6

When the dawn came, however, all was quiet in the French lines. The sky was overcast, and a hot wind blew steadily. Particles of dust seemed to penetrate even into the most tightly closed receptacles. Jack Molloy swore that there was some even in the egg his batman boiled for his breakfast In spite of the heat, the fatigue of the previous day, and the depressing effect of finding friends missing from the ranks, the spirits of the men were good. Not many of them understood the purpose of their gruelling march, but they could all see that they were facing the French, and placed in a strong position which they could defend all day, if need be.

‘They won’t attack us!’ said an old hand. ‘They’re eating their breakfasts, that’s what they’re doing. Bacon and eggs, and hunks of beef, what they plundered off the poor, blurry Spaniards. What we ought to ’av ’ad, if we wasn’t bleeding little gentlemen.’ ‘That’s right,’ agreed a disreputable individual, who was frying slices of pork on the end of his priming-rod. ‘Cruel it is, the way them Johnny Petits plunder the country. All they left for us was one scrawny porker. Where’s the Commissary?’ ‘Lorst, as usual.’

‘Well, damme, boys, if he don’t show his front, we must either find a potato-field, or ’ave a killing-day!’ said a stout Rifleman cheerfully.

As the morning wore on, without any other sign of activity in the French lines than the movement of various reconnoitring parties, it became apparent that Marshal Marmont, having neatly turned Wellington’s flank on the 16th July, and during the two succeeding days, superbly manoeuvred the French army over eighty miles of sunburnt country, had decided to give his stoical infantry a rest. The entire army remained stationary all day, and moved off in the cool of the evening, in a southerly direction.

‘Oh, damn it! I believe they’re as chary of coming to grips as we are!’ said Young Varmint despairingly. ‘All this watching and prowling reminds me of nothing so much as the start of a cat-fight!’

It really began to seem as though the caution of the opposing Generals would result in nothing but a stalemate, for the weary marches continued for two more days, in much the same fashion, the armies sometimes within half-musket shot of each other, sometimes out of sight, but never engaging in any more serious hostilities than artillery-fire, and some cavalry skirmishing. Once, when the rival columns were seen to be converging on the same village, a general engagement seemed to be inevitable, but Wellington, to the wrath of the major part of his army, refused battle by avoiding the village.

By the time the Allied army reached the Tonnes, a number of sick and wounded men were missing from the ranks, and the baggage-train, shepherded by a Portuguese brigade of cavalry, had begun to straggle. Nothing had been seen of the French for some hours, but when the camp-fires were presently lit, it was observed that some of the French divisions were bivouacking within striking distance of the fords of Huerta.

Early on the following morning, Wellington withdrew his army to its old position on the heights of San Christoval, above the more northerly fords of Aldea Lengua, and Santa Marta.

‘In fact,” Eeles said, ‘we might as well have stayed here the whole time, and never have gone to Rueda at all. Then I shouldn’t have had the worst blister in the army.’ As Lord Wellington seemed to have decided to allow Marshal Marmont to pass the Tonnes unopposed, Charles Eeles was able to nurse his heel all day. The Allied army remained in position on the heights until sundown, while the French troops slowly crossed the river by the fords of Huerta, marched up the valley on the farther side, and encamped at the edge of a forest barely six miles from Salamanca.

Juana seized the opportunity to wash and iron two of Harry’s shirts. He found her propping her iron up on a stubble-fire, which she had ordered Joe Kitchen to build for her. She looked hot, with her dark ringlets clinging damply to her forehead, and beads of sweat on the bridge of her nose. Harry took the iron away from her, and gave it to Kitchen. ‘No, my little love,’ he said, leading her away. ‘Not so!’

‘But Kitchen does not iron at all well, amigo! I assure you-’ ‘And I assure you I won’t have it. I gave you orders to rest, you little varmint!’ ‘Indeed, I am not tired! De ningun modo!’

‘Tanto mejor!’ He drew her into the shade of a tree, and sat down on the ground, pulling her down beside him. He was looking tired, finer-drawn than he had been at the start of the campaign, with the lines running from his nose to the corners of his mouth deeper-cut, giving his thin face a sterner expression.

Juana said: ‘En efecto, it is you who are tired, mi Enrique!’

‘Very. It’s these cursed boils.’ He stretched himself out on the ground, with his head pillowed in her lap. ‘Comfort your boy,’ he murmured, his eyes smiling up at her under their weighted lids.

She let her fingers stray over his hair. They trembled a little; a rush of tenderness welled up in her. She stammered: ‘Do you think I am a bad wife?’

‘I don’t know. I never had another.’ ‘I tease you with my bad temper!’

‘Si!’ Harry’s eyelids were dropping. ‘I meant to be so good!’ she said distressfully. His eyes opened again. ‘What’s all this?’ ‘I am afraid you will be killed in the battle.’ ‘Juana, you goose!’

She bent over him, gently pressing her hands against his hollow cheeks. ‘I have only you. If you die, I must also. Do you see?’

He reached up a hand to clasp one of her wrists. ‘Who’s talking of dying? Not I, I give you my word! They’ll tell you in the regiment that I bear a charmed life.’

‘At contrario, they say you are a reckless one.”

