The smoke of the enemy’s camp-fires lay like a low dirty mist over the southern horizon. Sharpe could see a knot of horsemen close to the inn, but otherwise the enemy was hidden. In the valley itself patches of the tall rye had been beaten flat by the night’s rain, leaving the fields looking as though they suffered from some strange and scabrous disease.
There were Riflemen positioned some two hundred paces down the road in the valley, just opposite the farm of La Haye Sainte. Sharpe and Harper trotted towards those Greenjackets, who were occupying a sandpit on the road’s left, while the farm on the right was garrisoned by men of the King’s German Legion.
‘A bad night?’ Sharpe asked a Greenjacket sergeant.
‘We’ve known worse, sir. It’s Mr Sharpe, isn’t it?’
‘Yes.’
‘Nice to know you’re here, sir. Cup of tea?’
‘The usual smouch?’
‘It never changes, sir.’ Smouch was a cheap tea which was rumoured to be made from ash leaves steeped in sheep’s dung. It tasted even worse than its alleged recipe sounded, but any hot liquid was welcome on this damp cold morning. The Sergeant handed Sharpe and Harper a tin mug each, then stared through the dawn gloom at the enemy-held ridge. ‘I suppose Monsewer will start the ball early?’
Sharpe nodded. ‘I would if I was in his boots. He needs to beat us before the Prussians come.’
‘So they are coming, sir?’ The Sergeant’s tone betrayed that even these prime troops realized how precarious was the British predicament.
‘They’re coming.’ Sharpe had still not heard any official news of the Prussians, but Rebecque had been confident the night before that Blücher would march at dawn.
The Sergeant suddenly whipped round, proving he had eyes in the back of his head. ‘Not here, George Cullen, you filthy little bastard! Go and do it in the bloody field! We don’t want to be tripping over your dung all day! Move!’
A group of the Greenjackets’ officers had gathered about an empty artillery canister that they had filled with hot water for their morning shave. One of the men, a tall, cadaverous and grey-haired major, looked oddly familiar to Sharpe, but he could neither place the man’s face nor his name.
‘That’s Major Dunnett,’ the Sergeant told Sharpe. ‘He was only posted to this battalion last year, sir. Poor gentleman had the misfortune to be a prisoner for most of the last war.’
‘I remember now.’ Sharpe spurred the mare towards the group of officers and Dunnett, looking up, caught his eye and stared with apparent amazement. Then Dunnett shook the soap off his razor blade and walked to meet Sharpe. They had last met during the disastrous retreat to Corunna when Dunnett had been in charge of a half-battalion of Greenjackets and Lieutenant Sharpe had been his quartermaster. Dunnett had hated Sharpe with an unreasonable and ineradicable hatred. The last glimpse Sharpe had caught of his erstwhile commanding officer had been as French Dragoons captured Dunnett while Sharpe had scrambled to desperate safety with a group of Riflemen. Now, denied promotion by his five years in prison, Dunnett was still a Major while Sharpe, his old quartermaster, outranked him.
‘Hello, Dunnett.’ Sharpe curbed his horse.
‘Lieutenant Sharpe, as I live and breathe.’ Dunnett patted his face dry. ‘I heard that you’d survived and prospered, though I doubt you’re still a lieutenant? Or even a quartermaster?’
‘A Dutch Lieutenant-Colonel, which I don’t think counts for very much. It’s good to see you again.’
‘It’s good of you to say so.’ Dunnett, evidently embarrassed by Sharpe’s compliment, looked away and caught sight of Harper who was still talking with the Sergeant. ‘Is that Rifleman Harper?’ Dunnett asked incredulously.
‘Ex-Rifleman Harper. He cheated his way out of the army, and now can’t resist coming back to see it fight a battle.’
‘I thought he’d have died long ago. He was always a rogue.’ Dunnett was painfully thin, with deep lines carved either side of his grey moustache. He looked back to Sharpe. ‘So were you, but I was wrong in my opinion of you.’
