the bloody army knows, my dear Sharpe. I can't think why you accepted! Is it because the man struck you?'
Sharpe said nothing. The truth was that his pride had been offended, but it was more than that. It was his stubborn superstition that Fate, the soldier's goddess, demanded that he accept. Besides, he did it for the Marquesa.
D'Alembord sighed. `A woman, I suppose?'
`Yes.'
The Light Company Captain smoothed a wrinkle in his sleeve. `When I fought my duel, Sharpe, I later discovered that the woman had put us up to it. She was watching, it turned out.'
`What happened?'
The elegant shoulders shrugged. `After I skewered him she went back to her husband. It was all rather tedious and unnecessary. Just as I'm sure this duel is unnecessary. Do you really insist on this duel, Sharpe?'
`Yes.' Sharpe would not explain, was not even sure he could explain the tangle of guilt, lust, pride and superstition that drove him to folly. Instead he sat and shouted for the Mess servant to bring tea. The servant was a Spaniard who brewed tea foully.
`I'll have rum. Has it occurred to you,' and d'Alembord leaned forward with a small frown of embarrassment on his face, `that some people are joining this regiment simply because you're in it?'
Sharpe frowned at the words. `Nonsense.'
`If you insist, my dear Sharpe, but it is true. There's at least two or three young fire-eaters who think you'll lead them to glory, such is your reputation. They'll be very sad if they discover your paths of glory lead but to a lady's bedchamber.' He said the last words with a wry inflexion that hinted to Sharpe that it was a quotation that he ought to know. Yet Sharpe had not learned to read till he was well into his twenties; he had read few books, and none of them poetry.
`Shakespeare?' he guessed.
`Thomas Gray, dear Sharpe. `The paths of glory lead but to the grave.' I hope it's not true, for you.' He smiled. What his smile did not tell Sharpe was that Captain d'Alembord, who was an efficient, sensible man, had already tried to make sure that this folly did not lead Sharpe either to a grave or to disgrace. D'Alembord had sent Lieutenant Harry Price on one of his own fastest horses to find Colonel Leroy, fetch him back to Battalion, and order Sharpe not to fight the Spaniard. If Major Richard Sharpe was idiotic enough to will his own destruction by fighting a duel against Wellington's express orders, then Captain d'Alembord would stop him. He prayed that Harry Price would reach Brigade in time, then took his glass of rum from the steward and raised it to Richard Sharpe. `To your cleaver, Sharpe, may it hew mightily.'
`May it kill the bastard!' Sharpe sipped his tea. `And I hope it hurts.'
They went on horseback to the cemetery to outdistance the curious troops of the South Essex who wanted to follow and watch their Major skewer the Spanish aristocrat. D'Alembord, a natural horseman, led Sharpe on a circuitous route. Sharpe, once again mounted on one of d'Alembord's spare horses, wondered whether he should accept the younger man's advice and turn back.
He was behaving stupidly and he knew it. He was thirty-six years of age, a Major at last, and he was throwing it all away for mere superstition. He had joined the army twenty years before, straggling with a group of hungry recruits to escape a murder charge. From that inauspicious beginning he had joined that tiny band of men who were promoted from Sergeant into the Officers' Mess. He had done more. Most men promoted from the ranks ended their days as Lieutenants, supervising the Battalion stores or in charge of the drill-square. Most such men, Wellington claimed, ended as drunkards. Yet Sharpe had gone on rising. From Ensign to Lieutenant, Lieutenant to Captain, and Captain to Major, and men looked at him as one of the few, the very very few, who might rise from the ranks to lead a Battalion.
He could lead a Battalion, and he knew it. The war was not over yet. The French might be retreating throughout
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