CHAPTER 20
It was a short, bad night. After the repulse of
the French the army rescued the wounded and, in the thin firelight,
searched and piled the dead that could be found. Battal-ions that
had thought themselves safe in an imaginary second line now posted
sentries, and the brief night was broken by frequent rattles of
musketry as the nervous picquets imagined fresh enemy columns in
the dark. The bugles sounded at two in the morning, the fires were
restored to life, and hungry men shivered round the flames and
listened to the distant French bugles rousing the enemy. At half
past three, when a silvery grey light touched the flanks of the
Medellin, Berry's body was found and carried to the fire, where
Simmerson and his officers sipped scalding tea. Gibbons, appalled
at the great wound disfiguring his friend's throat, looked at
Sharpe with pale and suspicious eyes. Sharpe looked back and
smiled, saw the suspicion, and then Gibbons turned abruptly away
and shouted for his servant to clear up the blankets. Simmerson
flicked a glance round the officers. "He died a brave death,
gentlemen, a brave death."
They all muttered the right words, more
concerned with hunger and what was to come than with the death of a
fat Lieutenant, and watched bleakly as the body was stripped of its
valuables before being piled with the scores of dead that would be
buried before the sun rose high and made them offensive. No-one
thought it odd that Berry's body had been found so far from the
other dead. The events of the night had been muddled; there were
stories that the Germans below the Medellin had fought a running
skirmish with another column and groups of French fugitives had
become lost in the darkness and wandered in the British lines, and
the shivering officers assumed Berry had met such a
group.
By four o'clock the army was in position.
Hill's Brigades were on the Medellin and the Brigade Majors lined
the Battalions back from the hill crest so that they would be
invisible to the French gunners. The South Essex were on the flank
of the hill overlooking the Germans and the Guards who would defend
the flat plain between the Medellin and the Pajar. Sharpe stared at
the town, half hidden in mist, and wondered what was happening to
Josefina. He was impatient for the battle to start, to take his
Light Company away from Simmerson and up to the skirmish line that
would form in the mist-shrouded Portina valley. He was surprised
that Simmerson had said nothing to the Battalion. Instead the
Colonel sat on his grey horse and stared moodily at the myriad
smoke trails from the French camp that rose and mingled in front of
the rising sun. He ignored Sharpe; he always did, as though the
Rifleman was a small nuisance that would be brushed from his life
when his letter was received in London. Gibbons sat beside
Simmerson and it suddenly occurred to Sharpe that the two men were
frightened. In front of them the solitary colour drooped from its
staff, beaded with morning moisture, a lonely reminder of the
Battalion's disgrace. Simmerson did not know war, and he was
staring at the mist along the Portina, wondering what would emerge
from the whiteness to challenge his Battal-ion. It was not just
Sharpe's future that depended on this battle. If the Battalion did
badly then it would stay a Battalion of Detachments and dwindle
away under the onslaught of disease and death until it would simply
disappear from the army list; the Battalion that never was.
Simmerson would survive. He would sail home to his I country
estate, take his seat in Parliament, become an armchair expert on
the war, but wherever soldiers met, the names of Simmerson and the
South Essex would be scorned. Sharpe grinned to himself;
ironically, on this day, Simmerson needed the Riflemen far more
than Sharpe needed the Colonel. At last the signal came and the
Light Companies went forward, spreading themselves into a thin
screen of skirmishers to become the first men to meet the attack.
As he walked down the slope towards the mist Sharpe stared at the
Cascajal Hill that was topped with French guns, almost wheel to
wheel, the barrels pointing at the Medellin. Somewhere behind the
guns the French Battalions would be parading into the huge columns
that would be thrown at the British line; behind them there would
be cavalry waiting to pour through the opening: more than fifty
thousand Frenchmen preparing to punish the British for their
temerity in sending Wellesley's small army into their Empire. The
Light Company walked into the mist, into the private world where
skirmisher would fight Voltigeur, and Sharpe thrust away the
thoughts of defeat. It was unthinkable that Wellesley could lose,
that the army might be shattered and sent reeling back to the sea,
that Sharpe's problems, Simmerson's problems, the fate of the South
Essex, all. would become drowned in the disastrous flood of defeat.
Harper ran up to him and nodded cheerfully as he pulled the muzzle
stopper from his rifle.
"The weather's hot for us, sir."
Sharpe grimaced. "It will clear in an hour or
so." The mist hid everything beyond a hundred paces and took away
the advantage of the long range rifles. Sharpe saw the stream
ahead.
"Far enough. See if Mr Denny is all
right."
