Europe, but no enemy army had yet pierced the French frontier. Even if this year's campaign was as successful as last year's, and pushed the French back to the Pyrenees, then there would be hard fighting if, unlike last year, the British were to force their way through those cold, high mountains. Fighting in which Lieutenant Colonels would die and leave their Battalions to new commanders.
Yet he risked it all. He twisted his horse through bright-leaved ash trees on a hill top that overlooked their destination, and he thought of the Marquesa, of her eyes on him, and he knew that he risked all for one woman who played with men, and for another who was dead. None of it made sense, he was simply driven by a soldier's superstition that said not to do this thing was to risk oblivion.
D'Alembord curbed his horse at the hill's edge. `Dear God!' He pulled a cigar from his boot-top, struck a light with his flint and steel, and jerked his head at the valley. `Looks like a day at the races!'
The cemetery, in Spanish fashion, was a walled enclosure built well away from the town. The hugely thick walls, divided into niches for the dead, were thronged with men. There were the colours of the uniforms of Spain and Britain, the Spanish to the west and north, the British to the south and east, sitting and standing on the wall as though they waited for a bullfight. D'Alembord twisted in his saddle. `I thought this was supposed to be private!'
`So did I.'
`You can't go through with it, Sharpe!'
`I have to.' He wondered whether another man, an old friend like Major Hogan or Captain Frederickson, could have persuaded him to stop this idiocy. Perhaps, because d'Alembord was a newcomer to the Battalion, and was a man of that easy elegance which Sharpe envied, Sharpe was trying to impress him.
D'Alembord shook his head. `You're mad, sir.'
`Maybe.'
The Captain blew smoke into the evening sky and pointed with his cigar at the sun which was low in the west. He shrugged, as though accepting the inevitability of the fight. `You'll face up north and south, but he'll try to manoeuvre you so the sun is in your eyes.'
`I'd thought of that.'
D'Alembord ignored the ungracious acceptance of his advice. `Assume we'll start with you in the south.'
`Why?'
`Because that's where the British troops are, and that's where you'll go to strip off your jacket.'
Somehow Sharpe had not realised how formal this would be, that he would take off his prized Rifleman's jacket and fight in his grubby shirt. `So?'
`So he'll be attacking your left, trying to make you go right. He'll feint right and thrust left. He'll be expecting you to do the opposite. If I were you, I'd make your feint your attack,'
Sharpe grinned. He had always intended to take fencing lessons, but somehow there had never seemed to be time. In battle a man did not fence, he fought. The most delicate swordsman on a battlefield was usually overwhelmed by the anger of bayonets and savage steel, yet this evening there would be no madness beneath the battlesmoke, just cold skill and death. `The last time I fought a skilled swordsman I won.'
`You did?' d'Alembord smiled in mock surprise.
`I got him to run his blade through my thigh. That trapped it and I killed him.'
D'Alembord stared at the Major, whose fame had reached Britain, and saw that he had been told the truth. He shuddered. `You are mad.'
`It helps when you're fighting. Shall we go down?'
D'Alembord was searching the cemetery and roadway for a sign of Lieutenant Price bringing Colonel Leroy to the duel, but he could see no horsemen. He shrugged inwardly. `To our fate, sir, to our fate.'
`You don't have to come, d'Alembord.'
`True, sir. I shall say I was a mere innocent misled by you.' He spurred his horse down the pastureland of the hillside.
Sharpe followed. It was a beautiful evening, a promise of summer in the blossoms beneath his horse's hooves and in the warm fragrant air. There was a scattering of high mackerel clouds in the west,
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