‘The Regency will be powerless if the letter is unsigned,’ Montseny pointed out drily. ‘The English will not dare own to its authorship, will they? And rumour can do its work for us. Within a day all Cadiz will know that their ambassador wrote the letter.’
The letters had been written by the British ambassador to Spain and they were pathetic outpourings of love. There was even a proposal of marriage in one letter, a proposal made to a girl who was a whore called Caterina Veronica Blazquez. She was an expensive whore, to be sure, but still a whore.
‘The owner of the Correo is a man named Nunez, yes?’ the admiral asked.
‘He is.’
‘And he will publish the letter?’
‘There is an advantage to being a priest,’ Montseny said. ‘The secrets of the confessional, of course, are sacred, but gossip persists. We priests talk, my lord, and I know things about Nunez that he does not want the world to know. He will publish.’
‘Suppose the English try to destroy the press?’ the admiral enquired.
‘They probably will,’ Montseny said dismissively, ‘but for a small sum I can turn the building into a fortress, and your men can help protect it. Then the British will be forced to buy the remaining letters. I’m sure, once we have published one, they will pay very generously.’
‘What utter fools men make themselves over women,’ the admiral said. He took a long, black cigar from a pocket and bit the end off. Then he just stood, waiting until a couple of small boys saw the cigar and came running. Each lad held a length of thick hemp rope that smouldered at one end. The admiral indicated one of the boys who slapped his rope twice on the ground to revive its fire then held it up so the admiral could light the cigar. He waved the boy towards the men who followed him and one of them tossed a coin. ‘It would be best,’ the admiral said, ‘if we possessed both the letters and the gold.’ He watched the British frigate that was now near the rocks that lay off the bastion of San Felipe and he prayed she would run aground. He wanted to see her masts lurch forward as the hull struck the rocks, he wanted to see her canted and sinking, and he wanted to see her sailors floundering in the heaving seas, but of course she sailed serenely past the danger.
‘It would be best,’ Father Montseny said, ‘if we had the English gold and published the letters.’
‘It would be treacherous, of course,’ the admiral observed mildly.
‘God wants Spain great again, my lord,’ Montseny said fervently. ‘It is never treachery to do God’s work.’
The sudden boom of a gun sounded flat across the bay and both men turned to see a far white cloud of smoke. It had come from one of the giant mortars the French had placed in their forts on the Trocadero Peninsula and the admiral hoped the shell had been aimed at the British frigate. Instead the missile fell on the city’s waterfront a half mile to the east. The admiral waited for the shell to explode, then drew on his cigar. ‘If we publish the letters,’ he said, ‘then the Cortes will turn against the British. The bribes will make that certain, and then we can approach the French. You would be willing to go to them?’
‘Very willing, my lord.’
‘I shall give you a letter of introduction, of course.’ The admiral had already made his proposals to Paris. That had been easy. He was known to hate the British and a French agent in Cadiz had spoken to him, but the reply from the Emperor was simple. Deliver the votes in the Cortes and the Spanish king, now a prisoner in France, would be returned. France would make peace and Spain would be free. All the French demanded in return was the right to send troops across Spanish roads to complete the conquest of Portugal and so drive Lord Wellington’s British army into the sea. As an earnest of their goodwill the French had given orders that the admiral’s estates on the Guadiana should not be plundered and now, in return, the admiral must deliver the votes and so sever the alliance with Britain. ‘By summer, Father,’ he said.
‘Summer?’
‘It will be done. We shall have our king. We shall be free.’
‘Under God.’
‘Under God,’ the admiral agreed. ‘Find the money, Father, and make the English look like fools.’
‘It is God’s will,’ Montseny said, ‘so it will happen.’
And the British would go to hell.
Everything was easy after the shot felled Sharpe.
The boat drifted down the ever-widening Guadiana into the night. A hazed moon silvered the hills and lit the long water that shuddered under the small wind. Sharpe lay in the boat’s bilges, senseless, his head broken and bloodied and bandaged, and the brigadier sat in the stern, his leg splinted and his hands on the tiller ropes, and he wondered what he should do. The dawn found them between low hills without a house in sight. Egrets and herons stalked the river’s edge. ‘He needs a doctor, sir,’ Harper said, and the brigadier heard the anguish in the Irishman’s voice. ‘He’s dying, sir.’
‘He’s breathing, isn’t he?’ the brigadier asked.
‘He is, sir,’ Harper said, ‘but he needs a doctor, sir.’
‘Good God incarnate, man, I’m not a conjuror! I can’t find a doctor in a wilderness, can I?’ The brigadier was in pain and spoke more sharply than he intended and he saw the flare of hostility on Harper’s face and felt a stab of fear. Sir Barnaby Moon reckoned himself a good officer, but he was not comfortable dealing with the ranks. ‘If we come to a town,’ he said, trying to mollify the big sergeant, ‘we’ll look for a physician.’
‘Yes, sir, thank you, sir.’
The brigadier hoped they would find a town. They needed food and he wanted to find a doctor who could look at his broken leg which throbbed like the devil. ‘Row!’ he snarled at the men, but they made a poor job of it. The painted blades clashed with every stroke, and the more they rowed, the less headway they seemed to make and the brigadier realized that they were fighting an incoming tide. They must have been miles from the sea, yet the tide was flooding against them and there was still no town or village anywhere in sight.
‘Your honour!’ Sergeant Noolan shouted from the bows, and the brigadier saw another boat had appeared about a bend in the wide river. She was a rowing boat, about the size of his own commandeered launch, and she was crammed with men who knew how to use their oars, and she had other men with muskets, and the brigadier hauled on the tiller to point the boat towards the Portuguese bank. ‘Row!’ he shouted, then cursed as the oars tangled again. ‘Dear God,’ he said, because the strange boat was coming fast. She was expertly manned and being carried on the flooding tide, and Brigadier Moon cursed a second time just before the man commanding the approaching boat stood and hailed him.
The shout was in English. The officer commanding the boat wore naval blue and had come from a British sloop that patrolled the Guadiana’s long tidal reach, and the sloop rescued them, lifted Sharpe from the bottom boards, fed them and then carried them out to sea where they were rowed to HMS Thornside, a thirty-six-gun frigate, and Sharpe knew none of it. There was just pain.
Pain and darkness, and a creaking sound so that Sharpe half dreamed he was back on HMS Pucelle, sailing endlessly across the Indian Ocean, and Lady Grace was with him, and in his delirium he was happy again, but then he would half wake and know she was dead and he wanted to weep for that. The creaking went on and the world swayed and there was pain and darkness and a sudden flash of agonizing brilliance, then darkness again.
‘I think he blinked,’ a voice said.
Sharpe opened his eyes and the pain in his skull was like white-hot embers. ‘Sweet Jesus,’ he hissed.
‘No, it’s just me, sir, Patrick Harper, sir.’ The sergeant loomed over him. There was a wooden ceiling partially lit by narrow