Sharpes Sword   ::   Корнуэлл Бернард

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The doctors said that Harper had certainly killed Sharpe with that treatment, yet that night the fever went down and Harper came back from the Cathedral to find Sharpe lucid again.

“How are you feeling, sir?”

“Bloody.” He looked it, too. His eyes were sunk in a pale face.

Harper grinned at him. “You’ll be up soon.”

Harper and Isabella took it in turns to pray. She used the chapel of the Irish College, close and beautiful, but Harper thought God might be nearer to the big Cathedral and he climbed the hill twice a day and he prayed with a childlike intensity. His broad, strong face would screw up in concentration as though the very force of his thoughts could drive the prayer up, past the statues, past the glorious ceiling, and up to a heaven where so many other prayers were clamouring for answers. He lit candles to St. Jude, the patron saint of hopeless causes, and he prayed to him, pleaded with him, and once again the doctors began to cautiously suggest that there was a chance; that sometimes men recovered from the wound, and Harper prayed on. Yet he knew something was nüssing. They gave Sharpe medicines when they could, prayers that they did not tell him about, and Harper knew there was something else; something that might persuade Sharpe to live. Something was missing.

Sharpe’s weapons were missing. The Rifle had been stolen in the hospital, the sword broken by Leroux. It took Harper three days, a bribe, but in the end a storekeeper with the Town Major opened up a small warehouse and rummaged through the racks. “Swords,” he muttered to himself, “swords. You can have this one.” He offered Harper a sabre.

“That’s bloody rubbish. It’s got bloody woodworm. I want a Heavy sword, not that bent rubbish.”

The Corporal storekeeper sniffed. He found another sword, this one straight. “Twenty pounds?”

“You want me to try it on you? I’ve paid already.”

The Corporal shrugged. “I have to account for this lot.”

“You poor wee man. And how do you account for the stuff you steal?” Harper went to the racks himself, raked through the weapons, and found a plain, sturdy, Heavy Cavalry blade. „I’ll take this one. Where are your rifles?“

“Rifles? You didn’t say nothing about any rifles.”

“Well I am now.” The huge Sergeant pushed past the storekeeper. “Well?”

The Corporal glanced at the open door. “More than my bloody job’s worth.”

“Your job’s worth cowdung. Now where are the rifles?”

The Corporal reluctantly opened a box.

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