The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard.

The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard.

‘Fight for your skin, froggy,’ said he.

Ah, it was so fine to have a horse between my thighs and a weapon in my grip.  I waved it above my head and shouted in my exultation.  The chief had come forward with that odious smiling face of his.

‘Your excellency will observe that this Frenchman is our prisoner,’ said he.

‘You are a rascally robber,’ said the Englishman, shaking his sword at him.  ’It is a disgrace to us to have such allies.  By my faith, if Lord Wellington were of my mind we would swing you up on the nearest tree.’

‘But my prisoner?’ said the brigand, in his suave voice.

‘He shall come with us to the British camp.’

‘Just a word in your ear before you take him.’

He approached the young officer, and then turning as quick as a flash, he fired his pistol in my face.  The bullet scored its way through my hair and burst a hole on each side of my busby.  Seeing that he had missed me, he raised the pistol and was about to hurl it at me when the English sergeant, with a single back-handed cut, nearly severed his head from his body.  His blood had not reached the ground, nor the last curse died on his lips, before the whole horde was upon us, but with a dozen bounds and as many slashes we were all safely out of the glade, and galloping down the winding track which led to the valley.

It was not until we had left the ravine far behind us and were right out in the open fields that we ventured to halt, and to see what injuries we had sustained.  For me, wounded and weary as I was, my heart was beating proudly, and my chest was nearly bursting my tunic to think that I, Etienne Gerard, had left this gang of murderers so much by which to remember me.  My faith, they would think twice before they ventured again to lay hands upon one of the Third Hussars.  So carried away was I that I made a small oration to these brave Englishmen, and told them who it was that they had helped to rescue.  I would have spoken of glory also, and of the sympathies of brave men, but the officer cut me short.

‘That’s all right,’ said he.  ‘Any injuries, Sergeant?’

‘Trooper Jones’s horse hit with a pistol bullet on the fetlock.’

’Trooper Jones to go with us.  Sergeant Halliday, with troopers Harvey and Smith, to keep to the right until they touch the vedettes of the German Hussars.’

So these three jingled away together, while the officer and I, followed at some distance by the trooper whose horse had been wounded, rode straight down in the direction of the English camp.  Very soon we had opened our hearts, for we each liked the other from the beginning.  He was of the nobility, this brave lad, and he had been sent out scouting by Lord Wellington to see if there were any signs of our advancing through the mountains.  It is one advantage of a wandering life like mine, that you learn to pick up those bits of knowledge which distinguish the man of the world.  I have, for example, hardly ever met a Frenchman who could repeat an English title correctly.  If I had not travelled I should not be able to say with confidence that this young man’s real name was Milor the Hon. Sir Russell, Bart., this last being an honourable distinction, so that it was as the Bart that I usually addressed him, just as in Spanish one might say ‘the Don.’

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The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.