He had lost count of the number of times he had done this.
"Go! Go! Go!"
This was rehea.r.s.ed. The Light Company broke into a run, the last thing the enemy expected, and they went left and right, confusing their enemy"s aim, and they closed the range to put pressure on the enemy"s nerve. The Riflemen stopped first, wicked guns at their shoulders, and Sharpe heard the first crack which spun the enemy officer backwards, hands up, blood spraying suddenly, and then Sharpe was on his knee, his own rifle at his shoulder, and he saw the puff of smoke where the man had been who was aiming for him and he knew the musket ball had gone wide. Sharpe aimed up the hill. He looked for the enemy Colonel, saw him on his horse, aimed slowly, squeezed, and grinned as he glimpsed the Frenchman fall back from the saddle. That would be Sharpe"s last shot in this battle. Now he would fight his men as a weapon.
More rifles cracked, firing into the smudge of smoke about the nearest gun. If the gunners could be killed, that was good, but at the least the bullets whistling about their weapon would slow their fire and spare the South Ess.e.x some of the ghastly canister.
"Sergeant Huckfield! Watch left!"
"Sir!"
The men fought in pairs. One man fired while the other loaded, and both sought targets for each other. Sharpe could see four enemy down, two of them crawling backwards, and he saw that unwounded men were hurrying to help the wounded. That was good. When the uninjured went to help their comrades it meant they were looking for an excuse to leave the battle.
Sharpe"s muskets were firing fast now and his men were going forward, paces at a time, and the enemy were going backwards. The field gun opposite the South Ess.e.x had slowed down and Sharpe smiled because he had nothing to do. His men were fighting as he expected them to fight, using their intelligence, pushing the enemy back, and Sharpe looked behind to see where the main Battalion was.
The South Ess.e.x were fifty yards behind, coming steadily forward, and on their muskets were bayonets, bright in the sun, and behind them, on the ridge slope, were the bodies broken by the cannon.
"Rifles! Go for the main line! Kill the officers!"
Make widows on this field! Kill the officers, crumble the enemy morale, and Sharpe saw Hagman aim, fire, and the other Riflemen followed. Lieutenant Price was directing the musket fire, keeping the enemy skirmishers pinned back and releasing the Rifles to fire above their heads. Sharpe felt a surge of pride in his men. They were good, so good, and they were showing the spectators just how a Light Company should fight. He laughed aloud.
They were at the foot of the slope now, the enemy Light troops driven back towards their own line, and in a few seconds the South Ess.e.x would catch up with their Light Company. They had a hundred yards to go into the attack.
Sharpe pulled his whistle from its holster, waited a few seconds, then blasted out the signal to form company. He heard the Sergeants repeat the signal, watched his men come running towards him for now their skirmishing task was done. Now they would form up on the left of the attacking line and go in like the other Companies. The men sprinted towards him, tugging out bayonets, and he clapped them on the shoulders, said they had done well. Then the Company was formed, marching, and they were climbing the knoll over the blood of their enemies.
The field gun had stopped firing. The smoke was drifting clear.
Sharpe walked in front of his men. The great sword sc.r.a.ped on the scabbard throat as it came clear.
The French line levelled their muskets.
Boots swished through the gra.s.s. It was hot. The powder smoke stung men"s nostrils.
"For what we"re about to receive," a voice said.
"Quiet in the ranks! Close up!"
"Keep your dressing, Mellors! What the h.e.l.l do you think you"re doing? Get in line, you useless b.a.s.t.a.r.d!"
Boots in the gra.s.s, the French line seeming to take a quarter turn to the right as the muskets go back into the shoulders. The muzzles, even at eighty yards, look huge.
"Get your bayonet up, Smith! You"re not ploughing the b.l.o.o.d.y field!"
Sharpe listened to the Sergeants.
"Steady, lads, steady!"
The French officers had their swords raised. The cannon smoke had cleared now and Sharpe could see that the field gun had gone. It had been taken back, away from the infantry.
"Take it like men, lads!"
Seventy yards and the French swords swept down and Sharpe knew they had fired too soon. The smoke rippled from the hundreds of muskets, the sound was like the falling of giant stakes, and the air was thick with the thrumming of the b.a.l.l.s.
The attacking line was jerked by the b.a.l.l.s. Some men fell backwards, some stumbled, most kept stolidly on. Sharpe knew the enemy would be frantically reloading, fumbling with cartridges and ramrods, and he instinctively quickened his pace so that the South Ess.e.x might close the gap before the enemy had recharged their weapons. The other officers hurried too, and the attacking line began to lose its cohesion. The Sergeants yelled. "It"s not a sodding steeplechase! Watch your dressing!"
Fifty yards, forty, and Major Leroy, whose voice was twice as loud as Forrest"s, bellowed at the South Ess.e.x to halt.
Sharpe could see some enemy muskets being rammed. The Frenchmen were looking nervously at their enemy so close.
Leroy filled his lungs.
"Level your muskets!"
The Light Company alone was not loaded. The other companies levelled their muskets and beneath each muzzle the seventeen inch bayonet pointed towards the French.
"Fire!"
"And charge! Come on!"
The crash of that volley, the smoke, and then the redcoats were released from the Sergeants" discipline and they were free to take the blades up the hill to savage the enemy who had been shattered by the close volley.
"Kill the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds. Go on! Get in with them!" And the cheer carried them up the slope, screaming mad, wanting only to get at the men who had threatened them during the long approach march, and Sharpe ran ahead of his men with his long sword ready.
"Halt! Form up! Hurry!"
The enemy had gone. They had fled the bayonets as Sharpe had guessed they would. The enemy Battalions were running full tilt back towards the main army, and the redcoats were left holding the small knoll which bore the dead and wounded of their enemy. The looting had begun already, practised hands stripping the casualties of clothes and money. Sharpe sheathed his unblooded sword. It had been well done, but now he wondered what was next. Twelve hundred British troops held the small hill, the only British troops on a plain that was peopled with more than fifty thousand Frenchmen. That was not his concern. He settled down to wait.
"They"ve run away!" La Marquesa sounded disappointed.
Lord Spears grinned. "That was only a ten guinea battle, my dear. For two hundred you get the whole spectacle; slaughter, dismemberment, pillage, and even a little rape."
"Is that where you come in, Jack?"
Spears laughed. "I"ve waited so long for that invitation, Helena."
"You"ll have to wait a little longer, dear." She smiled at him. "Was that Richard Sharpe?"
"It was. A genuine hero, and all for ten guineas."
"Which I doubt I"ll ever see. Is he truly a hero?" Her huge eyes were fixed on Spears.
"Good Lord, yes! Absolutely genuine. The poor fool must have a death wish. He took an Eagle, he was first into Badajoz, and there"s a rumour he blew up Almeida."
"How delicious." She opened her fan. "You"re a little jealous of him, aren"t you?"
He laughed, because the accusation was not true. "I wish to have a long, long life, Helena, and die in the bed of someone very young and breathtakingly beautiful."
She smiled. Her teeth were unusually white. "I rather want to meet a real hero, Jack. Persuade him to come to the Palacio."