It was a handsome retraction. Sharpe tried to throw it off by saying how terrible the retreat to Corunna had been; an ordeal that had abraded mens’ tempers and manners till they were snarling at each other like rabid dogs. ‘It was a bad time,’ he concluded.
‘And today doesn’t promise to be much better. Is it true that Boney’s whole army is over there?’
‘Most of it, anyway.’ Sharpe assumed that Napoleon had sent some men to keep the Prussians busy, but the thickness of the camp-fires across the valley was evidence that most of the French army was now assembled in front of Wellington’s men.
‘Damn the bastards however many they might be.’ Dunnett buttoned his shirt and pulled on his green coat. ‘I won’t be taken a prisoner again.’
‘Was it bad?’
‘No, it was even civilized. We had the freedom of Verdun, but if you didn’t have money, that was a dubious privilege. I think I’d rather die than see that damned town again.’ Dunnett turned and stared towards the empty slope of the French ridge where the only movement was the ripple of the wind moving the standing patches of damp rye. He stared for a few seconds, then turned back to Sharpe. ‘It’s oddly good to see you again. There aren’t many of that particular battalion still living. You heard they were at New Orleans?’
‘Yes.’
‘Butchered,’ Dunnett said bitterly. ‘Why do they make fools into generals?’
Sharpe smiled. ‘I think you’ll find the Duke’s no fool.’
‘So everyone tells me, and let’s hope it’s true. I want the chance of killing some Crapauds today. I’ve scores to settle with the bloody French.’ Dunnett laughed as if to dilute the hatred he had betrayed, then offered his hand. ‘Allow me to wish you well of this day, Sharpe.’
Sharpe reached down and took his old enemy’s hand. ‘And you, Dunnett.’ He thought how odd it was that men made peace before they went to war, and it seemed odder still as Dunnett, with apparent pride, introduced Sharpe to the other officers. These Riflemen were cruelly exposed, so far forward of the ridge, but so long as the Germans held the farm buildings then the Greenjackets were assured of their supporting fire. ‘Better here than over there.’ A captain pointed towards the left flank where the British ridge was pierced and flattened by a shallow re-entrant and where a battalion of Dutch-Belgian troops was in full view of the enemy. The rest of Wellington’s infantry were concealed behind the ridge or sheltered behind thick farm walls, but the one Dutch-Belgian battalion was horribly exposed. Doubtless some troops had to be stationed to block the dangerous re-entrant, but, after Quatre Bras, it seemed futile to expect the Belgians to stand and fight.
‘Perhaps the Duke wants the buggers to run away early? No point in feeding the scum if they won’t fight.’ Five years of imprisonment had done nothing to dull Dunnett’s tongue.
Sharpe made his farewells, then he and Harper rode back towards the ridge. ‘Strange to meet Dunnett again,’ Sharpe said, then he twisted to look at the empty French ridge as he thought of the men he knew in that far army. One or two of those men he counted as friends, yet today he would have to fight them.
Once at the crest of the ridge Sharpe and Harper turned west towards the British right flank which the Prince of Orange had judged to be vulnerable. Some battalions were already formed up behind the ridge’s crest. The Prince of Wales’s Own Volunteers were paraded in a hollow square that faced inwards towards a chaplain who was trying to make himself heard above the sound of the wind and the buzz of other battalions’ voices. Sharpe saw d‘Alembord’s head bowed, apparently in prayer, though more probably in reverie. Just beyond the Prince of Wales’s Own Volunteers an infantry battalion of the King’s German Legion was singing a psalm. The Hanoverian voices were strong and full of emotion so that Sharpe had the sudden guilty impression that he eavesdropped upon a very private moment. ‘It’s Sunday, so it is,’ Harper said with a note of surprise, then made the sign of the cross on his uniform jacket.
On the ridge’s crest a cheerful and rubicund gunner officer was riding from gun battery to gun battery. ‘You will not indulge in counter-battery fire. You will save your powder for the infantry and the cavalry! You will not fire at the enemy guns, but at their infantry and cavalry alone! Good morning, Freddy!’ He raised his hat to a friend who evidently commanded one of the batteries.
