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Authors: Allan Mallinson

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They had not seen it in a week, but the tables declared there to be one. ‘Yes; and fullish,’ replied Hervey.

Myles Vanneck spoke again. ‘But we may expect for sure that the Grenadiers will be picketing every approach to the bridge. One of their company officers told me they would be nine-hundred strong in the field.’ The First Guards, the Grenadiers, were the principal element of the opposing forces, and Vanneck did not underestimate them, for all that their days were tied to parades in the capital. ‘Do we know where the rest of the GOC’s force is, Colonel?’

‘Yes,’ said Lord Holderness assuredly. ‘They do not march from their barracks until tomorrow morning. These are preliminary trials for us and the Grenadiers, since we had no field inspection last year. It is, in truth, a contest of horse and foot. We and the Guards shall have the general’s undivided attention for a full twenty-four hours.’

‘Do we have any information regarding what else the Grenadiers may be doing, or are they entirely disposed to keeping us from the bridge?’

‘I am proceeding on that assumption,’ replied Holderness. ‘If they have other assignments then that is to our advantage. But the ratio, as you perceive, is three-to-one against us, and we the attacking force. Not what the strategian would call favourable.’

‘But we have the initiative,’ suggested Vanneck.

‘We do,’ agreed Worsley. ‘But we need more of it. Do they have any guns?’

‘I don’t know,’ said Holderness. ‘But we may learn more when we meet with the Chestnuts in one hour.’

The little group fell silent.

‘What is
your
opinion, Hervey?’ asked Lord Holderness, raising his voice slightly to include his erstwhile second in command.

Hervey could see no immediate course but the application of ruthless logic. A direct assault was impossible: the odds were too strongly against them, even (perhaps especially) at night. Yet if there were nine hundred Grenadiers within half an hour’s forced march of the bridge (as must be assumed), then it would avail the regiment nothing to capture it too early by, as the French called it,
coup de main
, for a determined counter-attack would hurl any but the strongest force from the bridge. If, however, the
coup de main
were left until the last minute – until just before first light – there would be no time for a secondary plan to be put into action if that were to fail. The only conclusion possible was that
coup de main
must be combined with
ruse de guerre
. But how, he could not yet fathom.

‘I see no alternative to getting across the river between here and Dorney, Colonel, and making a surprise attack from the rear with a small number of men, say a dozen, and then to employ some ruse – which I cannot yet conceive – to persuade the Grenadiers that a counterattack would be futile.’

Lord Holderness nodded, intrigued.

‘I am not proposing we disguise ourselves and try one of the bridges; the general will have them well posted with sentries, and even if we
were
to hoodwink them, the general would certainly disallow it once he discovered it – as he surely must do. No, we must admit the bridges destroyed as if by powder.’

Captain Worsley looked doubtful. ‘You saw the river when we crossed at Eton, Hervey. I don’t think I ever saw it worse in all the time I was there.’

Hervey nodded. He had no doubt of his brother officer’s courage. ‘The means of crossing is a practical question. First we must decide what the mission demands.’

Fairbrother pulled at Hervey’s sleeve. ‘There is a way,’ he whispered.

‘You have an opinion, Captain Fairbrother?’ said Lord Holderness.

Hervey beckoned his friend to speak.

‘My lord, I know a way to get them across – a few at least. By towing. It was a means we used in Jamaica when the bridges were swept away. A rope is tied to a tree, or something equally firm, on the far side, and the end, in a loop, goes round the horse’s neck. The current takes it to midstream and then the horse is able to swim the rest of the way, like a pendulum.’

Lord Holderness looked obliged, though without the least condescension pointed out the obvious flaw in the method. ‘But how, sir, is the rope to be got across the river in the first place?’

‘If there are no boats to be had, my lord, then there is no alternative but to swim.’

Lord Holderness now looked incredulous. ‘But if we do not believe the
horses
are able to swim . . .’

‘I should gladly volunteer, my lord.’

Lord Holderness looked pained. Before him was evidently a solution, but it turned on the willingness, and capability, of a man he scarcely knew. ‘Major Hervey?’

Hervey hesitated. ‘I do believe it our best chance, Colonel. If we begin as soon as it is dark – otherwise we risk discovery – there will be time to try another tactic if it fails.’

