Cornwell, Bernard 01 Sharpe’s Tiger-Serigapatam-Apr-May 1799

‘I wouldn’t have told him anyway,’ Sharpe said. ‘Of course I wouldn’t. I wish you joy of the fellow, sister, eh?’ He smiled. ‘Sister Aruna. It’s nice to have some family and you’re all I’ve got. And I hate to ask you to find this Shekhar fellow, but the Lieutenant and me, we just can’t manage to escape so someone else has to send the message out. Looks like you.’ Sharpe grinned. ‘But it looks like you’ve changed sides now and I don’t blame you. So you don’t mind doing this for me?’

‘I’ll do it for you. I promise.’

‘You’re a good lass.’ He stood. ‘Do brothers kiss sisters in India?’

Mary half smiled. T think they do, yes.’

Sharpe gave her a very respectable kiss on the cheek, smelling her perfume. ‘You look grand, Mary,’ he said. ‘Too grand for me, eh?’

‘You’re a good man, Richard.’

‘That won’t get me very far in this world, will it?’ He backed away from Mary then grinned at Kunwar Singh who offered him a stiff, slight bow. ‘You’re a lucky man!’ Sharpe said, and then, with a backwards glance at the tall elegant woman who now called herself Aruna, he walked away from Mary Bickerstaff. Easy come, easy go, he thought, but there was also a pang of jealousy for the tall good-looking Indian. But what the hell? Mary was doing her best to survive and Sharpe could never blame someone for doing that. He was doing the same himself.

He had turned back towards the barracks where Gudin’s battalion was quartered. He was thinking about Mary and

about how graceful, even unapproachable, she had looked, and he was hardly looking where he was going when a cheerful shout warned him of an approaching bullock cart that was loaded with great barrels. Sharpe stepped hastily aside as the bullocks, their horns painted yellow and blue and tipped with small silver bells, lumbered past. He saw that the brightly painted cart was heading down a narrow alley which led towards the gatehouse in the western wall and the sentries at the gate, seeing the cart approach, heaved back the huge double doors.

And Sharpe instinctively knew something was amiss. He stood watching and suspected he was on the edge of solving the city’s mystery. The guards were opening the gates, yet so far as Sharpe knew there were no gates in the city’s western wall which faced the South Gauvery river. He knew of the Bangalore Gate to the east, the Mysore Gate to the south, and the much smaller Water Gate to the north, but no one had ever spoken of a fourth gate, yet there it was. Once, plainly, there had been another water gate here, a gate that opened onto the South Gauvery, and presumably that entrance to the city had long ago been sealed up, yet now Sharpe was watching the gates being opened and he impulsively turned and followed the cart down the alley. The cart had already vanished into the deep gloom inside the gate’s tunnel and the two guards were dragging the big double doors closed, but then they saw the bright gold medallion on Sharpe’s chest and maybe that rare token convinced them that he had the authority to enter. ‘Looking for Colonel Gudin!’ Sharpe offered in brazen explanation when one of the two men nervously moved to intercept him. ‘Got a message for the Colonel, see?’

Then he was through the gate and he saw that it was not a passage out of the city at all, but was rather a long tunnel that led only to a blank stone wall. It had once been a gateway, that much was obvious, but at some time the old outer gate

had been walled shut to leave this gloomy tunnel that was now stacked with barrels. They had to be powder barrels, for Sharpe could see pale lengths of fuses coming from their stoppered bungholes. The whole northern side of the tunnel was crammed with the powder barrels. Just the northern side.

An officer saw him and shouted angrily. Sharpe played the innocent. ‘Colonel Gudin?’ he asked. ‘Have you seen Colonel Gudin, sahib?’

The Indian officer ran towards him and, as he came, he drew a pistol, but then, in the tunnel’s dim dusty light, he saw the gold medal on Sharpe’s chest and he pushed the pistol back into his sash. ‘Gudin?’ he asked Sharpe.

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