flying distance of the Cape, Laurence had packed the
surgeons and the barest handful of men and supplies aboard
Temeraire's back, and taken them on ahead, that they might
begin this desperate business of attempting to find the
cure.
It had not been merely an excuse: their orders
unequivocally stated without the loss of a moment, and
Maximus's ragged, gurgling cough was a constant spur to
their sides. But in all honesty, neither had Laurence been
sorry in the least to go. The quarrel had not been made up,
at all.
Laurence had made attempts: once, three weeks into the
journey, he paused, belowdecks, as they passed one another
by chance, and removed his hat; but Riley only just touched
his own brim and shouldered by, a quick surge of red color
mounting in his cheeks. This had stiffened Laurence another
week, long enough to make him refuse an offer of a share in
one of the ship's milch goats, when the one which he had
provided himself ran dry and was sacrificed instead to the
dragons.
Then regret won out again, and he said to Catherine,
"Perhaps we ought to invite the captain and the ship's
officers to dinner?" on deck and perfectly audible to
anyone who might be curious, so when the invitation was
sent it could not be mistaken as anything but a peace
offering. But though Riley came, and his officers, he was
utterly withdrawn all the meal, scarcely answering except
when Catherine spoke to him and never lifting his head from
his plate. His officers, of course, would not speak without
he or another captain addressing them, so it was a strange
and silent affair with even the younger aviators stifled by
the uneasy sense that their manners did not suit the
formality of the occasion.
With such a standing quarrel among the officers, the men,
who at no time made any great secret of their dislike of
the dragons and their aviators, now made still less of one.
Their hostility was leashed tightly by their fear, of
course, even among those who had sailed with Laurence and
Temeraire on the previous voyage to China. Seven dragons
made a great difference from one, and the sudden violent
fits of coughing or sneezing which wracked the poor
creatures and ate at their strength only made them all the
more fearsomely unpredictable to the common sailors, who
could scarcely be made to ascend the foremast for its being
too close to the beasts.
What was worse, their officers corrected them none too
sharply for their hesitation, with predictable results: off
the coast of the Horn she missed stays, and had to be
hurriedly box-hauled, because the men were slow moving on
the dragondeck to shift over the jib and foretop-mast
staysail sheets. The maneuver jarred the dragons sadly
about, setting them to coughing, and then nuisance in a
moment nearly became tragedy: Nitidus went tumbling off
Temeraire's back and knocked Lily's head askew.
Her greasy tub of oiled sand slid with ponderous majesty
over the edge of the dragondeck, and plunged immediately
into the ocean. "Over the side, dearest, put your head over
the side," Catherine cried, her crew all of them to a man
rushing to fetch one of the other replacements from the
galley below. Lily had with a tremendous effort lunged
forward and now was clutching precariously at the edge of
the ship, her head thrust out over the water and her
shoulders curled up into great knots as she tried to hold
from coughing; drops spilled from her bone spurs and smoked
thin black hissing streams from the tarry sides of the
ship: the Allegiance was coming up through the wind, which
blew them back against the wood.
"Shall I try and carry you away from the ship?" Temeraire
asked anxiously, wings half-spread. "Will you climb on my
back?"-a dangerous maneuver at the best of times, with a
dragon not dripping poisonous acid from her jaws, if Lily
could even have managed to get upon him.
"Temeraire," Laurence called instead, "will you see if you
can break up the deck, here," and Temeraire turned his
head. Laurence had only meant him to try and wrench the
planks up, but instead Temeraire opened his jaws
experimentally over the place and gave a queer, throttled
version of his usual roar: four planks cracked, one opening
up along the ring-pattern of the wood and dropping a knot
straight down onto the startled heads of the galley cooks,
crouched and covering themselves in terror.
The space was nearly wide enough: with a few frantic
moments of work they had it enlarged, and Temeraire could
reach down and heave up the tub directly. Lily pressed her
jaw down into the sand and coughed and coughed, miserably
and long, the fit worsened by her having repressed it at
first. The oily sand hissed and smoked and stank with the
fumes of the acid, and the deck gaped with the splintered
hole, jagged edges threatening the dragons' bellies and
letting the steam out of the galley which kept them warm.
"A damned disgrace; we might as well be sailing on a
Frenchman," Laurence said, angrily and not low; it had
already been in his mind that tacking into the wind was
incautious for so large and ponderous a vessel, better
suited to old-fashioned wearing about, particularly when
weighted down as she was with so many dragons.
Riley had appeared on the quarterdeck, and across the ship
faintly drifted the sound of his furious voice, calling
Owens, the deck officer, to account, and the men to fresh
order. But Laurence's voice carried, too; there was a
momentary pause in Riley's tirade, and then it finished
more abruptly.
Riley made his stiff and formal apologies for the incident
only to Catherine, catching her as she came off the
dragondeck to go below, at the end of the day, in what
Laurence could only imagine a design to avoid going up to
speak to all of the aviators together. Her hair had come
loose from its plait, her face was smudged with smoke and
charred soot, and she had taken off her coat to pad under
Lily's jaw, where the bare edge of the tub had chafed. When
he stopped her, she straightened and put her hand through
her hair, loosening it entirely about her face, and his
speech, undoubtedly prepared with care, quite fell apart.
