sleep gone all to pieces, taken half in wine at Brodin's
table and half during the early hours of the morning, and
crept through his day, supervising the useless harness-work
and lessons for Emily and Dyer, until it was time to go
again. They repeated the engagement twice more, and then on
the fifth day, while he sat lumpen and considering the
chessboard dully, Brodin raised his head and said to
Laurence abruptly, "Has he not yet begun to cough?"
"Perhaps my throat is a little sore," Temeraire said
judiciously. Laurence was sitting, his head bent nearly to
his knees, scarcely able to support the weight of hope
resting so unexpectedly upon his shoulders, while Keynes
and Dorset clambered over Temeraire like monkeys: they had
listened to his lungs with a great paper cone placed
against the chest, to which they put their ears, and stuck
their heads in his jaws to examine his tongue, which
remained a healthy and unspotted red.
"We must cup him, I think," Keynes said at last, turning to
his medical satchel.
"But I am perfectly well," Temeraire objected, sidling away
from the approach of the wicked curved blade of the
catling. "It does not seem to me that one ought to be
forced to take medicine when one is not sick; anyone would
think you had no other work to do," he said, aggrieved, and
the operation was only achieved by persuading him of the
noble service which it should be, to the sick dragons.
It yet required a dozen attempts: he kept withdrawing his
leg at the last moment, until Laurence convinced him not to
look, but to keep his eyes turned in quite the opposite
direction until the ready basin held by Dorset was filled,
and Keynes said, "There," and clapped the cautery, waiting
ready in the fire, to the nick at once.
They would have carried the steaming bowlful of dark blood
away without another word, if Laurence had not chased after
them to demand their verdict: "No, of course he is not
sick, and does not mean to be, so far as I can tell,"
Keynes said. "I will say no more at present; we have work
to do," and went away, leaving Laurence almost ill himself
with reaction; he felt a man who had stepped out of the
shadow of the gallows, two weeks of anxious dread giving
way quite suddenly to this almost shattering relief. It was
very difficult not to yield to the force of his emotions,
with Temeraire saying, "It is not very nice to be cut open,
and I do not see what good it will do at all," nosing
experimentally at the tiny seared-shut wound, and then
nudging him in alarum. "Laurence? Laurence, pray do not
worry; it does not hurt so much, and look, it has already
stopped bleeding."
Jane was writing papers before Keynes had half made her his
report, her face lit with energy and purpose, the grey
shroud of sorrow and weariness fully visible only now with
its removal.
"Let us not have any rioting, if you please," Keynes said
almost angrily. His hands were still gory with blood
crusted under the fingernails; he had come straight from
his work, in making comparisons of the samples of blood
beneath his microscope. "There is no justification for it.
It may very well be merely a difference in physiognomy, or
an individual trait. I have said only there is the merest
possibility, worthy of a trial-worthy of a small trial,
with no expectations-" His protests were useless: she did
not pause for a moment. He looked as though he would have
liked to snatch away her pen.
"Nonsense; a little riot is just what we need," Jane said,
without even looking up, "and you will write the most
damned encouraging report ever seen, if you please; you
will give no excuses to the Admiralty."
"I am not speaking to the Admiralty at present," Keynes
said, "and I do not care to give unfounded hopes. In all
likelihood, he has never had the disease-it is some natural
resistance, unique to his breed; and the cold which he
suffered last year merely coincidence."
The hope was indeed a very tenuous one. Temeraire had been
ill en route to China, briefly, the sickness settling
itself out of hand after little more than a week in
Capetown, and so dismissed at the time and afterwards as a
mere trifling cold. Only his present resistance to the
disease had given Keynes the suspicion that the illnesses
might perhaps have been one and the same. But even if he
were not mistaken, there might be no cure; if there were a
cure, it might not be easily found; if it were found, still
it might not be brought back in time to save many of the
sick.
"And it is by no means the least likely possibility,"
Keynes added peevishly, "that there may be no curative
agent whatsoever; many a consumptive has found a temporary
relief in warmer climes."
"Whether the climate or the waters or the food, I do not
care two pins; if I must ship every dragon in England to
Africa by boat to take the cure, you may be sure I will do
it," Jane said. "I am almost as glad to find some cause to
lift our spirits again as for the chance of a cure, and you
will do nothing to depress them again," Little hope riches
enough to those who until lately had none, and worth
pursuing with every means at hand. "Laurence, you and
Temeraire must go, though I hate to give you up again," she
added, handing him his orders, hastily written and scarcely
legible, "but we must rely on him to remember best whatever
might have suited his taste, and be the foundation of the
cure. The ferals come along as well as could be hoped,
thank Heavens, and with this latest spy captured, perhaps
we will be lucky, and Bonaparte will not be in such a hurry
to send good dragons after bad.
"And I am sending along all your formation," she continued.
"They are in urgent need, having been among the first to
take sick; if you bring them back well, which God willing,
you can hold the Channel while we treat the others."
"Then I may see Maximus and Lily again, now," Temeraire
said jubilantly, and would not wait, but insisted that they
go at once: they had scarcely set down outside the barren
clearing where Maximus slept, before Berkley came striding
out to them and seizing Laurence by the arms nearly shook
him, saying ferociously, "For God's sake, say it is true,
and not some damned fairy-tale," and he turned aside and
covered his face when Laurence gave his assent.
