Bernard Cornwell – 1803 09 Sharpe’s Triumph

The howdah is so comfortable, as long as you do not suffer from seasickness.”

“I shall stay with my husband,” Simone said. She had stood and proved to be much taller than Dodd had supposed. Tall and somewhat gawky, he thought, but she still possessed an odd attraction.

“A good woman should stay with her husband,” Pohlmann said, ‘or someone’s husband, anyway.” He turned to Dodd.

“I shall see you in a few days, Major, with your new regiment. Don’t let me down.”

“I won’t, sir, I won’t,” Dodd promised as, holding his new sword, he watched his new commander climb the silver steps to the howdah. He had a regiment to save and a reputation to make, and by God, Dodd thought, he would do both things well.

CHAPTER 2

Sharpe sat in the open shed where the armoury stored its gun carriages. It had started to rain, though it was not the sheeting downpour of the monsoon, just a miserable steady grey drizzle that turned the mud in the yard into a slippery coating of red slime. Major Stokes, beginning the afternoon in a clean red coat, white silk stock and polished boots, paced obsessively about a newly made carriage.

“It really wasn’t your fault, Sharpe,” he said.

“Feels like it, sir.”

“It would, it would!” Stokes said.

“Reflects well on you, Sharpe, ‘pon my soul, it does. But it weren’t your fault, not in any manner.”

“Lost all six men, sir. And young Davi.”

“Poor Hedgehog,” Stokes said, squatting to peer along the trail of the carriage.

“You reckon that timber’s straight, Sharpe? Bit hog-backed, maybe?”

“Looks straight to me, sir.”

“Ain’t tight-grained, this oak, ain’t tight-grained,” the Major said, and he began to unbuckle his sword belt. Every morning and afternoon his servant sent him to the armoury in carefully laundered and pressed clothes, and within an hour Major Stokes would be stripped down to breeches and shirtsleeves and have his hands full of spoke-shaves or saws or awls or adzes.

“Like to see a straight trail,” he said.

“There’s a number four spokeshave on the wall, Sharpe, be a good fellow.”

“You want me to sharpen it, sir?”

“I did it last night, Sharpe. I put a lovely edge on her.” Stokes unpeeled his red jacket and rolled up his sleeves.

“Timber don’t season here properly, that’s the trouble.” He stooped to the new carriage and began running the spokeshave along the trail, leaving curls of new white wood to fall away.

“I’m mending a clock,” he told Sharpe while he worked, ‘a lovely-made piece, all but for some crude local gearing.

Have a look at it. It’s in my office.”

“I will, sir.”

“And I’ve found some new timber for axletrees, Sharpe. It’s really quite exciting!”

“They’ll still break, sir,” Sharpe said gloomily, then scooped up one of the many cats that lived in the armoury. He put the tabby on his lap and stroked her into a contented purr.

“Don’t be so doom-laden, Sharpe! We’ll solve the axletree problem yet. It’s only a question of timber, nothing but timber. There, that looks better.” The Major stepped back from his work and gave it a critical look. There were plenty of Indian craftsmen employed in the armoury, but Major Stokes liked to do things himself, and besides, most of the Indians were busy preparing for the feast of Dusshera which involved manufacturing three giant-sized figures that would be paraded to the Hindu temple and there burned. Those Indians were busy in another open-sided shed where they had glue bubbling on a fire, and some of the men were pasting lengths of pale cloth onto a wicker basket that would form one of the giants’ heads. Stokes was fascinated by their activity and Sharpe knew it would not be long before the Major joined them.

“Did I tell you a sergeant was here looking for you this morning?”

Stokes asked.

“No, sir.”

“Came just before dinner,” Stokes said, ‘a strange sort of fellow.” The Major stooped to the trail and attacked another section of wood.

“He twitched, he did.”

“Obadiah Hakeswill,” Sharpe said.

“I think that was his name. Didn’t seem very important,” Stokes said.

“Said he was just visiting town and looking up old companions. D’you know what I was thinking?”

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