Harper went off to the right to where Denny
should be joining up with the German skirmishers. Sharpe walked
upstream where he suspected the attack would be and found Knowles
at the end of the line. Beyond in the mist he could see the
redcoats of the 66th and some Riflemen from the Royal
Americans.
"Lieutenant?"
"Sir?" Knowles was nervously alert, half
dreading, half enjoying his first day of real battle. Sharpe
grinned cheerfully at him.
"Any problems?"
"No, sir. Will it be long?" Knowles glanced
constantly at the empty far bank of the Portina as though he
expected to see the whole French army suddenly
materialise.
"You'll hear the guns first." Sharpe stamped
his feet against the cold. "What's the time?"
Knowles took out his watch, inscribed from his
father, and opened the case. "Nearly five, sir." He went on looking
at the ornate watch face with its filigree hand. "Sir?" He sounded
embarrassed.
"Yes?"
"If I die, sir, would you have this?" He held
the watch out.
Sharpe pushed the watch back. He wanted to
laugh but he shook his head gravely. "You're not going to die.
Who'd take over if I went?"
Knowles looked at him fearfully and Sharpe
nodded. "Think about it, Lieutenant. Promotion can be rapid in
battle." He grinned, attempting to dispel Knowles' gloom. "Who
knows? If it's a good enough day we may all end up
Generals."
A gun banged on the Cascajal. Knowles' eyes
widened as he heard, for the first time, the rumbling thunder of
iron shot in the air. Unseen by the skirmishers the eight-pound
ball struck the crest of the Medellin, bounced over the troops in a
spray of dirt and stones, and rolled harmlessly to rest four
hundred yards down the plateau. The sound of the shot echoed flady
from the hills, was muffled by the mist, and died into silence. A
hundred thousand men heard it, some crossed themselves, some
prayed, and some just thought fitfully of the storm that was about
to break across the Portina. Knowles waited for another gun but
there was silence.
"What was that, sir?"
"A signal to the other French batteries.
They'll be reloading the gun." Sharpe imagined the sponge hissing
as it was thrust into the gun, the steam rising from the vent, and
then the new charge and shot being rammed home. "About now, I'd
think."
The silence was over. From now Sharpe would
tell the story of the battle by the sounds and he listened as the
iron shot from seventy or eighty French guns screamed and thundered
in the air. He could hear the crash of the guns, imagined them
throwing their massive weights back onto the trails, bucking in the
air and slamming back onto the wheels as the rammer was dipped in
water and the men prepared the next shot. Behind was a different
noise, the muted sound of the roundshot gouging the Medellin, the
thud of iron on earth. He turned back to Knowles. "This is my
unlucky day."
Knowles turned a worried face on him. The
Captain was supposed to be `lucky'. Sharpe and the company depended
on the superstition. "Why, sir?"
Sharpe grinned. "They're firing to our left."
He was shouting over the sound of the massed cannons. "They'll
attack there. I thought I might be the proud owner of a watch
otherwise!" He slapped a relieved Knowles on the shoulder and
pointed across the stream. "Expect them in about twenty minutes,
over to the left a bit. I'll be back!"
He walked down the line of men, checking
flints, making the old jokes and looking for Harper. He felt
desperately tired, not just the tiredness of disturbed and little
sleep, but the weariness of problems that seemed to have no end.
Berry's death was like a half forgotten dream and solved nothing
except half a promise, and he had little idea how to solve the
other half or the promise about the Eagle. The promises were like
barriers he had erected in his own life, and honour demanded that
they be overcome but his sense told him the task was impossible. He
waved at Harper, and as the Sergeant walked towards him the noise
of the battle changed. There was a whining quality to the roar of
the shot overhead, and Harper looked up into the mist.
"Shells?"
Sharpe nodded as the first one exploded on the
Medel-lin. The sound rose in intensity, the crash of the shells
echoing the thunder of the guns, and added to the din was the
sharper sound of the long British six-pounders firing back. Harper
jerked a thumb at the unseen Medellin. "That's a rare hammering,
sir."
Sharpe listened. "The bands are still
playing."
"I'd rather be down here."
Distantly, through the incessant crashes that
merged into one long rumble, Sharpe could hear the sound of
Regimental bands. As long as the bandsmen were playing then the
British Battalions were not suffering overmuch from the French
bombardment. If Wellesley had not pulled the British line behind
the crest the French gunners would be slaughtering the Battalions
file by file and the bandsmen would be doing their other job of
picking up the wounded and taking them to the rear. Sharpe knew
Harper, like himself, was thinking of the promise to Lennox, of the
Eagle. He stared across the stream at the empty grass, listened to
the cannonade as though it were someone else's battle, and turned
to the Sergeant.
