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And to have lost his sword! The sword was only a cheap Heavy Cavalry blade, ugly and ill-balanced, but it had been a gift from Harper and it had kept Sharpe alive in some grim battles. Now it would be a trophy on Bautista's wall. Christ! Sharpe stared at the fortress where Bautista ruled, and he felt the horrid impotence of failure, and the horrid certainty that he could never have his revenge. He was being taken away, across a world and back to ignominy, and he was helpless.
He was helpless, he was penniless, and he had just come ten thousand bloody miles for nothing.
The frigate, with its cargo of gold, sailed on that evening's tide. Sharpe and Harper were put to work on a capstan that raised one of the anchors, then sent down to the gundeck where they helped to stack nine- and twelve-pounder shots in the ready racks about the frigate's three masts. They worked till their muscles were sore and sweat was stinging their eyes, but they had no other choice. The dice had rolled badly, there was no other explanation, and the two men must knuckle under. Which did not mean they had to be subservient. A huge scarred beast of a man, a one-eyed seaman who was an evident leader of the forecastle, came to look them over, and such was the man's power that the Bosun's mates quietly edged back into the shadows when he gestured them away.
"My name's Balin," the huge man said, "and you're English."
"I'm English," Sharpe said, 'he's Irish."
Balin jerked his head to order Harper aside. "I've no quarrel with the Irish," he said, "but I've no love for Englishmen. Though mind you," he took a step forward, ducking under the deck beams, "I like English clothes. That's a fine coat, Englishman. I'll take it." He held out a broad hand. Two score of seamen made a ring to hide what happened from any officers who might come down to the deck. "Come on!" Balin insisted.
"I don't want trouble," Sharpe spoke very humbly, "I just want to get home safely."
"Give me your coat," Balin said, "and there's no trouble."
Sharpe glanced left and right at the unfriendly faces in the gundeck's gloom. Night had fallen, and the only lights were a few glass-shielded lanterns that hung above the guns, and the flickering flames made the seamen's faces even more grim than usual. "If I give you the coat," Sharpe asked, "you'll keep me from trouble?"
"I'll cuddle you to sleep, diddums," Balin said, and the men laughed.
Sharpe nodded. He took off the fine green coat and held it out to the massive man. "I don't want trouble. My friend and I just want to get home. We didn't ask to be here, we don't want to be here, and we don't want to make enemies.
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