‘Be damned to ’em! I’ll take good care of my skin, I promise you. If anything does happen to me, Tom will look after you, and see that you are sent to England. I’ve told him what to do: you’ve no need to worry your head. Aren’t I a provident husband?’

‘No, no, you are a fool, a fool! Do you think I will live without you? Jamas! I have made up my mind to die also. It will be quite easy.’

‘The devil it will! Now, what am I to do with you?’ ‘You can do nothing. Only, I thought I would tell you.’ ‘Muchas gracias!’

She traced with one finger the line of his cheek-bone. ‘It will be better so, don’t you think?’ ‘I think it will be better still if I take precious good care not to be killed, my wife.’ ‘Oh, yes! Much better!’ she agreed, brightening. ‘But it does not seem to me that there will be any battle. When do we march?’

‘This evening.’

‘Well, I think it is going to rain,’ she said.

‘God forbid! I know what your Spanish storms are like.’ He looked up at the sky. ‘All the same, I believe you’re right. We’re in for a regular Tam o’Shanter’s night. Good! That means we shall be engaged tomorrow. It always rains before the Peer’s battles.’ As the afternoon wore on, the sky grew steadily more sullen, some very black clouds rolling up from the west. In the last half-hour of daylight, the landscape looked leaden. As the Light division, bringing up the rear of the army, began to descend the slope of the Aldea Lengua mountain to the river, the fast-gathering darkness closed down on them, and some heavy drops of rain fell. ‘Here it comes!’ said Kincaid.

‘Damn! I wish I had sent you across with the Pioneers!’ Harry said, fastening his boat-cloak round Juana’s neck.

‘Oh, vamos! I am not afraid of rain,’ Juana answered gaily. ‘And I would not leave the brigade, I assure you!’

A sudden gust of wind nearly carried her hat away; by the time the ford at the foot of the hill was reached, the rain was falling in torrents, and the river was already swollen. The flicker of lightning, and some threatening growls of thunder, rolling round the hilltops, frightened Juana’s horse. She could feel him trembling under her, and was obliged to force him into the river. The water, swirling and foaming round his legs, made him snort and jib badly, backing away. The more she tried to urge him forward, the more obstinate he became, carrying her in his terror into the deeper water beyond the ford, and there becoming too frightened to move. West, who was leading Harry’s spare horse, could do very little to help her, beyond shouting advice, and trying to induce her horse to follow his lead. He was beginning to be seriously alarmed, for there were quicksands in the river, when Harry came splashing through the torrent on Old Chap, and, seizing the Portuguese horse’s bridle above the bit, fairly dragged him to the opposite bank. They had scarcely scrambled up it when a deafening dap of thunder so startled the horses that even Old Chap flung up his head, while the Portuguese stood stock-still, shaking, Juana said, in every limb. ‘Why the devil didn’t you wait for me?’ Harry said wrathfully. ‘You might have been drowned, you little fool!’

He could barely distinguish her face in the darkness, but her voice was brimful of mischief. ‘You said I must learn to ford rivers by myself! Muy bien.’

‘I’d like to wring your neck! Do you know what a fright you gave me?’ ‘It is all the fault of this stupid, cowardly horse. I won’t ride him any more. I will have Tiny instead.’

‘We’ll talk about that later. Go on, and get under cover, if you can find any!’ He was obliged to leave her, for he had his duties to attend to, and it was not until an hour or two later that he found her again. Meanwhile, undaunted by the rain which beat remorselessly on her head and shoulders, Juana joined Kincaid, whose brigade was already across the river. He seemed to be in some kind of trouble. He said in a shaken voice: ‘My God, I thought I was blind!’

‘Why? What has happened to you?’

‘Nothing, my dear. That terrific flash so dazzled me I thought I had been struck. I tell you, I couldn’t see a thing, not even the lanterns, for a full ten minutes! Never had such a scare in my life! By Jove, though, what a sight it is!’

The storm, by this time, was at its height. The lightning, which was almost continuous, luridly lit up the whole scene, casting into sharp relief the background of towering hills and woods, and seeming actually to nicker on the points of the long column of bayonets still moving steadily down the mountain-side to the river at its foot. The Light division, keeping close order, passed the river without losing its formation, but a jagged fork of fire, falling amongst some of Le Marchant’s dragoons, already bivouacking on the low ground near Santa Marta, killed several men and beasts, and frightened the picketed horses so much that hundreds of them broke loose from the ropes and galloped off into the surrounding gloom, squealing with panic. The noise of their pounding hooves, as they careered wildly round, the shriller note of their squealing, mingled with the roar and clatter of the thunder, created such an infernal pandemonium that Kincaid was quite astonished to find Juana apparently unperturbed by all the commotion, but laughing, with the rain-drops splashing off the sodden brim of her hat, and running down her neck.

‘My poor dear, you ought to be under cover!”

‘Yes, but I like this better. The rain does not hurt me, and I must stay with the brigade.’ ‘Where’s Harry? Gone off with the QMG to find quarters for Vandeleur?’ ‘He did not tell me, but certainly that is what he must be doing. Enrique never neglects his duty.’

‘Only his wife?’ said Kincaid quizzically.

‘You know better! A decir verdad, he is very angry with me, because this stupid horse would not cross the river. I am going to ride Tiny in future.’

‘Are you, by Jove! Does Harry know?’

‘Yes, for I have told him,’ replied Juana firmly.

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