Sharpe’s Fury: The Battle of Barrosa, March 1811. Bernard Cornwell

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marquesa mocked.

      ‘You sent for them, you sour old bitch,’ Sharpe said, and he was tempted to hammer her malevolent face, but instead went outside where Harper had unceremoniously dumped Moon in the wheelbarrow.

      ‘My sabre!’ the brigadier pleaded.

      ‘Slattery, push the barrow,’ Sharpe said. ‘Pat, get that volley gun ready.’ The seven-barrel gun, more than anything, would frighten the men guarding the boat. ‘Hurry!’ he shouted.

      Moon was still complaining about his lost sabre, but Sharpe had no time for the man. He ran ahead with Harper, through the bushes, then he was in the kitchen garden and he could see the knot of townsmen standing guard on the boathouse. ‘Sergeant Noolan!’

      ‘Sir!’ That was Harris. ‘There, sir.’

      Bloody hell. Two pontoons, crammed with French troops, drifting downstream. ‘Shoot at them, Harris! Sergeant Noolan!’

      ‘Sir?’

      ‘Forward march.’ Sharpe joined the small rank of Connaught men. They were outnumbered by the townsmen, but the redcoats had bayonets and Harper had joined them with his volley gun. Rifles fired from the upstream bank and French muskets cracked from the pontoons. A bullet struck the boathouse roof and the townsmen flinched. ‘Váyase,’ Sharpe said, hoping his Spanish was understandable, ‘yo le mataré.’

      ‘What does that mean, sir?’ Sergeant Noolan asked.

      ‘Go away or we kill them.’

      Another French musket ball hit the boathouse and it was that, more perhaps than the threat of the advancing bayonets, that took the last shred of courage from the civilians. They fled, and Sharpe breathed a sigh of relief. Slattery arrived, pushing the brigadier, as Sharpe hauled the door open. ‘Get the brigadier in the boat!’ he told Slattery, then ran to where Harris and three other riflemen were crouching by the bank. The two French boats, both salvaged pontoons being driven by crude paddles, were coming fast and he put the rifle to his shoulder, cocked it and fired. The smoke hid the nearest French boat. He started to reload, then decided there was no time. ‘To the boat!’ he called, and he ran back with the other riflemen and they threw themselves into the precious boat and Noolan had already cut the mooring lines and they shoved the boat out into the stream as they untangled the oars. A volley came from the French boats and one of Noolan’s men gave a grunt and fell sideways. Other musket balls thumped into the gunwales. The brigadier was in the bows. Men were scrambling into thwarts, but Harper already had two of the long oars in their rowlocks and, standing up, was hauling on the shafts. The current caught them and turned them downstream. Another shot came from the nearest French boat and Sharpe waded over the men amidships and snatched up Harper’s volley gun. He fired it at the French pontoon and the huge noise of the gun echoed back from the Portuguese hills as at last they began to outstrip their pursuers.

      ‘Jesus Christ,’ Sharpe said in pure relief for their narrow escape.

      ‘I think he’s dying, sir,’ Noolan said.

      ‘Who?’

      ‘Conor, poor boy.’ The man who had been shot was coughing up blood that frothed pink at his lips.

      ‘You left my sabre!’ Moon complained.

      ‘Sorry about that, sir.’

      ‘It was one of Bennett’s best!’

      ‘I said I’m sorry, sir.’

      ‘And there was dung in that wheelbarrow.’

      Sharpe just looked into the brigadier’s eyes, and said nothing. The brigadier gave way first. ‘Did well to get away,’ he said grudgingly.

      Sharpe turned to the men on the benches. ‘Geoghegan? Tie up the brigadier’s splint. Well done, lads! Well done. That was a bit too close.’

      They were out of musket range now and the two ponderous French pontoons had given up the chase and turned for the bank. But ahead of them, where the smaller river joined the Guadiana, a knot of French horsemen appeared. Sharpe guessed they were the 8th’s officers who had galloped ahead of the battalion. So now those men must watch their prey vanish downriver, but then he saw that some of the horsemen had muskets and he turned towards the stern. ‘Steer away from the bank!’ he told Noolan who had taken the tiller ropes.

      Sharpe reloaded the rifle. He could see four of the horsemen had dismounted and were kneeling at the river’s edge, aiming their muskets. The range was close, no more than thirty yards. ‘Rifles!’ he called. He aimed his own. He saw Vandal. The French colonel was one of the officers kneeling by the river. He had a musket at his shoulder and he seemed to be aiming directly at Sharpe. You bastard, Sharpe thought, and he shifted the rifle, pointing it straight at Vandal’s chest. The boat lurched, his aim wandered, he corrected it, and now he would teach the bastard the advantages of a rifle. He started to pull the trigger, keeping the foresight dead on the Frenchman’s chest, and just then he saw the smoke billow from the musket muzzles and there was an instant when his whole head seemed filled with light, a searing white light that turned blood red. There was pain like a lightning strike in his brain and then, like blood congealing on a corpse, the light went black and he could see and feel nothing at all. Nothing.

      CHAPTER THREE

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      Two men, both tall, walked side by side on Cadiz’s ramparts. Those defences were huge, ringing the city to protect it against enemies and the sea. The firestep facing the bay was wide, so wide that three coaches and horses could travel abreast, and it was a popular place for folk to take the air, but no one disturbed the two men. Three of the taller man’s servants walked ahead to part the crowds, and three more walked on either side and still more walked behind to prevent any stranger disturbing their master.

      The taller man, and he was very tall, was dressed in the uniform of a Spanish admiral. He had one white silk stocking, red knee breeches, a red sash and a dark-blue tail coat with an elaborate red collar trimmed with gold lace. His straight sword was scabbarded in black fishskin and had a hilt of gold. His face was drawn, distinguished and aloof, a face etched by pain and made harsh by disappointment. The admiral’s left calf and foot were missing, so his lower leg was made of ebony, as was the gold-topped cane he used to help him walk.

      His companion was Father Salvador Montseny. The priest was in a cassock and had a silver crucifix hanging on his breast. The admiral had been his companion in imprisonment in England after Trafalgar and sometimes, if they did not wish to be understood by nearby folk, they spoke English together. Not today. ‘So the girl confessed to you?’ the admiral asked, amused.

      ‘She makes confession once a year,’ Montseny said, ‘on her saint’s day. January 13th.’

      ‘She is called Veronica?’

      ‘Caterina Veronica Blazquez,’ Montseny said, ‘and God brought her to me. There were seven other priests hearing confession in the cathedral that day, but she was guided to me.’

      ‘So you killed her pimp, then you killed the Englishman and his servants. I trust God will forgive you for that, Father.’

      Montseny had no doubts about God’s opinions. ‘What God wants, my lord, is a holy and a powerful Spain. He

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