Picton snapped-to. ‘Nothing, Sir Edward. It is nothing at all!’
‘What would you have me do? Should we not seek a little cover – what’s left of the palisade there?’
‘No. If once we retire a yard we’ll never recover it. Now hear: this will be a desperate business, but I shall forfeit my life if we don’t carry it, and the brigadiers the same. Once we gain the castle the sole object shall be to assault the breaches from the rear. By then we’ll have lost a good many, the officers especially. You will therefore act as my staff, you and your officers – and drive them to the breaches. I want no heroics from you until then. That is the most imperative order.’
‘I understand, General.’
‘Well then, let us see what Kempt and Campbell can do with their brigades, damn them!’
It was nigh impossible to see anything in the Stygian ditch. Hervey stumbled and cursed as they edged their way back to make room for the 5th (Northumberland) bringing up more ladders. Every powder flash blinded him for a minute and more, and even with night eyes it was too dark to see the top of the walls. How could these men scale them, not knowing what was up there?
‘Hold hard,’ said Sir Edward suddenly. ‘I won’t push past any more of them. It’s bad enough wearing blue in a place like this.’
Hervey was surprised, for besides not being able to make out one colour from another on a night like this, Sir Edward as a rule displayed supreme indifference to such things. But then, this was Badajoz. Two assaults had failed already; if they failed again, the army would stop believing in itself. There could be no failure this time, whatever it took. That was what Picton had meant. It no longer mattered how many men died scaling these walls. If the bodies piled up in a mound, then their comrades could climb on them to reach the top – a ramp of redcoats, doing more in death than they had managed to do alive. And if that was to be, then it were better to go at it quickly, to take one’s death early, with the blood coursing, rather than waiting till it ran cold – easier by far to storm the walls with a hundred men following than to follow and see the bodies of the fallen. Hervey smiled grimly: there was always the chance of being first in Badajoz. Someone must earn that accolade!
‘Sir Edward, I wish to go with the Fifth.’
‘Hervey, we have work to do,’ replied his troop-leader, a shade impatient. ‘And besides, they would never let you.’
‘Surely, sir, they—’
‘Hervey, listen with close attention to what I say. Those brave fellows in red are legion. If the Fifth don’t scale the walls, the Seventy-seventh will, and if not them then the Eighty-third behind them, or the Ninety-fourth behind them. That is the purpose of the infantry of the line, and there will be many a fine officer dying to remind them of it. Our purpose is precise and limited. We will face our turn for oblivion when the walls are stormed.’
Hervey was abashed. ‘Sir.’
‘Very well,’ said Sir Edward, but more encouragingly. ‘Now, where are the covermen?’
Eight officers and NCOs of the 6th Light Dragoons crouched in the bottom of the ditch as cheering redcoats sprang forward. Ladders slammed against the walls; men even began climbing the stonework with their bare hands, getting nowhere but keeping up the momentum of the surge of red. In the torchlight, Hervey saw the Fifth’s commanding officer climbing the nearest ladder, his men close behind shielding his head with bayonets. Soon there were so many redcoats clinging to the ladder that even if the French had been able to get a hand to the top rung they would not have been able to tip it back. Did the ladder even reach the top? Hervey could not tell. But there was no check in the movement upwards, and for a moment he thought the French must have abandoned the walls. Then came a very deliberate fusillade. Men at the bottom fell clutching wounds, but none from the ladders. The Fifth’s light company answered, the musket flashes atop the walls showing them where to aim. Hervey realized the light company’s marksmen had been waiting for this: now they could sweep the walls and keep the defenders back while the grenadiers climbed.
‘Clever Fifth!’ he heard himself say. (And he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven!) ‘Clever, brave Fifth!’
But these were no angels ascending. Neither did they descend: there was no check in the ascent of the lieutenant-colonel’s ladder.
Suddenly there was shouting from the top: ‘Old Ridge’s in! He’s in!’
Grenadiers were all but running up the ladder now.
Hervey was as humbled as he was thrilled: the first man into Badajoz was not a thrusting ensign or a raging corporal, but the Fifth’s own commanding officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Ridge, leading his regiment sword-drawn as if on parade. And he, Cornet Matthew Hervey, crouched in the ditch below!
The light company stopped firing, and there were no shots from the top. Had the French left the ramparts? When would it be their turn?
‘Leu-in, leu-in the Fifth!’ shouted the brigadier, waving his sword and grasping the rung of a ladder. ‘Follow-up, Seventy-seventh!’
Hervey rose on one knee: a brigadier in – now was the time, surely?
‘Hold hard,’ said Sir Edward, calmly. ‘Let the Fifth fight the French out of the castle. We go after the Seventy-seventh.’
Hervey chafed as hundreds more redcoats surged to the walls. He was certain it would be over by the time their turn came, for Picton had said the French could not hold once the castle had fallen. He could hear firing again: the last desperate attempt to throw back the Fifth? What a thing it was to be waiting so close!
General Picton came, pushing, shoving, cursing worse than before. Everywhere there were torches, no need of the dark now that the walls were his. Yet he was a man angry with everything and everybody.
‘Get in there, Campbell!’ he barked at his brigadier. ‘Get every man you have in there!’
He pulled a grenadier from the bottom of a ladder and lashed at another two with the flat of his sword. ‘Laggards, laggards! Make way there!’
He cursed every rung to the top. He was still cursing as he jumped over the parapet and ran along the walls to the castle, checking only when he came upon Colonel Ridge lying dead at the gates.
General Phillipon was a defeated man. He had calculated (and disposed his troops accordingly) that even if the fortress walls were overcome he could still hold the castle until Marshal Soult came to his relief. But he knew that if the castle fell, the rest of the fortress would. Kempt’s brigade as well as Campbell’s had scaled the walls and fought the defenders out of this last redoubt with bloody loss, and they had held it against ferocious counter-attacks. The bugles that had been blowing since the first drummer gained the ramparts were now being answered by Leith’s on the other side of the city, and they told Phillipon that the game was up. An hour after midnight, unseen, he gathered about him his staff and escort, rode north from the centre of the city through Las Palmas gate, and crossed the old Roman bridge over the Guadiana to take refuge in Fort San Cristobal, which guarded the right bank.
Sir Edward Lankester and his party had followed close after General Picton, waiting occasion for their services, but hoping it would not come. Hervey thought the general was tiring, for he did not curse and swear as before, neither did he drive the brigades to the breaches. The escalade had been exhausting and the butcher’s bill large. Once his men had forced the castle gates, the French had fled or laid down their arms, and those at the breaches would know to do likewise soon. The impulsion of the assault was gone, the bullet spent. He, General Thomas Picton, fifty-four years old, his wound now telling, had done everything Wellington had asked of him, and more than could have been expected. That he was still alive was a surprise to him, as it was to others. His staff wanted him to rest: it was now up to the regimental officers to rally their companies, round up the prisoners, deal with the wounded, collect the dead. What else was there for a divisional commander to do but rest?