a very doubtful eye.
"But I suppose," Temeraire continued, "that we might try
beginning without the assumption, or the contrary one-" and
they put their heads together over Temeraire's sand-table,
and began to work out their own geometry, discarding those
principles which seemed to them incorrect, and made a game
of developing the theory; which entertained them a good
deal more than most amusements Laurence had ever seen
dragons engage in, with those listening applauding
particularly inventive notions as if they were
performances.
Shortly it became quite an all-encompassing project,
engaging the attention of the officers as well as the
dragons; the scant handful of aviators with good penmanship
Laurence was soon forced to press into service, for the
dragons began to expand upon their cherished theory quicker
than he alone could take their dictation, partly out of an
intellectual curiosity, and partly because they very much
liked the physical representation of their work, which they
insisted on having separately copied out one for each of
them, and treated in much the same way that Temeraire
treated his much-beloved jewels.
"I will make you a handsome edition of it, bound up like
that nice book which you see Laurence reads from," Laurence
found Catherine saying to Lily, shortly, "if only you will
eat something more every day: here, a few more bites of
this tunny," a bribery which succeeded where almost all
else had failed.
"Well, perhaps a little more," Lily said, with a heroic
air, adding, "and may it have gold hinges, too, like that
one?"
All this society Laurence might have enjoyed, though a
little ashamed to find himself preferring what he could not
in justice call anything but a very ramshackle way of going
on. But for all their courage and good humor, improved by
the interest of the sea-voyage, the dragons still coughed
their lungs away little by little. What would have
otherwise seemed a pleasure-cruise carried on under a
ceaseless pall, where each morning the aviators came on the
deck and put their crews to work washing away the
bloodstained relics of the night's misery, and each night
lay in their cabins trying to sleep to the rattling wet
accompaniment of the slow, weary hacking above. All their
noise and gaiety had a forced and hectic edge, defiance of
fear as much as real pleasure: fiddling as Rome burned.
The sentiment was not confined to the aviators, either.
Riley might have had other excuses besides the political
for preferring not to have Reverend Erasmus aboard, for the
ship was already loaded besides him with a large number of
passengers, most of them forced upon Riley by influence
with the Admiralty, and well-found in the article of
luggage. Some number departed at Madeira, to take other
ship for the West Indies or Halifax from there, but others
were bound for the Cape as settlers, and still others going
on to India: an uneasy migration driven, Laurence was
forced to suspect, little though he liked to think so ill
of perfect strangers, by a dread of invasion.
He had some evidence for his suspicion; the passengers,
when he chanced to overhear them speaking as they took the
air on the windward side of the quarterdeck, spoke
wistfully amongst themselves of the airy chances of peace,
and pronounced Bonaparte's name with fear. There was little
direct communication, separated as the dragondeck was, nor
did the passengers make much effort to become friendly, but
on a few occasions, Reverend Erasmus joined Laurence for
dinner. Erasmus did not carry tales, of course, but asked,
"Captain, is it your opinion that invasion is a settled
certainty?" with a curiosity which to Laurence spoke of its
being a topic much discussed among the passengers with whom
they ordinarily dined.
"I must call it settled that Bonaparte would like to try,"
Laurence said, "and being a tyrant he may do as he likes
with his own army. But if he is so outrageously bold as to
make a second attempt where the first failed so thoroughly,
I have every confidence he will be pushed off once again,"
a patriotic exaggeration; but he had no notion of
disparaging their chances publicly.
"I am glad to hear you say so," Erasmus said, and added
after a moment thoughtfully, "It must be a confirmation of
the doctrine of original sin, I think, that all the noble
promise of liberty and brotherhood which the revolution in
France first brought up to light should have so quickly
been drowned by blood and treasure. Man begins in
corruption, and cannot achieve grace striving only for
victory over the injustices of the world, without striving
also for God, and obeying His commandments."
Laurence a little awkwardly offered Erasmus the dish of
stewed plums, in lieu of an agreement which should have
felt dishonest; he was uneasily aware that he had not heard
services for the better part of a year; barring the Sunday
services on board, where Mr. Britten, the ship's official
chaplain, droned through his sermon with a notable lack of
either inspiration or sobriety: and for those, Laurence had
often to sit beside Temeraire, to keep him from
interrupting.
"Do you suppose, sir," Laurence ventured instead to ask,
"that dragons are subject to original sin?" This question
had from time to time preyed upon him; he had quite failed
to interest Temeraire in the Bible. Scripture rather
induced the dragon to pursue such thoroughly blasphemous
lines of questioning that Laurence had very soon given it
up entirely, from a superstitious feeling that this would
only invite greater disaster.
Erasmus considered, and gave it as his opinion that they
were not, "For surely the Bible would mention it, if any
had eaten of the fruit besides Adam and Eve; and though
resembling the serpent in some particulars, the Lord said
unto the serpent that upon its belly it should go, whereas
dragons are as creatures of the air, and cannot be
considered under the same interdiction," he added
convincingly, so it was with a heart lightened that
Laurence could return to the deck that evening, to once
again try and persuade Temeraire to take a little more to
eat.