"There will be other days, you know. Other
battles."
Harper smiled slowly, crouched, and flicked a
pebble into the clear water. "We'll see what happens, sir." He
stayed still, listening, then pointed ahead. "Hear that?"
It was the noise Sharpe had been waiting for,
faint but unmistakable, the sound he had not heard since Vimeiro,
the sound of the French attack. The enemy columns were not in
sight, would not be visible for minutes, but through the mist he
could hear the serried drummers beating the hypnotic rhythm of the
charge. Boom-boom, boom-boom, boomaboom, boomaboom, boom-boom. On
and on it would go until the attack was won or lost, the drummer
boys thrashing the skins despite the volleys, the endless rhythm
that had carried the French to victory after victory. There was a
relentless menace about the drumbeats, each repeated phrase brought
the French nearer by ten paces, on and on, on and on.
Sharpe smiled at Harper. "Look after the boy.
Is he all right?"
"Denny, sir? Tripped over his sword three times
but otherwise he's fine." Harper laughed. "Look after yourself,
sir."
Sharpe walked back up the stream, the drumbeats
nearer, the skirmish line peering apprehensively into the empty
mist. Their job was about to begin. The French guns had failed to
break the British Battalions and in front of the drums, spread in a
vast cloud, the Voltigeurs were coming. Their aim was to get as
close to the British Battalions as they could and snipe at the line
with their muskets, to thin the ranks, weaken the line, so that
when the drummed column arrived the British would be rotten and
give way. Sharpe's skirmishers with the other Light Companies had
to stop the Voltigeurs and their private battle, fought in the
mist, was about to begin. He found Knowles standing by the
stream.
"See anything?"
"No, sir."
The drumming was louder, competing with the
crash of the shells, and at the end of each drummed phrase Sharpe
could hear a new sound as the drummers paused to let thousands of
voices chant `Vive L'Empereur'. It was the victory noise that had
terrified the armies of Europe, the sound of Marengo, of
Austerlitz, of Jena, the voices and drums of French victory. Then,
upstream and out of sight, the Light troops met and Sharpe heard
the first crackle of musketry: not the rolling volleys of massed
ranks but the spaced, deliberate cracks of aimed shots. Knowles
looked at Sharpe with raised eyebrows, the Rifleman shook his head.
"That's only one column. There'll be at least another one, probably
two, and nearer. Wait."
And there they were, dim figures running in the
mist, dozens of men in blue jackets with red epaulettes who angled
across their front. The men raised their muskets.
"Hold your fire!" Sharpe pushed a musket down.
The Voltigeurs ran into the fire of the 66th and the Royal
Americans, they were a hundred paces upstream and Sharpe waited to
see if the French skirmish line would reach the South Essex.
"Wait!"
He watched the first Frenchmen crumple on the
turf, others knelt and took careful aim but it was not his fight.
He guessed the French attack, aimed at the Medellin, was going to
pass by the South Essex but he was glad enough to let his raw
troops see real skirmishing before they had to do it themselves.
The French, like the British, fought in pairs. Each man had to
protect his partner, firing in turn and calling out warnings,
constantly watching the enemy to see if the guns were aimed at him
or his partner. Sharpe could hear the shouts, the whistles that
passed on com-mands, and in the background, insistent as a tocsin,
the drumming and shouting. Knowles was like a leashed hound wanting
to go up the bank to the fight but Sharpe held him back. "They
don't need us. Our turn will come. Wait."
The British line was holding. The Frenchmen
tried to rush the stream but fell as they reached the water. The
British pairs moved in short rushes, changing position, confusing
their enemy, waiting for the Voltigeurs to come in range and then
letting off their shots. The green-jacketed Riflemen of the Royal
Americans looked for the enemy officers and Sergeants, and Sharpe
could hear the crack of the Rifles as they destroyed the enemy
leaders. The sound was rising to its first crescendo, the roar of
the cannon, the melding crashes of shells, the drums and voices of
the column, and the sound of bugles mixing with the musketry. The
mist was thickening with the smoke of the French batteries that
drifted westward towards the British line, but soon, Sharpe knew,
the mist would be burned off. He felt the faintest breeze and saw a
great swirl of whiteness shiver and move and heard Knowles draw
breath with amazement before the mist closed down. In the gap was a
mass of men, tight-packed marching ranks tipped with steel, one of
the columns aiming for the stream. It was time to retreat and, sure
enough, Sharpe heard the whistles and bugles and saw the
skirmishers to the left start to go backwards towards the Medellin.
