SHARPE’S REGIMENT

The muskets fired. He screamed in sheer terror, and somehow the scream turned into anger, and he saw Clayton jumping into the trench, bayonet searing down on one of the enemy. They seemed huge to Charlie, who suddenly felt very young, and then he was at the trench’s edge himself and a Frenchman, a great brute of a man who reminded Charlie of the blacksmith at home, lunged up with his bayonet.

Desperately, as though it was a pitchfork, Weller parried the blow. The crack of the two muskets meeting was satisfyingly loud and, even more satisfying, Weller’s farm bred strength drove the enemy’s weapon to one side and he suddenly heard Clayton shrieking at him. ‘Kill the bugger, Charlie! Kill him!’

He drove the bayonet down, screaming in fear as much as anger, and the blade went into the enemy’s neck. The man turned, wrenching Weller off balance, and he fell onto the wounded man. The Frenchman hit him, and Weller pounded his fist into the moustached face, and then a blade came over his shoulder and into the Frenchman’s chest. The man heaved once beneath Weller, choked, and was suddenly still. ‘Not bad, Charlie, but hang onto your gun.’ Clayton pulled him up. ‘Get the bugger’s pack. Quick!’

‘His pack?’ Charlie had entirely forgotten Harper’s advice.

‘That’s what you killed him for, isn’t it?’

Weller unstrapped the pack, lugged it off the corpse’s back, and did not mind that it was slick with blood. He shook the contents out, abandoning the spare clothes, but splitting a length of sausage with Boney, then he buckled his trophy to his belt. When this was over he would transfer his own belongings to his new pack. He looked at it proudly.

‘On! On! On!’ Captain d’Alembord was shouting at them. ‘Move!’ Angel, screaming with rage, was trying to count the Frenchmen he had killed while he killed yet more. Beside him, silent as ever, Daniel Hagman, his wounded shoulder healed, fired his rifle with murderous precision.

‘Come on, Charlie.’ Clayton pushed him on. The Light Company was coming to the pinnacle’s defences and Weller, with his bayonet blooded, and his hands sticky with enemy blood, was beginning to think that he might yet make a soldier.

Lieutenant Colonel Bartholomew Girdwood was singing. He was sitting in an abandoned trench, the dead lying like broken things about him, and he sang.

‘We’re in battle’s noise,

And all for victory, boys,

We’re fighting for our flag,

Hurrah!’

He sang it again. The tears running down his face gathered at the corners of his untarred moustache. He heard one of the mountain guns fire, and he shuddered. The shudder drew new tears. He looked at one of the dead man, a Welsh corporal who lay with a bullet hole in his throat, and Lieutenant Colonel Girdwood explained to the man that, in truth, this was not a battle. Not a battle at all. Battles, he said, were fought on plains. Always on plains. Not on hills. The corporal did not reply and Lieutenant Colonel Girdwood screamed at the man that he would be on a charge if he did not respond. ‘Speak, you bastard! Speak!’ Another gun made him whimper. He looked up at the sky. ‘Twenty-four inches is the proper interval between men for attack. Form up.’ He laughed. He thought he might get out of the trench and bring some order to this place. He looked at the corporal. ‘Her skin is white, you know. Did you know that? He cut it with the cane. White, white.’ He looked at his feet. ‘Two feet.’ He sang his verse of poetry again.

Then, from around the corner of the trench, one of the many dogs that plagued his Battalion trotted towards the Lieutenant Colonel. It looked at Girdwood, smelled the blood of the dead men, then began worrying at the throat of the Welsh corporal.

‘No! No!’ Girdwood screamed at the dog. He pulled out his pistol, aimed it, but the flint fell on an empty pan. His hands were shaking too much for him to reload the gun. The dog looked at him, its jowls redly wet, wagged its tail, and Lieutenant Colonel Girdwood, who had wanted nothing more than to fight in a real battle, screamed and screamed and screamed and screamed.

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