Sharpe's Regiment

Sharpe's Regiment by Bernard Cornwell Page B

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Authors: Bernard Cornwell
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politician. He’d eat dung for money or power. How do you know he’s lying?’
    He still stroked her, running his hands from her shoulderblades to her thighs. ‘He said my Second Battalion was disbanded, a paper convenience. It isn’t.’
    ‘How do you know?’ She said it with the trace of a sneer, as if a simple soldier back from the wars would know nothing.
    ‘Because they’re still recruiting. Disbanded regiments don’t recruit.’
    ‘So what will you do?’
    ‘Look for them.’
    She stared at him, then, in a gesture that was surprisingly gentle, pushed his dark hair away from his face. ‘Don’t.’
    ‘Don’t?’
    She seemed to sneer again, then hooked her legs round his. ‘Stay in London, Major. Prinny’s court is full of little whores. Enjoy yourself. Didn’t Fenner say he’d help you find another regiment? Let him.’
    ‘Why?’
    ‘Turn over.’ Her hands were pulling at him, her nails tearing at his skin. He felt as scarred as if he had fought a major battle.
    She would not give him her name, she would only give her lean, hungry body. She was like a cat, he thought, a green-eyed, lithe cat who, when he dressed, lay naked on the silk sheets and stared at him with her mysterious, disdainful eyes. ‘Shall I give you some advice, Major Sharpe?’
    He had pulled on his boots. ‘Yes.’
    ‘Don’t look for that Battalion, Major.’
    ‘So it does exist?’
    ‘If you say so.’ She pulled the sheets over her body. ‘Stay in London. Let Prinny slobber all over you, but don’t make an enemy of Lord Fenner.’
    He smiled. ‘What can he do to me?’
    ‘Kill you. Don’t look for it, Major.’
    He leaned down to kiss her, but she turned her face away. He straightened up. ‘I came to England to find it.’
    ‘Go away, Major.’ She watched him buckle on his sword. ‘There are stairs at the back, no one will see you leave. Go back to Spain!’
    Sharpe stared at her from the open door. The house beyond this bedroom seemed vacant. ‘There are men in Spain who need me, who trust me.’ She stared at him, saying nothing, and he felt that his words were inadequate. ‘They’re not special men, they wouldn’t look very well in Carlton House, but they are fighting for all of you. That’s why I’m here.’
    She mocked his appeal with a sneer. ‘Go away.’
    ‘If you know something about my Battalion, tell me.’
    ‘I’m telling you to go away.’ She said it savagely, as though she despised herself for having taken him to her bed. ‘Go!’
    ‘I’m at the Rose Tavern in Drury Lane. A letter there will reach me. I don’t need to know who you are. The Rose Tavern.’
    She turned away from him again, not replying, and Sharpe, walking out into the back alley and blinking at the sudden sunlight, wished he were truly at home; in Spain, with his men, at the place where the war was being fought. This city of luxury, lies, and deceit seemed suddenly foul. He had come to London, he had achieved nothing, and he walked slowly back to Drury Lane.

CHAPTER 3
    The British soldiers, red coats bright and muskets tipped with bayonets, went into the smoke. They cheered. They charged. A drummer beat them on.
    The French ran. They scrambled desperately at the hillside while, behind them, the redcoats came from the smoke to fire a single volley. Two of the French, their blue jackets unmarked, turned and fell. One gushed blood from his mouth. His arms went up. He span slowly, screaming foully, to collapse at the feet of the advancing British infantry whose boots gleamed with unnatural brilliance. A French officer, his wig awry, knelt in quivering fear and held clasped hands towards the victorious British soldiers.
    ‘And then, my Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen. The cavalry!’
    The orchestra went into a brazen, jaunty piece of music as four mounted men, wooden sabres in their hands, rode onto the wide stage. The audience cheered them.
    The ten defeated Frenchmen, needed again, formed a line at the bottom of the plaster

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