
Gilliland nodded, shrugged, shook his head, flapped his hands in impotence, then turned again to Sharpe. 'Sir? You once said a frightened enemy is already half beaten, yes?’
'Yes.
'Think of what these will do to an enemy! They're terrifying!
'As your men just found out.
Gilliland shook his head in exasperation. 'There's always a rogue rocket or two, sir. But think of it! An enemy that's never seen them? Suddenly the flames, the noise! Think, sir!
Sharpe thought. He was required to test these rockets, test them thoroughly, and he had done that in four hard days work. They had started the rockets at their full range of two thousand yards and quickly brought the range down, down to just three hundred yards and still the missiles were hopelessly inaccurate. And yet! Sharpe smiled to himself. What was the effect on a man who had never been exposed to them? He looked at the sky. Midday. He had hoped for an easy afternoon before going to see the performance of Hamlet that the officers of the Light Division were staging in a barn outside the town, but perhaps there was just one test that he had forgotten. It need not take long.
An hour later, alone with Sergeant Harper, he watched Gilliland make his preparations six hundred yards away. Harper looked at Sharpe and shook his head. 'We're mad.
'You don't have to stay.
Harper sounded glum. 'I promised your wife I'd look after you, sir. Here I am, keeping the promise.
Teresa. Sharpe had met her two summers ago when his Company had fought alongside her band of Partisans. Teresa fought the French in her own way, with ambush and knife, with surprise and terror. They had been married eight months and in that time Sharpe doubted if he had spent more than ten weeks with her. Their daughter, Antonia, was nineteen months old now, a daughter he loved because she was his only blood relative, but a daughter he did not know and who would grow to speak a different language, but still his daughter. He grinned at Harper. 'We'll be all right. You know they always miss.