They left bodies, red and green, behind them.
He blew his own whistle, waved an arm, and
listened for the Sergeants to repeat the signal. His men would be
disappointed. They had not fired a shot but Sharpe suspected that
they would have their opportunities soon enough. The drumming and
the chanting went on, the shot crashed overhead, but as the company
climbed the hill the mist cut them off from the battle. No-one was
shooting at them, no shells landed with spluttering fuses on their
piece of the hillside, and Sharpe continued to have the strange
sensation of listening to a batde that had nothing to do with him.
The illusion vanished as the line climbed out of the mist onto a
hillside bright with the early sun. Sharpe checked the line,
turned, and heard his men gasp and swear at the view they suddenly
encountered.
The crest of the Medellin was empty of
soldiers. Only the French shells continued to tear up the earth in
great gouts of soil and flame. The skirmishers in front of the
French attack scrambled up the slope, ever nearer to the bursting
shells, and turned to shoot at the columns that crawled out of the
mist like great, strange animals emerg-ing from the sea. The
nearest column was too hundred yards to the left and to Sharpe's
raw troops it must have seemed overwhelming. The Voltigeurs were
joining its ranks, swelling it, the drummers beat it along with
their relentless, hypnotic beating and the deep shouts of `Vive
L'Empereur' punctuated the grinding advance. There were three
columns climbing the slope; each, Sharpe guessed, had close to two
thousand men and over each there hung, glittering in the new sun,
three gilded Eagles reaching for the crest.
Sharpe turned his skirmish line to face the
column and then waved the men down. There was little they could do
at this range. He decided not to rejoin the Battalion; the company
would suffer less by staying on the hillside and watching the
attack than if they tried to run through the barrage of shells, and
as they knelt, watching the huge formation march up the slope,
Sharpe saw the men of the King's German Legion join his crude line.
They would be privileged spectators on the edge of the French
attack. Ensign Denny came and knelt beside Sharpe, and his face
betrayed the worry and fear that the drumming, chanting mass
engendered. Sharpe looked at him. "What do you think?"
"Sir?"
"Frightening?" Denny nodded. Sharpe laughed.
"Did you ever learn mathematics?"
"Yes, sir."
"So add up how many Frenchmen can actually use
their muskets."
Denny stared at the column and Sharpe saw
realisation dawn on his face. The French column was a tried and
tested battle winner, but against good troops it was a death trap.
Only the front rank and the two flank files could actually use
their guns, and of the hundreds of men in the nearest column only
the sixty in the front rank and the men on the ends of the thirty
or so other ranks could actually fire at their enemies. The mass of
men in the middle were there merely to add weight, to look
impres-sive, cheer, and fill up the gaps left by the
dead.
The sound of the battle changed abruptly. The
shelling stopped. The great marching squares were close to the
crest of the Medellin, and the French gunners were afraid of
hitting their own men. For a moment there was just the drumming,
the sound of thousands of boots hitting the hillside in unison, and
suddenly a great cheer as the French infantry thought they had won.
It was easy to see why they thought victory was in their grasp.
There was no enemy in front of them, just the empty skyline, and
the skirmish line had scrambled back over the crest to join their
Battalions. They had done their job. They had kept the Voltigeurs
from the British line, and the French cheer died away as the
British orders rang out and suddenly the hilltop was lined two deep
with waiting men. It still looked ridiculous. Three great fists,
enormous masses, aimed at a tenuous two-deep line, but the look was
deceptive; mathe-matics in this situation was all.
The column nearest Sharpe was headed for the
66th and the 3rd. The two British Battalions were outnumbered two
to one, but every redcoat on the crest could fire his musket. Of
the hundreds of Frenchmen who climbed in the column only a few more
than a hundred could actually fire back and Sharpe had seen it
happen too often to have any doubts about the outcome. He watched
the order given, saw the British line appear to take a quarter turn
to the right as they brought their muskets to their shoulders, and
watched as the French column instinctively checked in the face of
so many guns. The drums rattled, the French officers shouted, a
kind of low growl came from the columns, swelled to a roar, to a
cheer, and the French charged towards the summit.
And stopped. The slim steel blades of the
British officers swept down and the relentless volleys began.
