likely not make either dragon out in the least. "Silly
oriental stuff, this roof, do you insist on having it so?"
"It is not silly oriental stuff at all," Temeraire said,
"it is very elegant: that design is my mother's own
pavilion, and it is in the best fashion."
"You will need linkboys on it all winter long to brush the
snow clear, and I will not give a brass farthing for the
gutters after two seasons," Royle said. "A good slate roof,
that is the thing, do you not agree with me, Mr. Cutter?"
Mr. Cutter had not the least opinion to offer, as he was
backed to the trees and looked ready to bolt, if Laurence
had not prudently stationed his ground crew around the
border of the clearing to forestall just such panicked
flight.
"I am very willing to be advised by you, sir, as to the
best plan of construction, and the most reasonable,"
Laurence said, while Royle blinked around himself looking
for a response. "Temeraire, our climate here is a good deal
wetter, and we must cut our cloth to suit our station."
"Very well, I suppose," Temeraire said, with a wistful eye
for the upturned roof-corners and the brightly painted
wood.
Iskierka meanwhile took inspiration, and began to plot the
acquisition of capital. "If I burn up a ship, is that good
enough, or must I bring it back?" she demanded, and began
her piratical career by presenting Granby with a small
fishing-boat, the next morning, which she had picked up
from Dover harbor during the night. "Well, you did not say
it must be a French ship," she said crossly, to their
recriminations, and curled up to sulk. Gherni was hastily
recruited to replace it under cover of darkness, the
following night, undoubtedly to the great puzzlement of its
temporarily bereft owner.
"Laurence, do you suppose that we should be able to get
more capital, by taking French ships," Temeraire asked,
with a thoughtfulness very alarming to Laurence, who had
just returned from dealing with this pretty piece of
confusion.
"The French ships-of-the-line are penned in their harbors
by the Channel blockade, thank Heaven, and we are not
privateers, to go plying the lanes for their shipping,"
Laurence said. "Your life is too valuable to be risked in
such a selfish endeavor; in any case, once you began to
behave in such an undisciplined manner, you may be sure
Arkady and his lot would follow your example at once, and
leave all Britain undefended, not to mention the
encouragement Iskierka would take."
"Whatever am I to do with her?" Granby said, wearily taking
a glass of wine with Laurence and Jane that evening, in the
officers' common room at the covert headquarters. "I
suppose it is being dragged hither and yon in the shell,
and all the fuss and excitement she has had; but that is no
excuse forever. I must manage her somehow, and I am at a
standstill. I would not be amazed to find the entire harbor
set alight one morning, because she took it into her head
that we would not have to sit about defending the city if
it were all burnt up; I cannot even make her sit still long
enough to get her under full harness."
"Never mind; I will come by tomorrow, and see what I can
do," Jane said, pushing the bottle over to him again. "She
is a little young for work, by all the authorities, but I
think her energy had better be put to use than go in all
this fretting. Have you chosen your lieutenants, Granby?"
"I will have Lithgow, for my first, if you've no objection,
and Harper for a second, to act as captain of the riflemen
also," he said. "I don't like to take too many men, when we
don't know what her growth will be like."
"You do not like to turn them off later, you mean, when
they like as not cannot get another post," Jane said
gently, "and I know it will be hard if it comes to that;
but we cannot shortchange her, not with her so wild. Take
Row also, as captain of the bellmen. He is old enough to
retire if he must be turned off, and a good steady
campaigner, who will not blink at her starts."
Granby nodded a little, his head bowed, and the next
morning Jane came to Iskierka's clearing in great state,
with all her medals and even her great plumed hat, which
aviators scarcely wore, a gold-plated saber and pistols on
her belt. Granby had assembled all his new crew, and they
saluted her with a great noise of arms, Iskierka nearly
coiling herself into knots with excitement, and the ferals
and even Temeraire peering over the trees to watch with
interest.
"Well, Iskierka: your captain tells me that you are ready
for service," Jane said, putting her hat under her arm to
look sternly at the little Kazilik, "but what are these
reports I hear of you, that you will not mind orders? We
cannot send you into battle if you cannot follow orders."
"Oh! it is not true!" Iskierka said. "I can follow orders
as well as anyone, it is only no one will give me any good
ones, and I am only told to sit, and not to fight, and to
eat three times a day; I do not want any more stupid cows!"
she added smolderingly; the ferals, hearing this translated
for them by their own handful of officers, set up a low
squabbling murmur of disbelief.
"It is not only the pleasant orders we must follow, but the
tiresome ones as well," Jane said, when the noise had died
down. "Do you suppose Captain Granby likes to be forever
sitting in this clearing, waiting for you to grow more
settled? Perhaps he would rather go back to service with
Temeraire, and have some fighting himself."
Iskierka's eyes went platter-wide, and she hissed from all
her spikes like a furnace; in an instant she had thrown a
pair of jealous coils around Granby, which bid fair to boil
him like a lobster in steam. "He would not! You would not,
at all, would you?" she appealed to him. "I will fight just
as well as Temeraire, I promise; and I will even obey the
stupidest orders; at least, if I may have some pleasant
ones also," she qualified hastily.
"I am sure she will mind better in future, sir," Granby
managed himself, coughing, his hair already plastered down
soaking against his forehead and neck. "Pray don't fret; I
would never leave you, only I am getting wet," he added
plaintively, to her.
"Hm," Jane said, with an air of frowning consideration.