‘Thank God it’s stopped raining, eh? Give my compliments to your lovely wife when you write home. You will not indulge in counter-battery fire, but you will save your powder ...’ His voice faded behind as Sharpe and Harper rode further west.
‘I’ve never seen so many guns,’ Harper commented. Every few yards there was another battery of nine-pounders while, behind the ridge, the lethal short-barrelled howitzers waited in reserve.
‘You can bet your last ha’pence that Napoleon’s got more guns than us,’ Sharpe said grimly.
‘All the same, it’ll be bloody slaughter if the Crapauds march straight across the valley.’
‘Maybe they won’t. The little Dutch boy thinks they might hook round this end of our line.’ Sharpe spoke sourly, though in truth the Prince’s fear was a genuine and intelligent concern, and Sharpe, suddenly fearing that the Emperor might already have marched and that the French might already be threatening to spring a surprise attack on the British right flank, spurred his mare forward.
He reined in on the ridge above the chateau of Hougoumont. From here he could see far to the south-west, but nothing stirred in the grey morning. A handful of cavalry picquets from the King’s German Legion sat untroubled in the fields, proof that the French had not marched. The château itself buzzed with noise as the Coldstream Guards, who formed its garrison, finished their preparations. Sharpe could hear the sound of pickaxes making yet more loopholes in the thick walls of the barns and house.
A knot of horsemen was galloping along the ridge’s crest. The horses’ hooves flung up great gobs of mud and water from the soaking ground. The leading horseman was the Prince of Orange who, seeing Sharpe, raised a hand in greeting and swerved towards the two Riflemen. The Prince was elegantly dressed in a gold-frogged coat that was trimmed with black fur. ‘You were up early, Sharpe!’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Nothing moving on the flank?’
‘Nothing, sir.’
The Prince suddenly spotted that Sharpe still wore his Rifle green under the cloak. He was clearly tempted to say something, but just as clearly feared an act of downright disobedience that would betray his own lack of princely authority, so instead he scowled and stared towards the vulnerable open flank where the German horsemen sat like statues in the waterlogged meadows.
‘The Emperor will come round this way. You can depend on it!’
‘Indeed, sir,’ Sharpe said.
‘An attack around our right will cut us off from the North Sea and take the French away from the Prussians, Sharpe, that’s what it’ll do, and that’s why the Emperor will attack here. A child could work that out! It’s a waste of time putting guns on the ridge. They’ll all have to be moved to this flank and it’ll be a shambles when the orders are given. But at least we’ll be ready for the move!’
‘Are the Prussians coming, sir?’ Sharpe asked.
The Prince frowned as though he found the question aggravating. ‘They’re coming.’ The answer was grudging. ‘Blücher says two of his corps will be here by midday and a third will be hard on their heels. The message came a few minutes ago.’
‘Thank God,’ Sharpe said fervently.
The Prince, already irritated by Sharpe’s refusal to wear Dutch uniform, was galled by the Rifleman’s evident relief. ‘I don’t think we need be too grateful, Colonel Sharpe. I trust we can beat those devils without a few Germans, isn’t that so, Rebecque?’
‘Indeed, Your Highness.’ Rebecque, his horse just behind that of the Prince, said tactfully.
‘We can beat them so long as we hold this flank.’ The Prince turned his horse towards the château. ‘So keep watch here, Sharpe! The future of Europe may depend on your vigilance!’
The Prince shouted the last fine words as he spurred down the farm track, which led off the ridge to the château. Rebecque waited a few seconds until his master’s entourage was out of earshot, then added a few cautionary words. ‘The roads are very heavy, so I wouldn’t expect the Prussians till early afternoon.
‘But at least they’re coming.’
‘Oh, they’re coming, right enough. They’ve promised it. We wouldn’t be fighting here if they weren’t.’ Rebecque smiled to acknowledge his bald contradiction of the Prince’s confidence. ‘May I wish you joy of the day, Sharpe?’
‘And the same to you, sir.’
They shook hands, then Rebecque trotted after his master who had disappeared into Hougoumont’s big courtyard.