The commanding officer folded his arms as he turned over the proposition in his mind. The advantages were manifest, the danger equally so. Could he take such a risk for the sake of the regiment’s – and his – reputation? Could he
not
take it? At length he put his hands on his hips, and arched his back. ‘I note you say “
we
risk discovery”, Major Hervey, from which I infer you are content to join us in the enterprise?’

Hervey smiled. ‘An honour, Colonel.’

‘Very well,’ said Lord Holderness, decided. ‘I am obliged to you both, gentlemen. But
I
shall be the first to cross when Fairbrother has the rope secured.’

It was no coincidence that the moon was full. The general officer commanding the London District had appointed the time for the manoeuvres so that the inspecting officers might see a good deal of any movement by night. That there was no cloud this evening was another matter: luck, as ever, was a factor in war, even mock war.

Hervey had for many years counted himself a lucky officer: ill fortune may have placed him in more than his share of dire circumstances, but better fortune had always been his timely aid, whether in the form of stratagem or device . . . or a saviour (he shivered at the sudden recollection that he must count on Kat – again – in that role).

Now, however, in the lucky light of the moon, he surveyed the obstacle before them, the bend of the Thames north-east of Frogmore, and wondered how much longer he would be favoured, for although fortune might indeed favour the bold, there was a mere hair’s breadth between boldness and recklessness (and that difference only determined by fortune). How did a man judge his course bold or reckless therefore? And it was, to no little degree, his, Hervey’s, course; he had proposed it – urged it – and his friend had suggested the means by which it might be accomplished. Lord Holderness staked his own standing on the plan, it was true, but Hervey now found himself as keenly committed to the manoeuvres as he would have been were he back on the regiment’s strength.

‘Truly, I cannot imagine how a man might swim across,’ he said, shaking his head. He considered himself to be a strong swimmer by the usual measure, but he did not see how he could challenge such a spate.

‘I assure you it is possible,’ replied Fairbrother, dismounting and beginning to divest himself of his uniform. ‘With a little help.’

Serjeant-Major Collins dismounted alongside him, and took a coiled rope from his saddle. Collins had for many years been one of Hervey’s trusted men – from his time in Spain as a young corporal – and now as F Troop serjeant-major he had been assigned by Captain Christopher Worsley, with a dozen men, for the crossing of the Thames.

‘Your excellent serjeant-major here understands perfectly what is to be done,’ said Fairbrother.

Hervey did not doubt it. Collins and Fairbrother had been in conclave, with the farrier-major, half the afternoon.

The farrier-major made his way forward. ‘Here, Colly,’ he announced grimly but with a touch of pride, handing Collins the grappling hook that he had spent the past two hours fashioning.

Hervey frowned doubtfully. The best athlete at Shrewsbury School – Henry Locke, later officer of marines, who had been his saviour at the affair of the Chintal forts – had been able to throw a cricket ball clean across the river, but the Severn at Shrewsbury was not the Thames here; and a grappling iron and rope was certainly not a cricket ball.

Serjeant-Major Collins now took his carbine from the leather sleeve on the saddle. Hervey watched with increasing dismay: he had risked his own reputation, the colonel’s, and certainly that of his regiment, on a stratagem that looked as if it might tumble at the first fence. ‘What the deuce will you do with that?’

But the question was unnecessary: Collins revealed the carbine’s purpose as he eased the shaft of the grapple into the barrel. ‘An exactly perfect fit, Smiddy. Well done!’

‘You mean to fire the grapple from the carbine?’

‘Ay, sir. Reckon it’ll carry.’

As indeed would the noise. But Hervey was confident enough in that regard: he did not suppose the ‘enemy’ would so disperse his strength by picketing this far from the bridge. And as for the grapple, he had seen a musket’s ramrod fired a prodigious distance on more than one occasion in the Peninsula by a panicky finger . . . ‘Admirably ingenious, Sar’nt-Major.’

‘Colonel on parade!’ came the word from along the line as Lord Holderness made his way forward.

‘Good evening, Colonel,’ said Hervey when he reached the grapplers.

‘Good evening, Hervey, gentlemen,’ replied Holderness, breezily, dismounting. ‘Is that you I see, Sar’nt-Major Collins?’

