He came to. The troop had gone threes-about and were trotting down the slope towards them. He watched with the keen satisfaction of a man who had drilled his command in the peace of Hounslow Heath and who was now seeing the profit of that exertion. Many a dragoon who had cursed him behind his back would now be seeing the method in those long field days. Not that he should ever concern himself too greatly with what the canteen was saying. All the same…
They broke into a steady canter and began changing direction right. Hervey continued to watch with approval, and not merely for a drill-book evolution smartly executed, for it was not to be found in the drill book: they used a ‘non-pivot’ movement to bring about changes of direction in line faster and with fewer words of command. It had been his doing: the usual wheeling required the left or right flanker to turn slowly on the spot while the rest of the line swung round, like a door on its hinge, each man at a slightly different speed. It was a movement that looked fine when performed well on the parade ground but which was painfully slow and inactive in the face of the enemy. If they tried to wheel here, now, there was every chance the Zulu would fall on the right of the line before the evolution was complete.
What effect had their volley had though? Hervey wished he could have seen for himself, for it would have told him a deal about the way the Zulu would now fight. But he would have obstructed the Rifles’ line of fire had he remained with the troop and then tried to gallop back here.
It was not long – a minute perhaps – before he had his answer; in some part at least. The Zulu broached the crest more or less in line. This was what he had wanted: although Welsh’s snipers would not now be able to pick off the column leaders, the Rifles would have many more targets than if the Zulu had remained in single file.
Atop the ridge the black host suddenly halted. Perhaps they caught their breath, he thought. Perhaps they surveyed the veld to their front. Either way it was a sight that he –
Every officer’s telescope was now trained on the black line.
‘Not quite a thousand,’ said Captain Welsh matter-of-factly. ‘But not many short of it.’
Quicker than had Hervey, he had calculated the length of the ridge, and the part of it the Zulu occupied: twelve hundred yards of warriors close-packed.
Hervey had no reason to dispute it, but he had hoped the frontage would be far less, for there was now a considerable overlap (the Rifles fronted no more than two hundred yards).
There again, he had no intention of letting the Zulu close with them. ‘Three rounds then, Captain Welsh – in your own time.’ As the captain touched the peak of his shako to acknowledge, the first of the snipers’ shots rang out. One of the warriors in the centre of the line fell face down, dead. A great, painful moan swelled the length of the line, as if the death of one was the wounding of all.
Hervey felt a strange shiver in his spine. The battlefield was never so silent a place as here: no artillery, no musketry from opposing clouds of skirmishers; just a single shot, and a thousand voices – not so very different from the battles of the Old Testament on which he had feasted as a boy.
And then another shot, and another, and then several more. And every time a warrior falling. Hervey could not help but think that this was the way to give battle: sniping at the enemy from a distance, perhaps even picking out the men who would direct the fighting. He wished he had a troop of horse artillery with him. They would soon have the range, and shrapnel would fell these men in droves.
Why did the Zulu stand instead of advancing? Or withdraw behind the crest? Did they not comprehend what powder and ball was? Was it possible that so successful a tribe did not know of firearms? How he wished (did not the Duke of Wellington himself always say?) he were able to see over the other side of the hill.
Were they waiting for the rest of the
That, however, made no difference to his intention here: three rounds and then withdrawal. And in any event he could rely on Fearnley to judge keenly how to wield the troop to advantage. No, he was curious only in what the attack would tell him about the wiliness of the Zulu in battle – and therefore how he might play them as his little command fell back towards Somerset’s main force.
‘Here they come!’ said Welsh purposefully.
Hervey quit his thoughts and pushed his telescope back in its holster; and then almost at once he took it out again, for as the Zulu swarmed down the slope he observed that they left behind a knot of men on the ridge, which he supposed at once to be Matiwane (he now wore a great feathered headdress) and his staff. He recalled how at one point during the battle at Waterloo a horse gunner had told the Duke of Wellington that he had Bonaparte within range, and asked leave to open fire. The duke had refused him, saying that it was not the business of one commander-in-chief to fire upon another. Hervey had never quite believed it – even less understood it. Yet now he had a curious sense of why the duke might have been moved to say so, for he felt as if he would be shooting a magnificent perching bird if he fired on Matiwane. Ignoble deed! And yet he approved –
‘Captain Welsh, see yonder, in the middle of the ridge – the plumes. Might one of your men try his hand?’
Captain Welsh arranged it at once. ‘Serjeant-major! Corporal Cloete!’
They doubled to the company commander. He gave them the order.
The two sharpshooters doubled forward ten yards, and lay prone. Each took careful aim and fired.
The two rounds struck home, though the feathered target remained upright. It was extreme range, and the two riflemen calmly corrected their point of aim for the second barrel.
But before they could fire, other warriors surrounded the chief: a shield of flesh.
The serjeant-major fired; a warrior-shield fell dead.
Corporal Cloete fired an instant later but another Zulu had already taken his place.
The serjeant-major was reloading furiously. ‘We can do it, Cloete, even if it takes a dozen apiece!’
But before they could, more Zulu swarmed on to the crest to shield Matiwane.
‘As you were!’ called Hervey. This was a diversion they could ill afford.
Horse-holders now galloped forward to where the other sharpshooters lay. The picked riflemen sprang up and into the saddle, and spurred back to the line in a display that Hervey was sure would have delighted the duke himself.
‘Smart work, Captain Welsh; smart work.’
‘Thank you, Colonel. I will pass on your approbation at the first opportunity,’ said the Rifles captain, as if he were being dismissed at the end of a field day.
The Zulu came on steadily in the same loping gait. Hervey felt his stomach tightening again. The range was now two hundred yards: it was time for the Rifles to do their
He did not have to say anything. Captain Welsh had primed his men well: ‘In your own time, three rounds:
The first round was a near-perfect volley. Every man had taken and held his aim, waiting the order, so that as soon as it came twelve-dozen trigger-fingers squeezed as one. The powder-smoke hung low in the still air, but not as thick as it would have been with a company of muskets (the rifles were in open order). The fire-effect was visible at once. Hervey was astonished. Every round seemed to have found its mark.
But the Zulu line did not falter. The second volley came not five seconds later, more ragged this time, but just as accurate, so that a quarter of the Zulu host now lay dead or writhing at the bottom of the slope. It would be half a minute before the third, final, round, while the riflemen reloaded. Hervey cursed that they could not have another two volleys as quick: the French for sure would have reeled in the face of such fire; the Burmans and the Jhauts would have taken to their heels.
The volley made him start. It had come in seconds only, along the entire line … He looked at Welsh, amazed.
‘The horse-holders’ rifles. Better used than in a saddle bucket.’
He wished he had thought of it himself.
‘Now for the final round!’ said the captain keenly.
But the Zulu would not face it. On the crest of the ridge Matiwane’s spear was raised.