"Since Granby speaks for you, I suppose we will give you
your chance," she said, at last, "and here you may have
your first orders, Captain, if she will let you come for
them and, to be sure, stand still for her harness."
Iskierka immediately let him loose and stretched herself
out for the ground crew, only craning her neck a little to
see the red-sealed and yellow-tasseled packet, a formality
often dispensed with in the Corps, which directed them in
very ornate and important language to do nothing more than
run a quick hour's patrol down to Guernsey and back. "And
you may take her by that old heap of rubble left at Castle
Cornet, where the gunpowder blew up the tower, and tell her
it is a French outpost, so she may flame it from aloft,"
Jane added to Granby, in an undertone not meant for
Iskierka's ears.
Iskierka's harness was indeed a great deal of trouble to
arrange, as the spines were placed quite randomly, and the
frequent issuing of steam made her hide slick: an
improvised collection of short straps and many buckles,
wretchedly easy to tangle, and she could not entirely be
blamed for growing tired of the process. But the promise of
coming action and the observing crowd made her more
patient; at length she was properly rigged out, and Granby
with relief said, "There, it is quite secure; now try and
see if you can shake any of it loose, dear one."
She writhed and beat her wings quite satisfactorily,
twisting herself this way and that to inspect the harness.
"You are supposed to say, All lies well, if you are
comfortable," Temeraire whispered loudly to her, after she
had been engaged in this sport for several minutes.
"Oh, I see," she said, and settling again announced, "All
lies well; now we shall go."
In this way she was at least a little reformed; no one
would have called her temper obliging, certainly, and she
invariably stretched her patrols farther afield than Granby
would have them, in hopes of meeting some enemy more
challenging than an abandoned old fortification, or a
couple of birds. "But at least she will take a little
training, and eats properly, which I call a victory, for
now," Granby said. "And after all, as much a fright she
gives us, she'll give the Frogs a worse; Laurence, do you
know, we talked to the fellows at Castle Cornet, and they
set up a bit of sail for her: she can set it alight from
eighty yards. Twice the range of a Flamme-de-Gloire, and
she can go at it for five minutes straight; I don't
understand how she gets her breath while she is at it."
They had indeed some trouble in keeping her out of direct
combat, for meanwhile the French were continuing their
harassment and scouting of the coast, with ever-increasing
aggression. Jane used the sick dragons more heavily for
patrol, to spare Temeraire and the ferals: they, instead,
sat most of the day waiting on the cliffs for one warning
flare or another to go up, or listening with pricked ears
for the report of a signal-gun, before they dashed
frantically to meet another incursion. In the space of two
weeks, Temeraire skirmished four times more with small
groups, and once Arkady and a few of his band, sent
experimentally on patrol by themselves while Temeraire
snatched a few more hours of sleep, just barely turned back
a Pou-de-Ciel who had daringly tried to slip past the shore
batteries at Dover, less than a mile from a clear view of
the quarantine-grounds.
The ferals came back from their narrow but solitary victory
delighted with themselves, and Jane with quick cleverness
took the occasion to present Arkady ceremonially with a
long length of chain: almost worthless, being made only of
brass, with a large dinner-platter inscribed with his name
for a medal, but polished to a fine golden shine and
rendering Arkady for once speechless with amazement as it
was fastened about his neck. For only a moment: then he
burst forth in floods of caroling joy, and insisted on
having every single one of his fellows inspect his prize;
nor did Temeraire escape this fate. He indeed grew a little
bristling, and withdrew in dignity to his own clearing to
polish his breastplate more vigorously than usual.
"You cannot compare the two," Laurence said cautiously, "it
is only a trinket, to make him complacent, and encourage
them in their efforts."
"Oh, certainly," Temeraire said, very haughty, "mine is
much nicer; I do not in the least want anything so common
as brass." After a moment he added, muttering, "But his is
very large."
"Cheap at the price," Jane said the next day, when Laurence
came to report on a morning for once uneventful: the ferals
more zealous than ever, and rather disappointed not to find
more enemies than the reverse. "They come along handsomely:
just as we had hoped." But she spoke tiredly; looking into
her face, Laurence poured her a small glass of brandy and
brought it to her at the window, where she was standing to
look out at the ferals, presently cavorting in mid-air over
their clearing after their dinner. "Thank you, I will." She
took the glass, but did not drink at once. "Conterrenis has
gone," she said abruptly, "the first Longwing we have lost;
it was a bloody business."
She sat down all together, very heavily, and put her head
forward. "He took a bad chill and suffered a haemorrhage in
the lungs, the surgeons tell me. At any rate, he could not
stop coughing, and so his acid came and came; it began at
last to build up on the spurs, and sear his own skin. It
laid his jaw bare to the bone." She paused. "Gardenley shot
him this morning."
Laurence took the chair beside her, feeling wholly
inadequate to the task of offering any comfort. After a
little while she drank the brandy and set down her glass,
and turned back to the maps to discuss the next day's
patrolling.
He went away from her ashamed of his dread of the party,
now only a few days' hence, and determined to put himself
forward with no regard for his own mortification; if for
the least chance of improving the conditions of the sick.
...and I hope you will permit me to suggest [Wilberforce
wrote] that any oriental touch to your wardrobe, only a
little one, which might at a glance set you apart, would be
most useful. I am happy to report that we have engaged some
Chinese as servants for the evening, by offering a good sum
in the ports, where occasionally a few of them may be found