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      Wellesley nudged his horse forward and stared down as the prisoner’s bonds were cut loose. ‘Private Sharpe?’ He spoke with utter disdain, as though he dirtied himself by even addressing Sharpe.

      Sharpe looked up, blinked, then made a guttural noise. Bywaters ran forward and worked the gag out of Sharpe’s mouth. Freeing the pad took some manipulation, for Sharpe had sunk his teeth deep into the folded leather. ‘Good lad now,’ Bywaters said softly, ‘good lad. Didn’t cry, did you? Proud of you, lad.’ The Sergeant Major at last managed to work the gag free and Sharpe tried to spit.

      ‘Private Sharpe?’ Wellesley’s disdainful voice repeated.

      Sharpe forced his head up. ‘Sir?’ The word came out as a croak. ‘Sir,’ he tried again and this time it sounded like a moan.

      Wellesley’s face twitched with distaste for what he was doing. ‘You’re to be fetched to General Harris’s tent. Do you understand me, Sharpe?’

      Sharpe blinked up at Wellesley. His head was spinning and the pain in his body was vying with disbelief at what he heard and with rage against the army.

      ‘You heard the Colonel, boy,’ Bywaters prompted Sharpe.

      ‘Yes, sir,’ Sharpe managed to answer Wellesley.

      Wellesley turned to Micklewhite. ‘Bandage him, Mister Micklewhite. Put a salve on his back, whatever you think best. I want him compos mentis within the hour. You understand me?’

      ‘Within an hour!’ the surgeon said in disbelief, then saw the anger on his young Colonel’s face. ‘Yes, sir,’ he said swiftly, ‘within an hour, sir.’

      ‘And give him clean clothes,’ Wellesley ordered the Sergeant Major before giving Sharpe one last withering look and spurring his horse away.

      The last of the ropes holding Sharpe to the tripod were cut away. Shee and the officers watched, all of them wondering just what extraordinary business had caused a summons to General Harris’s tent. No one spoke as the Sergeant Major plucked away the last strands of rope from Sharpe’s right wrist, then offered his own hand. ‘Here, lad. Hold onto me. Gently now.’

      Sharpe shook his head. ‘I’m all right, Sergeant Major,’ he said. He was not, but he would be damned before he showed weakness in front of his comrades, and double damned before he showed it in front of Sergeant Hakeswill who had watched aghast as his victim was cut down from the triangle. ‘I’m all right,’ Sharpe insisted and he slowly pushed himself away from the tripod, then, tottering slightly, turned and took three steps.

      A cheer sounded in the Light Company.

      ‘Quiet!’ Captain Morris snapped. ‘Take names, Sergeant Hakeswill!’

      ‘Take names, sir! Yes, sir!’

      Sharpe staggered twice and almost fell, but he forced himself to stand upright and then to take some steady steps towards the surgeon. ‘Reporting for bandaging, sir,’ he croaked. Blood had soaked his trousers, his back was carnage, but he had recovered most of his wits and the look he gave the surgeon almost made Micklewhite flinch because of its savagery.

      ‘Come with me, Private,’ Micklewhite said.

      ‘Help him! Help him!’ Bywaters snapped at the drummer boys and the two sweating lads dropped their whips and hurried to support Sharpe’s elbows. He had managed to remain upright, but Bywaters had seen him swaying and feared he was about to collapse.

      Sharpe half walked and was half carried away. Major Shee took off his hat, scratched his greying hair, and then, unsure what he should do, looked down at Bywaters. ‘It seems we have no more business today, Sergeant Major.’

      ‘No, sir.’

      Shee paused. It was all so irregular.

      ‘Dismiss the battalion, sir?’ Bywaters suggested.

      Shee nodded, glad to have been given some guidance. ‘Dismiss them, Sergeant Major.’

      ‘Yes, sir.’

      Sharpe had survived.

      CHAPTER FOUR

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      It seemed airless inside General Harris’s tent. It was a large tent, as big as a parish marquee, and though both its wide entrances had been brailed back there was no wind to stir the damp air trapped under the high ridge. The light inside the big tent was yellowed by the canvas to the colour of urine and gave the grass underfoot a dank unhealthy look.

      Four men waited inside the tent. The youngest and most nervous was William Lawford who, because he was a mere lieutenant and by far the most junior officer present, was sitting far off to one side on a gilt chair of such spindly and fragile construction it seemed a miracle that it had survived its transport on the army’s wagons. Lawford scarcely dared move lest he draw attention to himself, and so he sat awkward and uncomfortable as the sweat trickled down his face and dripped onto the crown of his cocked hat which rested on his thighs.

      Opposite Lawford, and utterly ignoring the younger man, sat his Colonel, Arthur Wellesley. The Colonel made small talk, but gruffly, as though he resented being forced to wait. Once or twice he pulled a watch from his fob pocket, snapped open the lid, glared at the revealed face, then restored the watch to his pocket without making a comment.

      General Harris, the army’s commander, sat behind a long table that was spread with maps. The commander of the allied armies was a trim, middle-aged man who possessed an uncommon measure of common sense and a great deal of practical ability, and both were qualities he recognized in his younger deputy, Colonel Wellesley. George Harris was an affable man, but now, waiting in the tent’s yellow gloom, he seemed distracted. He stared at the maps, he wiped the sweat from his face with a big blue handkerchief, but he rarely looked up to acknowledge the stilted conversation. Harris was uneasy for, like Wellesley, he did not really approve of what they were about to do. It was not so much the irregularity of the action that concerned the two men, for neither was hidebound, but rather because they suspected that the proposed operation would fail and that two good men, or rather one good man and one bad, would be lost.

      The fourth man in the tent refused to sit, but instead strode up and down between the tables and the scatter of flimsy chairs. It was this man who kept alive what little conversation managed to survive the tent’s stiff, damp and airless atmosphere. He jollied his companions, he encouraged them, he tried to amuse them, though every now and then his efforts would fail and then he would stride to one of the tent doorways and stoop to peer out. ‘Can’t be long now,’ he would say each time and then begin his pacing again. His name was Major General David Baird and he was the senior and older of General Harris’s two deputy commanders. Unlike his colleagues he had discarded his uniform coat and waistcoat, stripping down to a dirty, much-darned shirt and letting the braces of his breeches hang down to his knees. His dark hair was damp and tousled, while his broad face was so tanned that, to Lawford’s nervous gaze, Baird looked more like a labourer than a general. The resemblance was even more acute because there was nothing delicate or refined about David Baird’s appearance. He was a huge Scotsman, tall as a giant, broad shouldered and muscled like a coal-heaver. It had been Baird who had persuaded his two colleagues to act, or rather he had persuaded General Harris to act much against that officer’s better judgement, and Baird frankly did not give a tinker’s damn whether Colonel Arthur bloody Wellesley approved or not. Baird disliked Wellesley, and bitterly resented the fact that the younger man had been made into his fellow second-in-command. Baird, never a man to let his grudges simmer unspoken, had protested Arthur Wellesley’s appointment to Harris. ‘If his brother wasn’t Governor-General, Harris, you’d never have promoted him.’

      ‘Not true, Baird,’ Harris had answered mildly. ‘Wellesley has ability.’

      ‘Ability, my arse. He’s got family!’ Baird spat.

      ‘We all have family.’

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