‘Colonel.’

‘And the farrier-major, I perceive.’

‘Colonel.’

Hervey explained the plan.

‘ ’Pon my word – ingenious, sir, ingenious!’

‘Sar’nt-Major Collins’s idea.’

‘Indeed, Sar’nt-Major?’

‘I saw something its like once at Dover, Colonel, when the lifeboat there were in trouble.’

‘I could wish for a lifeboat here.’

‘The rest of the regiment has marched, Colonel?’ asked Hervey.

‘They have. They will engage the pickets as soon as may be, keep them alert all night, make them think we are probing the lodgement. And, should there be an unexpected opening, Worsley or Vanneck will seize it.’

Collins finished tying the rope to the grapple. ‘Ready, Cap’n Fairbrother, sir.’

‘Ah, Fairbrother – forgive me; I did not see you there.’

‘I have that advantage at night, my lord.’

Lord Holderness rose to the jest in Fairbrother’s voice. ‘So you do, sir!’

Fairbrother, stripping finally to the flesh, and with but matches and candle in an oilskin tied at his neck, braced to attention. ‘Permission to cross, my lord?’ he asked, wholly unselfconsciously.

Lord Holderness took his flask and gave it to him. ‘You may find the brandy restorative. Good luck to you,’ he said nodding, and then to Collins.

Instead of firing the carbine from where they stood, however, a few yards back on the bank, as Hervey had expected, Collins remounted, gave a hand down to Fairbrother and hauled him astride behind him. ‘Keep paying out the rope, Smiddy. Give me plenty of slack,’ he said to the farrier, just as they had planned it. Then he pressed to the water’s edge, raised the carbine above his head, and forged into the river.

By God, reckoned Hervey: Collins knew his horse! He could count on one hand the regiment’s troopers that would take so tractably to water at night. As he recalled, Collins’s had been cast as a roadster on the Bath mail, having thrown a leg over the traces on the long incline to Chippenham, stumbling and almost bringing the whole team to grief; the gelding had never taken willingly to the harness after that. The remount officer had bought him unwarranted but at a good price, thereby, and Collins had taken him on as his second trooper, remaking him, evidently, with great patience.

Hervey smiled to himself: for once, capability and patience had been richly rewarded. Collins and Armstrong were neck and neck as serjeant-majors, in his judgement; it was but Geordie Armstrong’s seniority (and, he must admit, their long years’ association) that to his mind placed him first in line behind the RSM. For a moment he wondered how was Armstrong, and the detached troop, in that southern autumn. Whatever their fortune, with Armstrong the troop was in good hands; of that he was sure . . .

‘A really rather remarkable sort of man,’ said Lord Holderness, lighting a cheroot.

Hervey snapped to in time to see Fairbrother slide from the trooper’s quarters and grasp a stirrup leather as the animal began swimming freely. He held his breath as he watched the current begin taking its hold, swinging the three of them towards the middle of the river, exactly as the branch had behaved when they tried it in the afternoon. Collins lay almost prone along his trooper’s neck, carbine held high, until he reckoned they were at the point when the horse would have to swim hard to make headway, the current no longer working in their favour. He raised himself in the saddle, pointed the carbine at the far bank, high, and fired.

Hervey saw the grapple arching into the darkness, and Collins turning his trooper (or rather, letting him be turned) downstream. He could not see Fairbrother, though he searched with his telescope (it amplified the light); he could only pray the grapple held fast and his friend was able to haul himself across. He could barely see Collins, now: they would, please God, be striking for the home bank, taking advantage of the slack water on the outside of the bend – but a struggle, a prodigious effort, nevertheless. How far downstream they would make their footing he did not know. Even so, he felt like cheering.

‘What do you see, Hervey?’ asked Lord Holderness, searching with his own glass.

Hervey could see nothing: the rope was anchored, for sure, but Fairbrother’s head and shoulders were hardly a mark in such a flood. ‘I can’t make him out, Colonel. But—’

‘ ’E’s done it, sir, the serjeant-major,’ came an unmistakable voice from the shadows. Private Johnson, with a telescope of the usual provenance, was lying full length at the water’s edge. ‘’E’s just climbing out.’

‘Who is that?’ asked Lord Holderness (it was, to his ear, an unusual report).

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