Laurence pretended not to see. "Temeraire, I believe your
harness is loose, there over the left flank, will you look
at it?" he said firmly, when Temeraire would have kept
peering at Berkley's bowed shoulders.
"But Mr. Fellowes was working on it only last week,"
Temeraire said, diverted, nosing over it experimentally. He
delicately took up a bit of the harness between his teeth
and tugged on it. "No, it lies perfectly well; it does not
feel the least bit loose at all."
"Here, let's have a look at you," Berkley interrupted
brusquely, having mastered himself. "A good twelve feet
more since you sailed away to China, no? And you look well,
Laurence; I expected to see you ragged as a tinker."
"You would certainly have found me so, when we had first
returned," Laurence answered, gripping his hand. He could
not return any compliment; Berkley had put off some six
stone of weight, at first glance, and it did not suit him;
his jowls hung loose from his cheeks.
Maximus looked still more dreadfully altered, the great
scaly red-and-gold hide sagging in folds around the base of
the neck, and forward of his chest with the massive
fretwork of his spine and shoulders holding it up like
tent-poles, and what Laurence supposed to be the air-sacs
swollen and bulging from his wasted sides. His eyes were
slitted nearly shut, and a thin raspy noise of breathing
issued from his cracked-open jaws, a trail of drool
puddling beneath them; the nostrils were caked over with
dried flaking effluvia.
"He will wake up in a bit, and be glad to see you both,"
Berkley said gruffly, "but I don't like to wake him when he
can get any rest. The blasted cold will not let him sleep
properly, and he don't eat a quarter of what he should."
Temeraire, having followed them into the clearing, made no
sound, but crouched himself down, his neck curved back upon
itself like a wary snake, and sat there utterly still, his
wide unblinking gaze fixed on Maximus, who slept on,
rasping, rasping. Laurence and Berkley conversed in low
voices, discussing the sea-voyage. "Less than three months
to the Cape," Laurence said, "to judge by our last voyage;
and we had some fighting off the Channel to see us off,
which did not speed matters."
"However long, better on a ship to some purpose than lying
about like this, if we all drown at it," Berkley said. "We
will be packed by morning, and the lummox will eat properly
for once if I have to march the cows down his gullet."
"Are we going somewhere?" Maximus said sleepily, in a voice
much thickened, and turned his head aside to cough low and
deep, several times, and spit into a small leaf-covered pit
dug for the purpose. He rubbed each of his eyes against his
foreleg, in turn, to clear away the mucus, and then seeing
Temeraire slowly brightened, his head rising. "You are
back; was China very interesting?" he asked.
"It was, oh, it was, but," Temeraire burst out, "I am sorry
I was not at home, while all of you were sick; I am so very
sorry," and hung his head, miserably.
"Why it is only a cold," Maximus said, only to be
interrupted by another bout of coughing, after which he
added regardless, "I will be perfectly hearty soon, I am
sure; only I am tired." He closed his eyes almost directly
he had said this, and fell again into a light stupor.
"They have the worst of it," Berkley said heavily, seeing
Laurence away; Temeraire had crept very quietly out of the
clearing again, so they might go aloft without disturbing
Maximus. "All the Regal Coppers. It is the damned weight;
they do not eat, so they cannot keep up their muscle, and
then one day they cannot breathe. Four lost already, and
Laetificat will not see summer, unless we find your cure."
He did not say that Maximus would follow soon after, if not
precede her; he did not need to.
"We shall find it," Temeraire said fiercely, "we shall, we
shall, we shall."
"I hope to find you well, and your charge, when we return,"
Laurence said, shaking Granby's hand; behind him a great
bustle and commotion were under way as the crew made their
final preparations: they would depart tomorrow on the
evening tide, the wind permitting, and needed to be well
aboard by morning, with so many dragons and their crews to
be stowed. Emily and Dyer were busily folding his clothing
into his battered old sea-chest, which had only just
survived their most recent voyage, and Ferris was saying
sharply, "Don't think I do not see you with that bottle,
Mr. Allen; you may pour it out directly, do you hear?"
He had a great many new men aboard, replacements for the
unhappy number of his crew who had been lost in their
year's absence. Jane had sent them all on trial, for his
approval, but in the torment and anxiety of the past two
weeks, and the heavy work of those before, he had grown
only indifferently acquainted with them; now suddenly there
was no more time, and he must make do with whomever had
been given him. He was not a little sorry to be making his
farewells to a man whose character he knew and understood,
and upon whom he would have been happy to rely.
"I expect you will find us all to pieces," Granby said,
"with half of England on fire, and Arkady and his lot
celebrating in the ruins, roasting cows; it will be
wonderful otherwise."
"Tell Arkady from me that they are all to mind properly,"
Temeraire said, craning his head over carefully, so as not
to dislodge the harness-men scurrying upon his back, "and
that we will certainly be back very soon, so he need not
think he has everything all to himself, even if he does
have a medal now," he finished, still disgruntled.
They were prolonging their conversation over a cup of tea
when a young ensign came for Laurence. "Begging your
pardon, sir, but there is a gentleman to see you, at the
headquarters," the boy said, and added, in tones of
amazement, "a black gentleman," so a very puzzled Laurence
had to say his last farewells more abruptly and go.
He came into the officers' common room; there was no
difficulty in picking out his guest, although Laurence
struggled for a moment before recalling his name: Reverend
Erasmus, the missionary whom Wilberforce had presented to
him, at the party two weeks before-had it been so short a
time? "You are very welcome, sir; but I am afraid you find