Sharpe's Sword Part 21
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"I swear it."
Spears took a huge breath and bellowed again. "Richard Sharpe has rogered Dolores! The cobbler's hopping daughter!" He roared with laughter at his own joke and bowed to some astonished labourers who were dismantling the barri-cades that had been used for the previous day's bullfight. He linked his arm with Sharpe again and dropped his voice. "How is La Marquesa?"
"How would I know? I haven't seen her since we were at San Christobal."
"Richard! Richard! You're too clever for me. I wish you'd admit it, even if it isn't true, it would be a perfectly delicious scandal."
"I can't see that stopping you spreading it."
"True, but no one believes me!" Spears sighed, then suddenly became serious. "Let me ask you one more question."
"Go on."
"Have you heard of "El Mirador"?"
"El Mirador?" In his surprise, Sharpe checked.
Spears stopped as well. "You have, haven't you?"
"Only as a name." Sharpe wished he had not betrayed his surprise.
"A name? What connection?"
Sharpe paused to think of an answer. It crossed his mind that this could be some kind of a test, arranged by La Marquesa, to see if he was really trustworthy. It brought home to him, as if he had forgotten, the total secrecy that had to surround her. He shrugged. "No connection. Is he one of the Guerilla leaders?"
"Like El Empecinado?" Spears shook his head. "No, he's not a Partisan, he's a spy here in Salamanca."
"Ours or theirs?"
"Ours." Spears bit his lip, then turned fiercely on Sharpe. "Think! Try to remember! Where did you hear it?"
Sharpe was taken aback by the sudden pa.s.sion, then had an inspiration. "You remember Major Kea.r.s.ey? I think he mentioned it, but I can't remember why. It was two years ago."
Spears swore. Kea.r.s.ey had been, like Lord Spears, an Exploring Officer, but he was dead, swept off the ramparts of Almeida when Sharpe blew up the magazine.
"How do you know about him?" Sharpe asked.
Spears shrugged. "You hear rumours as an Exploring Officer."
"Why is it so important now?"
"It's not, but I'd like to know." He jerked the arm in its sling. "When this is healed I'll be back to work and I'll need friends everywhere."
Sharpe began walking again. "Hardly in Salamanca. The French have gone."
Spears matched Sharpe's stride. "Only for the moment, Richard. We have to defeat Marmont first, otherwise we'll be scuttling back to Portugal with our tails between our legs." He looked at Sharpe. "If you hear anything, will you tell me?"
"About El Mirador?"
"Yes."
"Why don't you ask Hogan?"
Spears yawned. "Maybe I will, maybe I will."
At midday Sharpe went to the main battery and watched the gunners heating the solid shot in their portable furnaces. The a.s.sault, he knew, had to be close, even the next day, and it would mark the end of his visits to the Palacio Casares. He wished the gunners were not so industrious. He watched them slaving at the bellows fixed to one end of the forge while other men shovelled the coal from the bunker at the far end. In the centre was the cast iron furnace, roaring in the noon heat, the flames escaping at the bottom of the casing, and he marvelled that men could work with that heat, under the sun. It took fifteen minutes to heat each eighteen pounder shot until the red glow had gone deep into the iron and the ball could be dragged from the crucible with long tongs and rolled carefully onto the metal cradle, carried by two men, that took the shot to the gun. The barrel was loaded with powder, then with a thick wad of soaking cloth that stopped the heated shot from igniting the charge. It was rammed home swiftly, the men eager to preserve the red-heat, and then the gun bellowed and the shot left the smallest, finest trace of smoke in its flat trajectory into the demolished French defences. Hardly an enemy gun replied now. The next a.s.sault, Sharpe knew, would meet small resistance. He wondered if Leroux was already dead, the body laid out with the others killed in the siege, and that thus these gunners would already have done Sharpe's work.
He found La Marquesa writing at a small desk in her dressing room. She smiled at him. "How is it progressing?"
"Tomorrow."
"For certain?"
"No." He could hardly hide the regret in his voice, but he sensed that she shared it, and he wondered at that. "The Peer will make the decision tomorrow, but he won't need to wait. It'll be tomorrow."
She laid the pen down, stood up, and kissed him swiftly on the cheek. "So tomorrow you'll take him?"
"Unless he's dead already."
She walked onto the mirador and pushed open one of the lattice doors. The San Vincente showed two fires, pale in the strong sun, and the San Cayetano smoked where a fire had been extinguished by the defenders. She turned back to him. "What will you do with him?"
"If he doesn't resist, then he's a prisoner."
"Will you parole him?"
"No, not again. He'll be shackled. He broke parole. He won't be exchanged, he won't be treated well, he'll just be sent to England, to a prison, and he'll be held there until the war ends." He shrugged. "Who knows? Maybe he can be tried for murder because he killed men when he was on parole.".
"So tomorrow I'm safe?"
"Until they send another one to find you."
She nodded. He was used to her now, to her gestures, to her sudden dazzling smiles, and he had forgotten the coquettish, teasing woman he had met at San Christobal. That was the public face, she told him, while he saw the private and he wondered if he would see her again, in the future, and he would see the public face surrounded by fawning officers and he would feel a terrible, keen jealousy. She smiled at him. "What happens to you when it's done?"
"We'll join the army."
"Tomorrow?"
"No. Sunday perhaps." The day after tomorrow. "We'll march north and bring Marmont to battle."
"And then?"
"Who knows? Madrid perhaps."
She smiled again. "We have a house in Madrid."
"A house?"
"It's very small. No more than sixty rooms." She laughed at him. "You'll be very welcome though, alas, it has no secret entrance." It was unreal, Sharpe knew. They never talked of her husband, or of Teresa. They were secret lovers, Sharpe and a lady, and they would have to stay secret. They had been given these few days, these nights, but fate was going to take them apart; he to a battle, she to the secret war of letters and codes. They had this night, tomorrow's battle, and then, if they were lucky, just one more night, the last night, and then they were in fate's hands. She turned to look once more at the fortresses. "Will you fight tomorrow?"
Sharpe's Sword Part 21
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Sharpe's Sword Part 21 summary
You're reading Sharpe's Sword Part 21. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Bernard Cornwell already has 629 views.
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