Argenton nodded. “You must tell me how to reach Vila Real de Zedes.”
“I shall give you directions,” Christopher said, then raised his glass, “and I shall drink
to the success of our endeavors.”
“Amen to that,” Argenton said, and raised his glass to the toast.
And Colonel Christopher smiled, because he was rewriting the rules.
Sharpe ran across the paddock where the dead horses lay with flies crawling in their
nostrils and across their eyeballs. He tripped on a metal picketing pin and, as he stumbled
forward, a carbine bullet fluttered past him, the sound suggesting it was almost spent,
but even a spent bullet in the wrong place could kill a man. His riflemen were shooting from
the field’s far side, the smoke of their Baker rifles thickening along the wall. Sharpe
dropped beside Hagman. “What’s happening, Dan?”
“Dragoons are back, sir,” Hagman said laconically, “and there’s some infantry there
too.”
“You sure?”
“Shot one blue bastard,” Hagman said, “and two greens so far.”
Sharpe wiped sweat from his face, then crawled a few paces along the wall to a place where the
powder smoke was not so thick. The dragoons had dismounted and were shooting from the edge
of a wood some hundred paces away. Too long a range for their carbines, Sharpe thought, but
then he saw some blue uniforms where the road ran through the trees and he reckoned the
infantry was forming for an attack. There was an odd clicking noise coming from somewhere
nearby and he could not place it, but it seemed to offer no threat so he ignored it.
“Pendleton!”
“Sir?”
“Find Lieutenant Vicente. He’s in the village. Tell him to get his men out on the northern
path now.” Sharpe pointed to the track through the vineyards, the same track by which they had
entered Barca d’Avintas and where the dead dragoons of the first fight still lay. “And,
Pendleton, tell him to hurry. But be polite, though.”
Pendleton, a pickpocket and purse snatcher from Bristol, was the youngest of Sharpe’s men
and now looked puzzled. “Polite, sir?”
“Call him sir, damn you, and salute him, but hurry!”
Goddamn it, Sharpe thought, but there would be no escape across the Douro today, no slow
shuttling back and forth with the small boat, and no marching back to Captain Hogan and the
army. Instead they would have to get the hell out northwards and get out fast. “Sergeant!” He
looked left and right for Patrick Harper through the misty patches of rifle smoke along the
wall. “Harper!”
“I’m with you, sir.” Harper came running from behind. “I was dealing with those two Frogs
in the church.”
“The moment the Portuguese are into the vineyard we get out of here. Are any of our men
left in the village?”
“Harris is there, sir, and Pendleton, of course.”
“Send someone to make sure the two of them get out.” Sharpe leveled his rifle across the
wall and sent a bullet spinning toward the infantry who were forming up on the road among
the trees. “And, Pat, what did you do with those two Frogs?”
“They’d robbed the poor box,” Harper said, “so I sent them to hell.” He patted his sheathed
sword bayonet.
Sharpe grinned. “And if you get the chance, Pat, do the same to that bastard French
officer.”
“Pleasure, sir,” Harper said, then ran back across the paddock. Sharpe reloaded. The
French, he thought, were being too cautious. They should have attacked already, but they must
have believed there was a larger force in Barca d’Avintas than two stranded half
companies, and the rifle fire must have been disconcerting to the dragoons who were not
used to such accuracy. There were bodies lying on the grass at the edge of the wood,
evidence that the dismounted French horsemen had been taught about the Baker rifle the hard
way. The French did not use rifles, reckoning that the spiraling grooves and lands that spun
the bullet in the barrel and so gave the weapon its accuracy also made it much too slow to
reload, and so the French, like most British battalions, relied on the quicker-firing, but
much less accurate musket. A man could stand fifty yards from a musket and stand a good
chance of living, but standing a hundred paces in front of a Baker in the hands of a good man
was a death warrant, and so the dragoons had pulled back into the trees.
