with a chilling skill, chopped down once.
“Bastards.” Murray, knowing there was no more fighting to do, sheathed his Heavy Cavalry
sword. “God-damned bloody crapaud bastards!”
Fifty Riflemen, survivors from all four companies, had been saved from the rout. Sergeant
Williams was with them, as was Rifleman Harper. Some of the men were bleeding. A Sergeant was
trying to staunch a terrible slash in his shoulder. A youngster was white-lipped and shaking.
Murray and the new Lieutenant were the only officers to have escaped the massacre.
“We’ll work our way east,” Murray said calmly. “Maybe we can reach the army after
dark.”
A morose swearword sounded from the big Irishman and the two officers glanced down the valley
to see the British cavalry at last appear in the drizzle. The chasseur saw them at the same time,
and the French trumpet called the Dragoons into order. The British, seeing the enemy’s
preparedness, and finding no sign of infantry, withdrew.
The Riflemen on the cloud’s edge jeered at their retreating cavalry. Murray whipped round.
“Silence!”
But the jeer had drawn the attention of the dismounted Dragoons on the slope below, and they
believed the mocking sound had been aimed at them. Some of them seized carbines, others took up
fallen rifles, and they fired a ragged volley at the small group of survivors.
The bullets hissed and whiplashed past the greenjackets. The ragged volley missed, except for
one fatal bullet that ricocheted from a rock into Captain Murray’s side. The force of the bullet
spun him round and threw him face down onto the hillside. His left hand scrabbled at the thin
turf while his right groped in the blood at his waist.
“Go on! Leave me!” His voice was scarcely more than a whisper.
Rifleman Harper jumped down the slope and plucked Murray into his huge arms. The Captain
sighed a terrible moan of pain as he was lifted. Below him the French were scrambling uphill,
eager to complete their victory by taking these last Riflemen prisoner.
“Follow me!” The Lieutenant led the small group into the clouds. The French fired again, and
the bullets flickered past, but the Riflemen were lost in the whiteness now. For the moment, at
least, they were safe.
The Lieutenant found a hollow among the rocks that offered some shelter from the cold. The
wounded were laid there while picquets were set to guard its perimeter. Murray had gone as white
as cartridge paper. “I didn’t think they could beat us, Dick.”
“I don’t understand where they came from.” The Lieutenant’s scarred face, Murray thought, made
him look like an execution. “They didn’t get past us. They couldn’t!”
“They must have done.” Murray sighed, then gestured to Rifleman Harper who, with a gentleness
that seemed odd in a man so big, first unstrapped the Captain’s sword belt, then unpeeled his
clothes from the wound. It was clear that Harper knew his business, and so the Lieutenant went to
peer down the fogged hillside for a sight of the enemy. He could neither see nor hear anything.
The Dragoons evidently thought the band of survivors too small to worry about. The fifty Riflemen
had become the flotsam of war, mere splinters hacked from a sinking endeavour, and if the French
had known that the fugitives were led by a Quartermaster, they might have been even more
contemptuous.
But the Quartermaster had first fought the French fifteen years before, and he had been
fighting ever since. The stranded Riflemen might call him the new Lieutenant, and they might
invest the word ‘new’ with all the scorn of old soldiers, but that was because they did not know
their man. They thought of him as nothing more than a jumped-up Sergeant, and they were wrong. He
was a soldier, and his name was Richard Sharpe.
CHAPTER 2
I n the night, Lieutenant Sharpe took a patrol
westwards along the high crest. He had hoped to determine whether