Страница:
54 из 209
"Bugger shot me!" Harper staggered against the wall, but managed to keep his balance. "I went through the whole damned French wars, so I did, and never once did I take a bullet, and now a damned thief in a damned town at the end of the damned world hits me! Jesus sweet Christ!" He took his hand away and blood oozed from his sandy hair to trickle down his neck. "I'm feeling dizzy, so I am."
Sharpe helped Harper to a chair, sat him down, then probed the blood-soaked hair. The damage was slight. The bullet had seared across the scalp, breaking the skin, but not doing any other damage. "The bullet just grazed you," Sharpe said in relief.
"Grazed, indeed! I was hit, so I was!"
"Barely broke the skin."
"Lucky to be alive, I am. Sweet mother of God, but I could have been dead by now."
"Luckily you've got a skull like a bloody ox." Sharpe rapped Harper's temple. "It would take a twelve pounder to dent that skull."
"Would you listen to him! As near to death as a goose at Christmas, so I am, and all he can do is tap my skull!"
Sharpe went to the big water vat by the back door, soaked a piece of cloth, and tossed it to Harper. "Hold that against your head. It'll bring you back to life. I'm going to see what the bastards took."
Apart from their weapons and the chest with Louisa's gold, all of which had been locked in Blair's strong room, the thieves appeared to have taken everything. Sharpe, disconsolate, went downstairs to where Harper was dabbing his bloody head with the wet rag. "The lot," Sharpe said bitterly. "Your bag, my bags, our clothes, boots, razors. The lot."
"The Emperor's thimble?" Harper asked in disbelief.
"Everything," Sharpe said. "Bonaparte's portrait, and some stuff of Blair's as well. I can't tell what, but the candlesticks are gone and those small pictures that were on the shelf. Bastards!"
"What about your locket?"
"Around my neck."
"The guns?"
Sharpe shook his head. "The strong-room padlock wasn't touched." He picked up the thief s weapon. "The bastard tried to shoot me twice. It wouldn't fire."
"He forgot to prime it?"
Sharpe opened the pan and saw a sludge of wet powder there, then saw that the trigger was loose. He scraped the priming out of the pan and tapped the gun's butt on the floor. His guess was that the carbine's mainspring had jammed because the wood of the stock had swollen in the damp weather. It was a common enough problem with cheap guns. He tapped harder and this time the trapped spring jarred itself free and the flint snapped down on the emptied pan.
"Swollen wood?" Harper asked.
|< Пред. 52 53 54 55 56 След. >|