There was infantry in the wood as well, but what were the bastards doing? Sharpe propped
his loaded rifle against the wall and took out his telescope, the fine instrument made by
Matthew Berge of London which had been a gift from Sir Arthur Wellesely after Sharpe had
saved the General’s life at Assaye. He rested the telescope on the wall’s mossy coping and
stared at the leading company of French infantry which was well back in the trees, but Sharpe
could see they were formed in three ranks. He was looking for some sign that they were ready to
advance, but the men were slouching, musket butts grounded, without even fixed bayonets. He
whipped the glass right, suddenly fearing that perhaps the French would try to cut off his
retreat by infiltrating the vineyard, but he saw nothing to worry him. He looked back at
the trees and saw a flash of light, a distinct white circle, and realized there was an
officer kneeling in the leafy shadows staring at the village through a telescope. The man
was undoubtedly trying to work out how many enemy were in Barca d’Avintas and how to
attack them. Sharpe put his own telescope away, picked up the rifle and leveled it on the
wall. Careful now, he thought, careful. Kill that one officer and any French attack is
slowed, because that officer is the man who makes the decisions, and Sharpe pulled back the
flint, lowered his head so that his right eye was gazing down the sights, found the patch of
dark shadow that was the Frenchman’s blue coat and then raised the rifle’s foresight, a blade
of metal, so that the barrel hid the target and so allowed the bullet to drop. There was
little wind, not enough to drift the bullet left or right. A splintering of noise sounded
from the other rifles and a drop of sweat trickled past Sharpe’s left eye as he pulled the
trigger and the rifle hammered back into his shoulder and the puff of bitter smoke from the
pan made his right eye smart and the specks of burning powder stung his cheek as the cloud of
barrel smoke billowed in front of the wall to hide the target. Sharpe twisted to see
Lieutenant Vicente’s troops streaming into the vineyard accompanied by thirty or forty
civilians. Harper was coming back across the paddock. The odd clicking noise was louder
suddenly and Sharpe registered that it was the sound of French carbine bullets striking
the other side of the stone wall. “We’re all clear of the village, sir,” Harper said.
“We can go,” Sharpe said, and he marveled that the enemy had been so slow, thus giving him
time to extricate his force. He sent Harper with most of the greenjackets to join Vicente
and they took a dozen French horses with them, each horse worth a small fortune in prize money
if they could ever rejoin the army. Sharpe kept Hagman and six other men and they spread
along the wall and fired as fast as their rifles would load, which meant they did not wrap the
bullets in leather patches which gripped the rifling, but just tapped the balls down the
barrels because Sharpe did not care about accuracy, he just wanted the French to see a
thick rill of smoke and hear the shots and thus not know that their enemy was withdrawing.
He pulled the trigger and the flint broke into useless scraps so he slung the rifle and
backed out of the smoke to see that Vicente and Harper were both well into the vineyard and
so he shouted at his remaining men to hurry back across the paddock. Hagman paused to fire
a last bullet, then he ran and Sharpe went with him, the last man to leave, and he could not
believe it had been that easy to disengage, that the French had been so supine, and just then
Hagman went down.
At first Sharpe thought Hagman had tripped on one of the metal pegs with which the dragoons
had picketed their horses, then he saw blood on the grass and saw Hagman let go of his rifle
and his right hand slowly clench and unclench. “Dan!” Sharpe knelt and saw a tiny wound high up
beside Hagman’s left shoulder blade, just an unlucky carbine bullet that had flicked
through the smoke and found its target.
“Go on, sir.” Hagman’s voice was hoarse. “I’m done for.”
“You’re bloody not,” Sharpe snarled and he turned Hagman over onto his back and saw no wound
in front, which meant the carbine ball was somewhere inside, then Hagman choked and spat up
frothy blood and Sharpe heard Harper yelling at him.
“The bastards are coming, sir!”
Just one minute before, Sharpe thought, he had been congratulating himself on how easy it
had been, and now it was all collapsing. He pulled Hagman’s rifle to him, slung it beside
his own and picked up the old poacher who gave a gasp and a whimper and shook his head. “Leave
me, sir.”
“I’m not leaving you, Dan.”
“Hurts, sir, it hurts,” Hagman whimpered again. His face was deathly pale and there was a
trickle of blood spilling from his mouth, and then Harper was at Sharpe’s side and took Hagman
out of his arms. “Leave me here,” Hagman said softly.
“Take him, Pat!” Sharpe said, and then some rifles fired from the vineyard and muskets
banged behind him and the air was whistling with balls as Sharpe pushed Harper on. He
followed, walking backward, watching the blue French uniforms appear in the mist of smoke
left by their own ragged volley.
