SHARPE’S DEVIL. Bernard Cornwell

“You have to get a travel permit from army headquarters.”

“Which is where?”

“In the Citadel, of course.” Blair nodded at the great fort which lay on the river’s bend at the very heart of Valdivia.

“Who do I see there?”

“A young fellow called Captain Marquinez.”

“Will Marquinez pay more attention to you than to me?” Sharpe asked.

“Oh, Christ, no! Marquinez is just an overgroomed puppy. He doesn’t make the decision. Bautista’s the one who’ll say yea or nay.” Blair jerked a thumb toward his padlocked strong room. “I hope there’s plenty of money in that box you fetched here, or else you’ll be wasting your time in Chile.”

“My time is my own,” Sharpe said acidly, “which is why I don’t want to waste it.” He frowned at Harper who was happily devouring Blair’s sugar cakes. “If you can stop feeding yourself, Patrick, we might start work.”

“Work?” Harper sounded alarmed, but hurriedly swilled down the last of his wine and snatched a final sugar cake before following Sharpe out of Blair’s house. “So what work are we doing?” the Irishman asked.

“We’re going to dig up Don Bias’s body, of course,” Sharpe said, “and arrange to have it shipped back to Spain.” Sharpe’s confident voice seemed to rouse Valdivia’s town square from the torpor of siesta. A man who had been dozing on the church steps looked irritably toward the two tall strangers who strode so noisily toward the Citadel. A dozen Indians, their squat faces blank as carvings, sat in the shade of a mounted statue which stood in the very center of the square. The Indians, who were shackled together by a length of heavy chain manacled to their ankles, pretended not to notice Sharpe, but could not hide their astonishment at the sight of Harper, doubtless thinking that the tall Irishman was a giant. ‘They’re admiring me, so they are!” Harper boasted happily.

“They’re working out how many families they could feed off your carcass. If they boiled you down and salted the flesh there probably wouldn’t be famine in this country for a century.”

“You’re just jealous.” Harper, seeing new sights, was a happy man. The French wars had given him a taste for travel, and that taste was being well fed by Chile, and his only disappointment so far was the paucity of one-legged giants, unicorns or any other mythical beasts. “Look at that! Handsome, aren’t they, now?” He nodded admiringly toward a group of women who, standing in the shade of the striped awnings that protected the shop fronts, returned Harper’s curiosity and admiration. Harper and Sharpe were new faces in a small town, and thus a cause for excited speculation. The wind swirled dust devils across the square and napped the ornate Spanish ensign that flew over the Citadel’s gatehouse. A legless beggar, swinging along on his hands, followed Sharpe and pleaded for money. Another, who looked like a leper, made a meaningless noise and held out the stump of a wrist toward the two strangers. A Dominican monk, his white robes stained with the red dust that blew everywhere, was arguing with a carter who had evidently failed to deliver a shipment of wine.

“We’re going to need a carter,” Sharpe was thinking aloud as he led Harper toward the Citadel’s sentries, “or at least a cart. We’re also going to want two riding horses, plus saddlery, and supplies for as long as it takes to get to Puerto Crucero and back. Unless we can sail home from Puerto Crucero? Or maybe we can sail down there! That’ll be cheaper than buying a cart.”

“What the hell do we want a cart for?” Harper was panting at the brisk pace set by Sharpe.

“We need a cart to carry the coffin to Puerto Crucero, unless, of course, we can go there by ship.”

“Why the hell don’t we have a coffin made in Puerto Crucero?” Harper asked. “The world’s not so short of carpenters that you can’t find a man to knock up a bloody box!”

“Because a box won’t do the trick!” Sharpe said. “The thing has to be watertight, Patrick, not to keep the rain out but to keep the decay in. We’re going to need a tinsmith, and I don’t suppose Puerto Crucero has too many of those! So we’ll have a watertight box made here before we go south.”

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