nearest him were so blood-soaked he could not name them; another was bent double in the saddle. What did he do now?
‘Mr Hervey, sir!’
His covering corporal had circled and come up behind him again.
‘Are you all right, sir?’ Well might he be anxious, for his officer’s bloody back rebuked him for not being in position.
‘I’ll be well, Corporal Toyne.’ Hervey was more determined than certain, for he felt his left arm weakening. But he must appear unperturbed, just as would Sir Edward Lankester.
‘I’m sorry, sir: she ran out as we bent left.’
In truth, Hervey had no sense of dereliction in his coverman. The charge had become a barging race, and he himself had lost the front rank, which
He closed to the doubled-up dragoon. ‘What’s wrong, Bunting?’
Private Bunting tried to lift his head.
Hervey saw the blood oozing between the dragoon’s fingers as he clutched his stomach – and the grey matter among the red, a hideous disembowelling. ‘Take him rear, Abbott,’ he said to the man next to him, trying not to betray any hopelessness. Then he turned away while he still had control of his gorge.
‘Hadn’t I better bind up your shoulder, sir?’ asked Corporal Toyne.
Hervey was tempted, but he couldn’t give in, not now. There was fighting still, and no bugle had sounded ‘recall’. ‘We’d better catch up the troop. Form line, Corporal!’
By the time they closed on the rest of the regiment, the fight was over, and Lord George’s trumpeter was blowing the octave leaps for ‘rally’. Hervey found himself strangely composed by the return to order, for it was just as the manual prescribed:
However, no one seemed to have missed him. But then, how
‘Very well, Mr Hervey,’ said Sir Edward, seeing him touch his sword to his lips. His voice was barely raised. ‘Right-mark for the second rank, if you please. Just there will do capitally.’ He nodded to where, then turned his head again. ‘Your jacket, sir, requires attention. See to it as soon as may be!’
Hervey’s mouth fell open. The remark would have stung when first he joined the Sixth, but now, after his Corunna steeling, he recognized his troop-leader’s manner for what it was. An officer might be carried from the field, but otherwise he was to bear his wounds unremarked and preferably unnoticed. Indeed, an officer was never
When they had retired west of the Portina, dressed wounds of men and horses alike, mended tackling, refastened shoes, and attended to all the other requirements of a regiment of cavalry that had clashed with a couple of hundred
He wrote nothing of his own predicament. The wound he would not have dreamed of mentioning, and certainly not the prospect of a general court martial. The one would have caused anxiety to the old man, the other dismay, and Hervey could not be sure that he would not speak of it with his people at Horningsham. And in any case, the wound was nothing that the surgeon’s needle – as John Knight’s with Jessye’s ear – had not been able to repair. His tunic was another matter, but Private Sykes had found the baggage animals and brought his second coat forward. Hervey had wanted to keep it for the court martial, but Sir Edward Lankester’s strictures would not now permit him.
It was a strange thing, he mused as he began readying himself for stand-to: he hoped fervently that the regiment would be in the thick of things tomorrow, yet he hoped as much that his uniform would not be spoiled. What queer things indeed an officer must be sensible of! But at least he would be well turned out to mess with the Fortieth. And after today, with the affair of the patrol and the charge at the guns, he would not trouble himself with thoughts of court martial. What could he do but smile at the peculiar fortunes of war?
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
TIMES PAST
Brevet-Colonel Charles Laming settled into the rear-facing seat of the Delgado travelling carriage, on the right-offside, as a gentleman ought, so that he faced Isabella diagonally, allowing her the forward prospect and the shaded side during the journey eastwards to Elvas. He had lost no time in securing leave of Sir William Clinton in order to go to the assistance of his old friend. The general, indeed, had been wholly supportive, declaring that if Hervey were not released very promptly then he would take it upon himself to effect his release by whatever means he thought fit. Sir William, as a lieutenant-general, had wide discretion (even if he could not be entirely certain what his orders from London amounted to), and he did not intend that any of this ill news should reach the Horse Guards until it was resolved satisfactorily, and to Hervey’s advantage, since the dispositions he was now making for the army of intervention were based in large part on Hervey’s own assessment of the situation.
In ordinary circumstances Sir William would not have been so sanguine about losing his deputy quartermaster-general. Laming had been promoted to the staff on account of his uncommon facility to render into few words, and with absolute clarity, the thoughts and intentions of politicos and senior officers. Throughout the years of unrest in England, which had continued in one form or another since the end of the war with Bonaparte, he had penned instructions to the army acting in support of the civil power, and his precision and foresight had saved many an ugly situation from turning into disaster. It was said that if it had been Laming who had drafted the orders for the Northern District that day in 1819, when the crowds had gathered to hear ‘Orator’ Hunt, there would have been no occasion for the coining ‘Peterloo’. These talents had kept him from regimental duty, and then had come the opportunity for advancement, on the list of another regiment, and eventually a substantive lieutenant-colonelcy