“Come on, sir!” Harper shouted, letting Sharpe know he had Hagman in the scanty shelter
of the vines.
“Carry him north,” Sharpe said when he reached the vineyard.
“He’s hurting bad, sir.”
“Carry him! Get him out of here.”
Sharpe watched the French. Three companies of infantry had attacked the pasture, but they
made no effort to follow Sharpe north. They must have seen the column of Portuguese and
British troops winding through the vineyards accompanied by the dozen captured horses and
a crowd of frightened villagers, but they did not follow. It seemed they wanted Barca
d’Avintas more than they wanted Sharpe’s men dead. Even when Sharpe established himself on a
knoll a half-mile north of the village and stared at the French through his telescope, they did
not come near to threaten him. They could easily have chased him away with dragoons, but
instead they chopped up the skiff that Sharpe had rescued and then set the fragments alight.
“They’re closing off the river,” Sharpe said to Vicente.
“Closing the river?” Vicente did not understand.
“Making sure they’ve got the only boats. They don’t want British or Portuguese troops
crossing the river, attacking them in the rear. Which means it’s going to be bloody hard for
us to go the other way.” Sharpe turned as Harper came near, and saw that the big Irish
Sergeant’s hands were bloody. “How is he?”
Harper shook his head. “He’s in a terrible bad way, sir,” he said gloomily. “I think the
bloody ball’s in his lung. Coughing red bubbles he is, when he can cough at all. Poor Dan.”
“I’m not leaving him,” Sharpe said obstinately. He knew he had left Tarrant behind, and
there were men like Williamson who had been friends of Tarrant who would resent that Sharpe was
not doing the same with Hagman, but Tarrant had been a drunk and a troublemaker while Dan
Hagman was valuable. He was the oldest man among Sharpe’s riflemen and he had a wealth of
common sense that made him a steadying influence. Besides, Sharpe liked the old poacher.
“Make a stretcher, Pat,” he said, “and carry him.”
They made a stretcher out of jackets that had their sleeves threaded onto two poles cut
from an ash tree and while it was being fashioned Sharpe and Vicente watched the French and
discussed how they were to escape them. “What we must do,” the Portuguese Lieutenant said,
“is go east. To Amarante.” He smoothed a patch of bare earth and scratched a crude map with a
splinter of wood. “This is the Douro,” he said, “and here is Porto. We are here”-he tapped the
river very close to the city-”and the nearest bridge is at Amarante.” He made a cross mark
well to the east. “We could be there tomorrow or perhaps the day after.”
“So can they,” Sharpe said grimly, and he nodded toward the village.
A gun had just appeared from among the trees where the French had waited so long before
attacking Sharpe’s men. The cannon was drawn by six horses, three of which were ridden by
gunners in their dark-blue uniforms. The gun itself, a twelve-pounder, was attached to its
limber which was a light two-wheeled cart that served as a ready magazine and as an axle for
the heavy gun’s trail. Behind the gun was another team of four horses, these pulling a
coffin-like caisson that carried a spare gun wheel on its stern. The caisson, which was
being ridden by a half-dozen gunners, held the cannon’s ammunition. Even from half a mile
away Sharpe could hear the clink of the chains and thump of the wheels. He watched in silence as
a howitzer came into sight, than a second twelve-pounder, and after that a troop of
hussars.
“Do you think they’re coming here?” Vicente asked with alarm.
“No,” Sharpe said. “They’re not interested in fugitives. They’re going to Amarante.”
“This is not the good road to Amarante. In fact it goes nowhere. They’ll have to strike north
to the main road.”
“They don’t know that yet,” Sharpe guessed, “they’re taking any road east that they can
find.” Infantry had now appeared from the trees, then another battery of artillery. Sharpe
was watching a small army march eastward and there was only one reason to send so many men
and guns to the east and that was to capture the bridge at Amarante and so protect the French
left flank. “Amarante,” Sharpe said, “that’s where the bastards are going.”
“Then we can’t,” Vicente said.
“We can go,” Sharpe said, “we just can’t go on that road. You say there’s a main road?”
“Up here,” Vicente said, and scratched the earth to show another road to the north of them.
“That is the high road,” Vicente said. “The French are probably on that as well. Do you
really have to go to Amarante?”