Though Temeraire had not taken sick, he grew limp and faded
in sympathy with the other dragons' illness, and, ashamed
of his appetite when his companions could not share in it,
began to disdain his food. Laurence coaxed and cajoled with
little effect, until Gong Su came up to him on deck and in
flowery Chinese of which Laurence understood one word in
six, but Temeraire certainly followed entire, offered his
resignation in shame that his cooking was no longer
acceptable. He dwelt at elaborate length upon the stain on
his honor and that of his teacher and his family, which he
would never be able to repair, and declared his intentions
to somehow return home at the nearest opportunity, so that
he might remove himself from the scene of failure.
"But it is very good, I promise, only I am not hungry just
now," Temeraire protested, which Gong Su refused to credit
as anything but a polite excuse, and added, "Good cooking
ought to make you hungry, even if you are not!"
"But I am, only-" Temeraire finally admitted, and looked
sadly at his sleeping companions, and sighed when Laurence
gently said, "My dear, you do them no good by starving
yourself, and indeed some harm; you must be at your full
strength and healthy when we reach the Cape."
"Yes, but it feels quite wrong, to be eating and eating
when everyone else has stopped and gone to sleep; it feels
as though I am sneaking food, behind their backs, which
they do not know about," Temeraire said, a perplexing way
of viewing the situation, as he had never shown the least
compunction about out-eating his companions while they were
awake, or jealously guarding his own meals from the
attention of other dragons. But after this admission, they
gave him his food in smaller portions throughout the day,
while the other dragons were wakeful; and Temeraire
exhibited no more very extreme reluctance, even though the
others still refused any more food themselves.
But he was not happy with their situation, any more than
was Laurence; and grew still less so as they traveled
southward, Riley's caution keeping them near the shore.
They did not put in at Cape Coast, or at Louanda or
Benguela; and from a distance these ports looked gaily
enough, full of white sails clustering together. But there
was reminder enough at hand of their grim commerce, the
ocean being full of sharks that came eagerly leaping to the
ship's wake, trained like dogs by the common passage of
slave-ships to and from those harbors.
"What city is that?" Mrs. Erasmus asked him abruptly. She
had come to take the air with her daughters, who were
parading themselves decorously back and forth under a
shared parasol, for once unattended by their mother.
"Benguela," Laurence said, surprised to be addressed; in
nearly two months of sailing she had never spoken to him
direct before. She was never forward on any occasion, but
rather in the habit of keeping her head bowed and her voice
low; her English still heavily accented with Portuguese
when she used it at all. He knew from Erasmus that she had
gained her manumission only a little while before her
marriage; not through the indulgence of her master but by
his ill-fortune. That gentleman, a landowner from Brazil,
had gone on business to France, passenger on a merchant
ship taken in the Atlantic; she and his other slaves had
been made free, when the prize had been brought in to
Portsmouth.
She was drawn up very tall and straight, both her hands
gripping the rail, though she had excellent sea-legs and
scarcely needed the support; and she stood a long time
looking there, even after the little girls had grown tired
of their promenade and abandoned both parasol and decorum
to go scrambling over the ropes with Emily and Dyer.
A great many slave-ships went to Brazil from Benguela,
Laurence recalled; he did not ask her, but offered her
instead his arm to go below again, when at last she turned
away, and some refreshment. She refused both, with only a
shake of her head, and called her children back to order
with a quick low word; they left off their game, abashed,
and she took them down below.
Past Benguela there were no more slave ports, at least;
both from the hostility of the natives to the trade, and
the inhospitable coastline, but the oppressive atmosphere
on board was no less. Together Laurence and Temeraire often
went aloft to escape, flying in closer to shore than Riley
would risk the Allegiance and pacing her from there, so
they might watch the African coastline wear away: here
impenetrably forested, here spilling yellow rock and yellow
sand into the ocean, here the shore crammed with lazy
seals; then the long stretch of endless orange desert,
bound regularly in thick banks of fog, which made the
sailors wary. Almost hourly the officer of the watch called
for them to take soundings of the ocean floor, voices
muffled and oddly far-away in the mist. Very occasionally a
few black men might be glimpsed on shore, observing them in
turn with wary attention; but for the most part there was
only silence, watchful silence, except for the shrieking of
birds.
"Laurence, surely we can reach Capetown from here, quicker
than the ship can go," Temeraire said at last, grown weary
of the oppressive atmosphere. They were still nearly a
month's sailing from that port, however, and the country
too dangerous to risk a long overland passage. The interior
of the continent was notoriously impenetrable and savage,
and had without a trace swallowed whole parties of men;
more than one courier-dragon tempted off the coastal route
had likewise vanished. But the suggestion appealed, with
its prospects of quitting sooner the unhappy conditions of
the voyage, and advancing more quickly the crucial research
which was their purpose.
Laurence persuaded himself that he should not be derelict
in going on early, once they should be near enough to make
the flight one which might be accomplished in a day, if a
strenuous one. With this incentive, Temeraire was easily
induced to eat properly and go for long and uninteresting
circular flights around the ship, to build up his strength;
and no one else raised objection to their departure. "If
you are quite sure you will reach in safety," Catherine
said, with only the most obligatory reluctance; none of the
aviators could help but share the urgent desire to have the
work begun, now they were so close.
"You shall of course do as you please," Riley said, when