Nothing could stand in the way of that musket fire. From right to
left along the Battalions the platoon volleys flamed and flickered,
a rolling fire that never stopped, the machine-like regularity of
trained troops pouring four shots a minute into the dense mass of
Frenchmen. The noise rose to the real crescendo of battle, the
awesome sound of the ordered volleys and mixed with it the curious
ringing as the bullets struck French bayonets. Sharpe looked to his
left and saw the South Essex watching. They were too far away for
their muskets to be of any use, but he was glad that Simmerson's
raw troops could see a demonstration of how practised firepower won
battles.
The drumming went on, the boys banging their
instru-ments frenetically to force the column up the slope and,
incredibly, the French tried. The instinct of victory was too
strong, too ingrained, and as the front ranks were de-stroyed by
the murderous fire, the men behind struggled over the bodies to be
thrown backwards in turn by the relentless bullets. They faced an
impossible task. The column was stuck, hunched against the storm,
soaking up an incredible punishment but refusing to give in, to
accept defeat. Sharpe was amazed, as he had been at Vimeiro, that
troops could take such punishment but they did and he watched as
the officers tried to organise a new attack. The French, too late,
tried to form into line, and he could see the officers waving their
swords to lead the rear ranks into the open flanks. Sharpe held his
rifle up.
"Come on!"
His men cheered and followed him across the
hillside. There was little danger that the French could form line
but the appearance of a couple of hundred skirmishers on the flank
would deter them. The Germans of the Legion went with Sharpe's
company and they all stopped a hundred paces from the struggling
mass of Frenchmen and began their own volleys, more ragged than the
ordered fire from the crest, but effective enough to repel the
Frenchmen who were bravely trying to form a line. The Germans began
fixing bayonets; they knew the column could not stand the fire much
longer, and Sharpe yelled at his own men to fix blades. The sound
of drums faded. One boy gave a further determined rattle with his
sticks, but the distinctive rhythm of the charge faded away and the
attack was done. The crest of the hill rippled with light as the
66th fixed bayonets; the volleys died, the British cheered and the
French were finished. Broken and smashed by musket fire they did
not wait for the bayonet charge. The mass split into small groups
of fugitives, the Eagles dropped, the blue ranks broke and ran for
the stream.
"Forward!" Sharpe, the German officers, and
from the ridge the company officers of the 66th shouted as they led
the red-steel-tipped line down the slope. Sharpe looked for the
Eagles but they were far ahead, being carried to safety, and he
forgot them and led his men diagonally down the hill to cut off the
fleeing groups of Frenchmen. It was a time for prisoners, and as
the skirmishers cut into the blue mass the Frenchmen threw down
their guns and held their hands high. One officer refused to
surrender and flickered his blade towards Sharpe, but the huge
cavalry sword beat it aside and the man dropped to his knees and
held clasped hands towards the Rifleman. Sharpe ignored him. He
wanted to get to the stream and stop his men pursuing the French
onto the far bank, where reserve Battalions waited to punish the
British victors. The mist had almost cleared.
Some Frenchmen stopped at the stream and turned
their muskets on the British. A ball plucked at Sharpe's sleeve,
another scorched past his face, but the small group broke and fled
as he swept the sword towards them. His boots splashed in the
stream; he could hear shots behind him and saw bullets strike the
water, but he turned and screamed at his men to stop. He drove them
back from the stream, herded them with the prisoners, away from the
French reserve troops who waited with loaded muskets on the far
bank.
It was done. The first attack beaten and the
slope of the Medellin was smothered in bodies that lay in a blue
smear from the stream almost to the crest they had failed to reach.
There would be another attack, but first each side must count the
living and collect the dead. Sharpe looked for Harper and saw,
thankfully, that the Sergeant was alive. Lieutenant Knowles was
there, grinning broadly, and with his sword still
unbloodied.
"What's the time, Lieutenant?"
Knowles tucked the blade under his arm and
opened his watch. "Five minutes after six, sir. Wasn't that
incredible?"
Sharpe laughed. "Just wait. That was
nothing."
Harper ran down the slope towards them and held
out a bundle in his hands. "Breakfast, sir?"
"Not garlic sausage?"
Harper grinned. "Just for you."
Sharpe broke off a length and bit into the
pungent, tasty meat. He stretched his arms, felt the tenseness ease
in his muscles, and began to feel better. The first round was over
and he looked up the littered slope to the single colour of the
Battalion. Beneath it was Gibbons, mounted beside his uncle, and
Sharpe hoped the Lieutenant had watched the skirmishers and was
feeling the fear. Harper saw where he was looking and he saw the
expression on his Captain's face. The Sergeant turned to the men of
the company, guarding their prisoners and boasting of their
exploits. "All right, this isn't a harvest bloody festival! Reload
your guns. They'll be back."