waste ground towards the main road. He heard footsteps behind, but still he did not turn. 'By God, Sharpe, but you push your luck.' It was Major Hogan who spoke.
'It's all I've got to push, sir,' Sharpe said bitterly. 'I wasn't born to rank, sir, I don't have a purse to buy it and I don't have the privileges to attract it, so I need to push what bit of luck I've got.'
'By giving lectures on assassinating officers?' Hogan's voice was frigid with disapproval. 'The Peer won't like that, Richard. It smacks of republicanism.'
'Bugger republicanism,' Sharpe said savagely. 'But you were the one who told me the
Hogan made a calming gesture with his hand, as if he feared Sharpe's voice might reach the worried officers. 'You make your point, Richard.'
'My point, sir, is that you told me to make them miserable. So that's what I'm doing.'
'I just wasn't sure I wanted you to start a revolution in the process, Richard,' Hogan said, 'and certainly not in front of Valverde. You have to be nice to Valverde. One day, with any luck, you can kill him for me, but until that happy day arrives you have to butter the bastard up. If we're ever going to get proper command of the Spanish armies, Richard, then bastards like Don Luis Valverde have to be well buttered, so please don't preach revolution in front of him. He's just a simple-minded aristocrat who isn't capable of thinking much beyond his next meal or his last mistress, but if we're going to beat the French we need his support. And he expects us to treat the
'This is Father Sarsfield' — Kiely introduced the priest to Hogan, conspicuously ignoring Sharpe — 'who is our chaplain. Father Sarsfield and Captain Donaju will travel with the company tonight, the rest of the company's officers will attend General Valverde's reception.'
'Where you'll meet Colonel Runciman,' Hogan promised. 'I think you'll find him much to your Lordship's taste.'
'You mean he knows how to treat royal troops?' General Valverde asked, looking pointedly at Sharpe as he spoke.
'I know how to treat royal guards, sir,' Sharpe intervened. 'This isn't the first royal bodyguard I've met.'
Kiely and Valverde both stared down at Sharpe with looks little short of loathing, but Kiely could not resist the bait of Sharpe's comment. 'You refer, I suppose, to the Hanoverian's lackeys?' he said in his half-drunken voice.
'No, my Lord,' Sharpe said. 'This was in India. They were royal guards protecting a fat little royal bugger called the Sultan Tippoo.'
'And you trained them too, no doubt?' Valverde inquired.
'I killed them,' Sharpe said, 'and the fat little bugger too.' His words wiped the supercilious look off both men's thin faces, while Sharpe himself was suddenly overwhelmed with a memory of the Tippoo's water-tunnel filled with the shouting bodyguard armed with jewelled muskets and broad-bladed sabres. Sharpe had been thigh-deep in scummy water, fighting in the shadows, digging out the bodyguard one by one to reach that fat, glittering-eyed, buttery-skinned bastard who had tortured some of Sharpe's companions to death. He remembered the echoing shouts, the musket flashes reflecting from the broken water and the glint of the gems draped over the Tippoo's silk clothes. He remembered the Tippoo's death too, one of the few killings that had ever lodged in Sharpe's memory as a thing of comfort. 'He was a right royal bastard,' Sharpe said feelingly, 'but he died like a man.'
'Captain Sharpe,' Hogan put in hastily, 'has something of a reputation in our army. Indeed, you may have heard of him yourself, my Lord? It was Captain Sharpe who took the Talavera eagle.'
'With Sergeant Harper,' Sharpe put in, and Kiely's officers stared at Sharpe with a new curiosity. Any soldier who had taken an enemy standard was a man of renown and the faces of most of the guards' officers showed that respect, but it was the chaplain, Father Sarsfield, who reacted most fulsomely.
'My God and don't I remember it!' he said enthusiastically. 'And didn't it just excite all the Spanish patriots in Madrid?' He climbed clumsily down from his horse and held a plump hand out to Sharpe. 'It's an honour, Captain, an honour! Even though you are a heathen Protestant!' This last was said with a broad and friendly grin. 'Are you a heathen, Sharpe?' the priest asked more earnestly.
'I'm nothing, Father.'
'We're all something in God's eyes, my son, and loved for it. You and I shall talk, Sharpe. I shall tell you of God and you shall tell me how to strip the damned French of their eagles.' The chaplain turned a smiling face on Hogan. 'By God, Major, but you do us proud by giving us a man like Sharpe!' The priest's approval of the rifleman had made the other officers of the
'Have you finished, Father?' Kiely asked sarcastically.
'I shall be on my way with Captain Sharpe, my Lord, and we shall see you in the morning?'
Kiely nodded, then turned his horse away. His other officers followed, leaving Sharpe, the priest and Captain Donaju to follow the straggling column formed by the
By nightfall the
Sharpe looked up at the British flag. 'Does it worry you, Father?'
'Napoleon worries me more, my son. Defeat Napoleon, then we can start on the lesser enemies like yourself!' The comment was made in a friendly tone. 'What also worries me, my son,' Father Sarsfield went on, 'is that I've eight bottles of decent red wine and a handful of good cigars and only Captain Donaju to share them with. Will you do me the honour of joining us for supper now? And tell me, do you play an instrument, perhaps? No? Sad. I used to have a violin, but it was lost somewhere, but Sergeant Connors is a rare man on the flute and the men in his section sing most beautifully. They sing of home, Captain.'
'Of Madrid?' Sharpe asked mischievously.
Sarsfield smiled. 'Of Ireland, Captain, of our home across the water where few of us have ever set foot and most of us never shall. Come, let's have supper.' Father Sarsfield put a companionable arm across Sharpe's shoulder and steered him towards the gatehouse. A cold wind blew over the bare mountains as night fell and the first cooking fires curled their blue smoke into the sky. Wolves howled in the hills. There were wolves throughout Spain and Portugal and in winter they would sometimes come right up to the picquet line in the hope of snatching a meal from an unwary soldier, but this night the wolves reminded Sharpe of the grey-uniformed Frenchmen in Loup's brigade. Sharpe supped with the chaplain and afterwards, under a star-shining sky, he toured the ramparts with Harper. Beneath them the