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

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if you can paddle to the western bank,’ Moon ordered. Some British officers, using captured horses, were on that bank and were trying to catch up with the raft.

      Sharpe had the men use their rifle and musket butts as paddles, but the pontoons were monstrously heavy and their efforts were futile. The raft drifted on southwards. A last shell plunged harmlessly into the river, its fuse extinguished instantly by the water. ‘Paddle, for God’s sake!’ Moon snapped.

      ‘They’re doing their best, sir,’ Sharpe said. ‘Broken leg, sir?’

      ‘Calf bone,’ Moon said, wincing, ‘heard it snap when the horse fell.’

      ‘We’ll straighten it up in a minute, sir,’ Sharpe said soothingly.

      ‘You’ll do no such bloody thing, man! You’ll get me to a doctor.’

      Sharpe was not certain how he was going to get Moon anywhere except straight down the river which was curving now about a great rock bluff on the Spanish bank. That bluff, at least, would check the French pursuit. He used his rifle as a paddle, but the raft defiantly took its own path. Once past the bluff the river widened, swung back to the west and the current slowed a little.

      The French pursuers were left behind and the British were finding the going hard on the Portuguese bank. The French cannon were still firing, but they could no longer see the raft so they had to be shooting at the British forces on that western bank. Sharpe tried to steer with a length of scorched, broken plank, not because he thought it would do any good, but to prevent Moon complaining. The makeshift rudder had no effect. The raft stubbornly stayed close to the Spanish bank. Sharpe thought about Bullen and felt a pulse of pure anger at the way in which the lieutenant had been taken prisoner. ‘I’m going to kill that bastard,’ he said aloud.

      ‘You’re going to do what?’ Moon demanded.

      ‘I’m going to kill that bastard Frenchman, sir. Colonel Vandal.’

      ‘You’re going to get me to the other bank, Sharpe, that’s what you’re going to do, and you’re going to do it quickly.’

      At which point, with a shudder and a lurch, the pontoons ran aground.

      The crypt lay beneath the cathedral. It was a labyrinth hacked from the rock on which Cadiz defied the sea, and in deeper holes beneath the crypt’s flagged floor the dead bishops of Cadiz waited for the resurrection.

      Two flights of stone steps descended to the crypt, emerging into a large chapel that was a round chamber twice the height of a man and thirty paces wide. If a man stood in the chamber’s centre and clapped his hands once the noise would sound fifteen times. It was a crypt of echoes.

      Five caverns opened from the chapel. One led to a smaller round chapel at the furthest end of the labyrinth, while the other four flanked the big chamber. The four were deep and dark, and they were connected to each other by a hidden passageway that circled the whole crypt. None of the caverns was decorated. The cathedral above might glitter with candlelight and shine with marble and have painted saints and monstrances of silver and candlesticks of gold, but the crypt was plain stone. Only the altars had colour. In the smaller chapel a Virgin gazed sadly down the long passage to where, across the wider chamber, her son hung on a silver cross in never-ending pain.

      It was deep night. The cathedral was empty. The last priest had folded his scapular and gone home. The women who haunted the altars had been ushered out, the floor had been swept and the doors locked. Candles still burned, and the red light of the eternal presence glowed under the scaffolding which ringed the crossing where the transept met the nave. The cathedral was unfinished. The sanctuary with its high altar had yet to be built, the dome was half made and the bell towers not even started.

      Father Montseny had a key to one of the eastern doors. The key scraped in the lock and the hinges squealed when he pushed the door open. He came with six men. Two of them stayed close to the unlocked cathedral door. They stood in shadow, hidden, both with loaded muskets and orders to use them only if things became desperate. ‘This is a night for knives,’ Montseny told the men.

      ‘In the cathedral?’ one of the men asked nervously.

      ‘I will give you absolution for any sins,’ Montseny said, ‘and the men who must die here are heretics. They are Protestants, English. God will be gladdened by their deaths.’

      He took the remaining four men to the crypt and, once in the main chamber, he placed candles on the floor and lit them. The light flickered on the shallow-domed ceiling. He put two men in one of the chambers to the east while he, with the remaining pair, waited in the darkness of the chamber opposite. ‘No noise, now!’ he warned them. ‘We wait.’

      The English came early as Father Montseny had supposed they would. He heard the distant squeal of the hinges as they pushed open the unlocked door. He heard their footsteps coming down the cathedral’s long nave and he knew that the two men he had left by the door would have bolted it now and would be following the English towards the crypt.

      Three men appeared on the western steps. They came slowly, cautiously. One of them, the tallest, had a bag. That man peered into the big round chamber and saw no one. ‘Hello!’ he shouted.

      Father Montseny tossed a packet into the chamber. It was a thick packet, tied with string. ‘What you will do,’ he said in the English he had learned as a prisoner, ‘is bring the money, put it beside the letters, take the letters and go.’

      The man looked at the black archways leading from the big candlelit chamber. He was trying to decide where Montseny’s voice had come from. ‘You think I’m a fool?’ he asked. ‘I must see the letters first.’ He was a big man, red-faced, with a bulbous nose and thick black eyebrows.

      ‘You may examine them, Captain,’ Montseny said. He knew the man was called Plummer and that he had been a captain in the British army, and now he was a functionary in the British embassy. Plummer’s job was to make certain the embassy’s servants did not steal, that the gratings on the windows were secure and that the shutters were locked at night. Plummer was, in Montseny’s opinion, a nonentity, a failed soldier, a man who now came anxiously into the ring of candles and squatted by the package. The string was tough and knotted tight and Plummer could not undo it. He felt in his pocket, presumably looking for a knife.

      ‘Show me the gold,’ Montseny ordered.

      Plummer scowled at the peremptory tone, but obliged by opening the bag he had placed beside the package. It was a cloth bag which he unlaced, then brought out a handful of golden guineas. ‘Three hundred,’ he said, ‘as we agreed.’ His voice echoed back and forth, confusing him.

      ‘Now,’ Montseny said, and his men appeared from the dark with levelled muskets. The two men Plummer had left on the steps staggered forward as Montseny’s last two men came down the stairs behind them.

      ‘What the hell are you …’ Plummer began, then saw the priest was carrying a pistol. ‘You’re a priest?’

      ‘I thought we should all examine the merchandise,’ Montseny said, ignoring the question. He had the three men surrounded now. ‘You will lie flat while I count the coins.’

      ‘The devil I will,’ Plummer said.

      ‘On the floor,’ Montseny spoke in Spanish, and his men, all of whom had served in the Spanish navy and had muscles hardened by years of gruelling work, easily subdued the three and put them face

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