happy to let the Dragoons ride to the nearby town so long as they fetched him back whatever old newspapers were available. âIf weâre not hiding,â one of the Italians grumbled to Challon, âthen what are we doing?â The Italians disliked being stranded in the primitive comforts of the turf-roofed farmhouse, but Challon told them to be patient.
âThe Majorâs sniffing the wind,â Challon said, and Ducos was indeed sniffing the strange winds that blew across France, and he was beginning to detect a danger in them. After two weeks in the farm Ducos told Challon of his fears. The two men walked down the valley, crossed an uncut meadow and walked beside a quick stream. âYou realize â Ducos said, âthat the Emperor will never forgive us?â
âDoes it matter, sir?â Challon, ever the soldier, had a carbine in his right hand while his eyes watched the forestâs edge across the stream. âGod bless the Emperor, sir, but he canât last for ever. The bastards will get him sooner rather than later.â
âDid you ever meet the Emperor?â Ducos asked.
âNever had that honour, sir. I saw him often enough, of course, but never met him, sir.â
âHe has a Corsicanâs sense of honour. If his family is hurt, Sergeant, then Napoleon will never forgive. So long as he has a breath in his body he will seek revenge.â
The grim words made Challon nervous. The four crates that Challon had escorted to Bordeaux had contained property that belonged to the Emperor and to his family, and soon the Emperor would have all the leisure in the world to wonder what had happened to that precious consignment. âEven so, sir, if heâs imprisoned, what can he do?â
âThe Emperor of France,â Ducos said pedantically, âis the head of the French State. If he falls from power, Challon, then there will be another head of state. That man, presumably the King, will regard himself as Napoleonâs legitimate heir. I presume that you would like to die of a peaceful old age in France?â
âYes, sir.â
âSo would I.â Ducos was staring over the stream and dark trees towards a tall crag of pale rock about which two eagles circled in the cold wind, but Ducos was not seeing the rock, nor even the handsome birds, but instead was remembering the Teste de Buch fort where, once again, he had been humiliated by an English Rifleman. Sharpe. It was odd, Ducos thought, how often Sharpe had crossed his path, and even odder how often that crude soldier had succeeded in frustrating Ducosâs most careful plans. It had happened again at the benighted fort on the French coast and Ducos, seeking some clever stroke that would give himself and Sergeant Challon freedom, had found himself thinking more and more about Major Richard Sharpe.
At first Ducos had resented the intrusion of Sharpe into his thoughts, but in these last two days he had begun to see that there was a possible purpose to that intrusion. Perhaps it would be possible for Ducos to take revenge on his old enemy as a part of the concealment of the theft. The plan was intricate, but the more Ducos tested it, the more he liked it. What he needed now was Challonâs support, for without the Sergeantâs physical courage, and without the loyalty that the other Dragoons felt for Challon, the intricacy was doomed. So, as they walked beside the stream, Ducos spoke low and urgently to the Sergeant, and what he said revealed a golden bridge to a wonderful future for Sergeant Challon.
âIt will mean a visit to Paris,â Ducos warned, âthen a killing somewhere in France.â
Challon shrugged. âThat doesnât sound too dangerous, sir.â
âAfter which weâll leave France, Sergeant, till the storm blows out.â
âVery good, sir.â Challon was quite content so long as his duties were clear. Ducos could do the planning, and Challon would