cared, could have packed their bags and ridden home right now.
He had ninety thousand men, of whom half might fight well, and he knew he would likely face a hundred thousand of Napoleonâs veterans. The Emperorâs veterans, fretting against the injustices of Bourbon France, had welcomed Napoleonâs return and flocked to the Eagles. The French army, which the Duke still thought was massing south of the border, was probably the finest instrument that Napoleon had ever commanded. Every man in it had fought before, it was freshly equipped, and it sought vengeance against the countries that had humbled France in 1814. The Duke had cause for worry, yet as he strolled down the rue Royale he was forced to put a brave face on the desperate odds lest his enemies took courage from his despair. The Duke could also cling to one strong hope, namely that his scratch army would not fight Napoleon alone, but alongside Prince Blücherâs Prussians. So long as the British and Prussian armies joined forces, they must win; separately, the Duke feared, they must be destroyed.
Yet twenty-five miles to the south the French were already pushing the Prussian forces eastwards, away from the British. No one in Brussels knew that the French had invaded; instead they prepared for a duchessâs ball while a fat Prussian major paid for his roast chicken, finished his wine, then ambled slowly northwards.
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At one oâclock in the afternoon, eight hours after the first shots had been fired south of Charleroi, Sharpe met more cavalrymen; this time a patrol in red-faced dark blue coats who thundered eagerly across a pasture to surround Sharpe and his two horses. They were men from Hanover, exiles who formed the Kingâs German Legion that had fought so hard and well in Spain. Now the German soldiers stared suspiciously at Sharpeâs strange uniform until one of the troopers saw the Imperial âNâ on the horseâs saddle-cloth and the sabres rasped out of their metal scabbards as the horsemen shouted at Sharpe to surrender.
âBugger off,â Sharpe snarled.
âYouâre English?â the KGL Captain asked in that language. He was mounted on a fine black gelding, glossy coated and fresh. His saddle-cloth bore the British royal cipher, a reminder that Englandâs King was also Hanoverâs monarch.
âIâm Lieutenant-Colonel Sharpe, of the Prince of Orangeâs staff.â
âYou must forgive us, sir.â The Captain, who introduced himself as Hans Blasendorf, sheathed his sabre. He told Sharpe his patrol was one of the many that daily scouted south to the French border and beyond; this particular troop had been ordered to explore the villages south and east of Mons down as far as the Sambre, but not to encroach on Prussian territory.
âThe French are already in Charleroi,â Sharpe told the German.
Blasendorf gaped at Sharpe in shocked silence for a moment. âFor certain?â
âFor certain!â Tiredness made Sharpe indignant. âIâve just been there! I took this horse off a French Dragoon north of the town.â
The German understood the desperate urgency of Sharpeâs news. He tore a page from his notebook, offered it with a pencil to Sharpe, then volunteered his own patrol to take the despatch to General Dornbergâs headquarters in Mons. Dornberg was the General in charge of these cavalry patrols which watched the French frontier, and finding one of his officers had been a stroke of luck for Sharpe; by pure accident he had come across the very men whose job was to alert the allies of any French advance.
Sharpe borrowed a shako from one of the troopers and used its flat round top as a writing desk. He did not write well because he had learned his letters late in life and, though Lucille had made him into a much better reader, he was still clumsy with a pen or pencil. Nevertheless, as clearly as he could, he wrote down what he had observed -