He only said, "I beg your pardon-deeply regret-"
incoherently, and looked all confusion, until she
interrupted tiredly, "Yes, of course, only pray not again,
and do let us have the carpenters make the repairs at once
tomorrow. Good-night," and brushed past him and went below.
She meant nothing by it but that she was tired, and wished
to go to sleep; but it looked cutting to one who did not
know her well enough to know her not in the least likely to
resort to social stratagem to express offense; and perhaps
Riley was ashamed. In any case, by morning all the ship's
carpenters were at work on the dragondeck before even the
aviators arose, with not a word of grumbling or fear even
if a great deal of sweating, particularly when the dragons
roused and began watching with close interest. By the end
of the day they had not only repaired the injury, but also
put in a smooth hatch, which could be opened up into the
galley if the operation required repeating.
"Well, I call that handsome," Catherine said, though
Laurence felt it small amends for the earlier neglect; and
when she added, "we ought to thank him for it," glancing at
him, he said nothing and made no shifts to take her place.
When she did go and ask Riley to dine again, this time
Laurence was careful to absent himself for the meal.
It was an end to any hope of resolution. The rest of the
journey passed in a cold distance between them, barely an
exchange of greetings and only the briefest gesture when
passing on deck or below: made rarer still, as the Navy
officers were quartered to the stern. There could be
nothing comfortable in traveling aboard a ship while at
unconcealed and bitter odds with her captain; the officers
likewise cold, if they were men who had never served with
Laurence himself, or stiff with discomfort otherwise. These
constant chafing indignities of cold treatment from the
ship's complement daily refreshed not only of the pain of
the quarrel but his resentment of Riley's anger.
There was one saving grace; thus isolated from the life of
the ship, and naturally brought into the closest contact
with his fellow captains of the Corps and their habits,
Laurence had sailed this time not merely in theory but in
practice as an aviator: a very different experience, and he
startled himself by preferring it. They had little
practical work to do; by noon the daily slaughter was over,
the dragondeck had been holystoned as best as could be
managed without shifting the dragons too much, the younger
officers examined on their schoolwork, and they were all at
liberty: as much liberty as could be had within the space
of a fully occupied dragondeck, and their half-a-dozen
small cabins below.
"Do you mind if we knock down the bulkhead, Laurence?"
Chenery had said, putting in his head scarcely three days
into the journey, as Laurence was writing letters in his
cabin: a habit he had much neglected on shore of late. "We
want to set up a card-table, but it is too wretchedly
cramped," an odd request, but he gave his assent; it was
pleasant to have the larger space restored, and to write
his letters with the companionable noise of their game and
conversation. It became so settled a practice among them
that the crewmen would have the bulkheads down without
asking, no sooner had they finished dressing; and restored
only for sleeping.
They took their meals almost always thus in common: a
convivial and noisy atmosphere, with Catherine presiding
and all talking across the table heedless of etiquette, the
junior officers squeezed in at the lower half in order of
their promptness in arrival rather than their rank; and
afterwards they gave the loyal toast standing on deck,
followed with coffee and cigars in the company of their
dragons, who were dosed with a posset against coughing, for
what little relief it gave them, in the cooler hours of the
evening. And after supper, he would read to Temeraire,
occasionally from the Latin or the French, with Temeraire
translating for the other dragons.
Laurence assumed Temeraire particularly unusual, among
dragons, for his scholarship; to better suit the rest, he
kept, at first, to their small store of literature, and
only then gave way to those mathematical and scientific
treatises which Temeraire doted upon and he himself found
hard going. Many of these interested the company as little
as Laurence had expected, but he was surprised in reading a
sadly wearing treatise upon geometry to be interrupted by
Messoria, who said sleepily, "Pray skip ahead a little; we
do not need it proven, anyone can tell it is perfectly
correct," referring to great circles. They had no
difficulty at all with the notion that a curved course
rather than a straight was the shortest distance for
sailing, which had confused Laurence himself for a good
week when he had been obliged to learn it for the
lieutenant's examination, in the Navy. The next evening he
was further interrupted in his reading by Nitidus and
Dulcia taking up an argument with Temeraire about Euclid's
postulates, one of which, referring to the principle of
parallel lines, they felt quite unreasonable.
"I am not saying it is correct," Temeraire protested, "but
you must accept it and go on: everything else in the
science is built upon it."
"But what use is it, then!" Nitidus said, getting agitated
enough to flutter his wings and bat his tail against
Maximus's side; Maximus murmured a small reproof without
quite waking. "Everything must be quite wrong if he begins
so."
"It is not that it is wrong," Temeraire said, "only it is
not so plain as the others-"
"It is wrong, it is perfectly wrong," Nitidus cried
decidedly, while Dulcia pointed out more calmly, "Only
consider a moment: if you should begin in Dover, and I a
little south of London, on the same latitude, and we should
then both fly straight northward, we should certainly meet
at the Pole if we did not mistake our course, so what on
earth is the sense of arguing that straight lines will
never meet?"
"Well," Temeraire said, scratching at his forehead, "that
is certainly true, but I promise you the postulate makes
good sense when you consider all the useful calculations
and mathematics which may be arrived at, starting with the
assumption. Why, all of the ship's design, which we are
upon, is at base worked out from it, I imagine," a piece of
intelligence which made nervous Nitidus give the Allegiance