked the dark. The missiles hissed as they streaked overhead, their smoke trails made lurid by the spitting flames. Spent rockets lay on the ground with small pale flames flickering feebly from their exhausts. The weapons were spectacular, but so inaccurate that even the inexperienced 33rd no longer feared them, but their relief was tempered by a sudden display of bright sparks at the lip of the aqueduct’s embankment. The sparks were instantly extinguished by a cloud of powder smoke, and the sound of musketry followed a few seconds later, but the range was too great and the balls spent themselves harmlessly.
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