Sharpe 12 - Sharpe's Battle

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Book: Sharpe 12 - Sharpe's Battle Read Online Free PDF
Author: Bernard Cornwell
knife, Captain."
    Sharpe ignored the threat, turning towards the village instead. “Firing party ready, Sergeant?”
    “They're ready, sir. And eager, sir!”
    Sharpe looked back to the Frenchman. "Your brigade is miles away, General. If it was any closer you wouldn't be here talking to me, but leading the attack.
    Now, if you'll forgive me, I've got some justice to execute."
    “No!” Loup said sharply enough to turn Sharpe back. “I have made a bargain with my men. You understand that, Captain? You are a leader, I am a leader, and I have promised my men never to abandon them. Don't make me break my promise.”
    “I don't give a bugger about your promise,” Sharpe said.
    Loup had expected that kind of answer and so shrugged. "Then maybe you will give a bugger about this, Captain Sharpe. I know who you are, and if you do not return my men I will place a price on your head. I will give every man in
    Portugal and Spain a reason to hunt you down. Kill those two and you sign your own death warrant."
    Sharpe smiled. “You're a bad loser, General.”
    “And you're not?”
    Sharpe walked away. “I've never lost,” he called back across his shoulder, "so
    I wouldn't know."
    “Your death warrant, Sharpe!” Loup called.
    Sharpe lifted two fingers. He had heard that the English bowmen at Agincourt, threatened by the French with the loss of their bowstring fingers at the battle's end, had first won the battle and then invented the taunting gesture to show the overweening bastards just who were the better soldiers. Now Sharpe used it again.
    Then went to kill the wolfman's men.
    Major Michael Hogan discovered Wellington inspecting a bridge over the River
    Turones where a force of three French battalions had tried to hold off the advancing British. The resulting battle had been swift and brutal, and now a trail of French and British dead told the skirmish's tale. An initial tide line of bodies marked where the sides had clashed, a dreadful smear of bloodied turf showed where two British cannon had enfiladed the enemy, then a further scatter of corpses betrayed the French retreat across the bridge which their engineers had not had time to destroy. "Fletcher thinks the bridge is
    Roman work, Hogan," Wellington greeted the Irish Major.
    "I sometimes wonder, my Lord, whether anyone has built a bridge in Portugal or
    Spain since the Romans.“ Hogan, swathed in a cloak because of the day's damp chill, nodded amicably to his Lordship's three aides, then handed the General a sealed letter. The seal, which showed the royal Spanish coat of arms, had been lifted. ”I took the precaution of reading the letter, my Lord," Hogan explained.
    “Trouble?” Wellington asked.
    “I wouldn't have bothered you otherwise, my Lord,” Hogan answered gloomily.
    Wellington frowned as he read the letter. The General was a handsome man, forty-two years old, but as fit as any in his army. And, Hogan thought, wiser than most. The British army, Hogan knew, had an uncanny knack of finding the least qualified man and promoting him to high command, but somehow the system had gone wrong and Sir Arthur Wellesley, now the Viscount Wellington, had been given command of His Majesty's army in Portugal, thus providing that army with the best possible leadership. At least Hogan thought so, but Michael Hogan allowed that he could be prejudiced in this matter. Wellington, after all, had promoted Hogan's career, making the shrewd Irishman the head of his intelligence department and the result had been a relationship as close as it was fruitful.
    The General read the letter again, this time glancing at a translation Hogan had thoughtfully provided. Hogan meanwhile looked about the battlefield where fatigue parties were clearing up the remnants of the skirmish. To the east of the bridge, where the road came delicately down the mountainside in a series of sweeping curves, a dozen work parties were searching the bushes for bodies and abandoned supplies. The French dead
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