Patrick Harper glanced up at the sky to judge the time. ‘The Germans will be here by early afternoon, eh? Where will they come from?’
‘From over there.’ Sharpe pointed to the west, far beyond the elm tree and beyond the left flank of Wellington’s line. ‘And I’ll tell you something else, Patrick. You were right. It’s going to be bloody murder.’ Sharpe turned to glower at the empty enemy ridge. ‘Napoleon’s not going to manoeuvre. He’s going to come straight for us like a battering ram.’
Harper was amused at Sharpe’s sudden grim certainty. ‘With the future of Europe at stake?’
Sharpe did not know why he was suddenly so certain, unless it was an inability to agree with anything the Prince of Orange believed. He attempted a more acceptable justification for his certainty. ‘Boney will want to get it done quickly, so why manoeuvre? And he’s never cared how many of his men die, so long as he wins. And he’s got enough men over there to hammer us bloody, so why shouldn’t he just march straight forward and have the damned business done?’
‘Thank God for the Prussians then,’ Harper said grimly.
‘Thank God, indeed.’
Because the Prussians had promised, and were coming.
Marshal Prince Blücher, Commander of the Prussian army, had promised he would march to fight beside Wellington, but Blücher’s Chief of Staff, Gneisenau, did not trust the Englishman. Gneisenau was convinced that Wellington was a knave, a liar and a trickster who, at the first sniff of cannon-fire, would run for the Channel and abandon the Prussians to Napoleon’s vengeance.
Blücher had scorned Gneisenau’s fears and ordered his Chief of Staff to organize the march to Waterloo. Gneisenau would not directly disobey any order, but he was a clever enough man to make sure that his method of obedience was tantamount to disobedience.
He therefore commanded that General Friedrich Wilhelm von Bülow’s Fourth Corps should lead the advance on Waterloo. Of all the Prussian corps the Fourth was the furthest away from the British. Making the Fourth march first would inflict a long delay on the fulfilment of Blücher’s promise, but Gneisenau, fearing that von Bülow might show a soldier’s haste in marching to the expected sound of the guns, further ordered the thirty thousand men of the Fourth Corps to march by a particular road that not only led through the narrow streets of Wavre, but also crossed a peculiarly narrow and inconvenient bridge. The Fourth Corps was also commanded to march through the cantonments of Lieutenant-General Pirch’s Third Corps, which was instructed to leave its guns and heavy supply wagons parked on the road. Once von Bülow’s thirty thousand men had edged past those obstructions, Pirch was permitted to begin his own march in von Bülow’s footsteps. Lieutenant-General Zieten’s Second Corps, which was only twelve miles from Waterloo and the closest of all the Prussian Corps to the British, was firmly ordered to stay in its cantonments until the Fourth and Third had passed it by, and then the Second was to take a circuitous northerly route that would still further delay its arrival on the battlefield.
It needed a masterful piece of staff work to create such chaos, but Gneisenau was a master and, proving that fortune will often favour the competent, an extra delay was impose
d when a burning house blocked a street in Wavre so that von Bülow’s men were stalled almost before their march had begun. The soldiers just grounded their muskets and waited.
Somewhere to the south a French Corps was blundering about in search of the Prussian army, but Gneisenau was not worried by that threat. All that mattered was that the precious Prussian army should not be sucked into the huge defeat that the Emperor was about to inflict on the British, and Gneisenau, confident that his skill had averted such a disaster, ordered his breakfast.
A single horseman rode to the solitary elm tree. The horseman wore a blue civilian coat over white buckskin breeches and tall black boots. About his neck was a white cravat, while on his cocked hat were four cockades, one each for England, Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands. A blue cloak was rolled on the pommel of his saddle. His staff closed in behind as His Grace the Duke of Wellington stared through a spyglass at the tavern called La Belle Alliance. The military commissioners of Austria, Spain, Russia and Prussia attended the Duke, and like him trained their telescopes at the far ridge. Some civilians had also ridden from Brussels to observe the fighting and they too crowded in behind the Duke.