officially informed, without looking Laurence in the face;
and bent his head down again over his maps to pretend to be
making calculations: a pretense which succeeded not at all,
Laurence being perfectly aware that Riley could not do so
much as a sum in his head without scratching it out on
paper.
"I will not take all the crew," Laurence told Ferris, who
looked dismal, but even he did not protest over-much.
Keynes and Dorset would come, of course, and Gong Su: the
cooks in the employ of Prince Yongxing, on their previous
visit, had experimented with great enthusiasm on the local
produce, which thus formed one of the surgeons' foremost
hopes of reproducing the cure.
"Do you suppose you can prepare these ingredients in the
same way as they might have used?" Laurence asked Gong Su.
"I am not an Imperial chef!" Gong Su protested, and to
Laurence's dismay explained that the style of cooking in
the south of China, whence he hailed, was entirely
different. "I will try my poor best, but it is not to be
compared; although northern cooking is not very good
usually," he added, in a burst of parochialism.
Roland and Dyer came to be assistants to him, and run and
fetch in the markets, their slight weight a negligible
burden; for the rest, Laurence packed aboard a chest of
gold, and took little more baggage than his sword and
pistols and a pair of clean shirts and stockings. "I do not
feel the weight at all; I am sure I could fly for days,"
Temeraire said, grown still more urgent: Laurence had
forced himself to let caution keep them back a full week,
so they were now less than two hundred miles distant: still
a desperately long single day's flight, but not an
impossible one.
"If the weather holds until morning," Laurence said.
One final invitation he made, which he did not think would
be accepted, to Reverend Erasmus. "Captain Berkley begs me
inform you he would be happy if you continued aboard as his
guests," Laurence said, rather more elegantly than
Berkley's, "Yes, of course. Damned formal nonsense; we are
not going to put them overboard, are we?" could be said to
have deserved. "But of course you are my personal guests,
and welcome to join me, if you would prefer it."
"Hannah, perhaps you would rather not?" Erasmus said,
looking to his wife.
She lifted her head from her small text on the native
language, whose phrases she was forming silently with her
mouth. "I do not mind," she said; and indeed climbed up to
Temeraire's back without any sign of alarm, settling the
girls around her and chiding them firmly for their own
anxiety.
"We will see you in Capetown," Laurence told Ferris, and
saluted Harcourt; with one grateful leap they were gone,
flying and flying over clean ocean, with a good fresh wind
at their heels.
A day and a night of flying had seen them coming in over
the bay at dawn: the flat-topped fortress wall of Table
Mount standing dusty and golden behind the city, light
spilling onto the striated rock face and the smaller jagged
sentinel peaks to either side. The bustling town crammed
full the crescent slice of level ground at the base of the
slope, with the Castle of Good Hope at its heart upon the
shore, its outer walls forming a star-shape from above with
the butter-yellow pentagon of the fort nested within,
gleaming in the early morning as her cannon fired the
welcoming salute to leeward.
The parade grounds where Temeraire was lodged were beside
the castle, only a few dragon-lengths from where the ocean
came grumbling onto the sandy beach: a distance
inconvenient when the wind was blowing too strongly at high
tide, but which otherwise made a pleasant relief against
the summer heat. Although the courtyard enclosed within the
fort itself was large enough to house a few dragons in
times of emergency, it would not have made a comfortable
situation, either for the soldiers stationed in the castle
barracks, or for Temeraire; and happily, the grounds had
been much improved since their last visit breaking their
journey to China. While the couriers no longer flew routes
this far south, too remote for their failing strength, a
fast frigate had been sent on ahead of the Allegiance with
dispatches to warn the acting-governor, Lieutenant-General
Grey, both of their arrival and, secretly, of their urgent
purpose. He had widened the grounds to house all the
formation, and put up a low fence around.
"I am not afraid you will be pestered; but it may keep away
prying eyes, and stifle some of this damned noise," he said
to Laurence, referring to the protests of the colonists at
their arrival. "It is just as well that you have come on
ahead: it will give them some time to get over the notion,
before we have seven dragons all in a lump. The way they
wail, you would think they had never heard of a formation
at all."
Grey had himself reached the Cape only in January; he was
the lieutenant-governor, and would soon be superceded by
the arrival of the Earl of Caledon, so that his position,
with all the awkwardness of a temporary situation, lacked a
certain degree of authority; and he was much beset by cares
not a little increased by their arrival. The townspeople
disliked the British occupation, and the settlers, who had
established their farms and estates farther out into the
countryside and down the coast, despised it and indeed
anything in the shape of government that would have
interfered with their independence, which they considered
dearly and sufficiently paid for by the risk which they
ran, in pressing the frontier into the wild interior of the
continent.
The advent of a formation of dragons was viewed by them all
with the deepest suspicion, especially as they were not to
be permitted to know the real purpose. Thanks to much slave
labor cheaply acquired, in the earlier years of the colony,
the settlers had come to disdain manual labor for
themselves and their families; and their farms and
vineyards and herds had expanded to take advantage of the
many hands which they could forcibly put to the work.
Slaves were not exported from the Cape; they wanted rather
more slaves than they could get: Malay by preference, or
purchased from West Africa, but not disdaining, either, the
unhappy servitude of the native Khoi tribesmen, who if they
were not precisely slaves were very little less
constrained, and their wages unworthy of the term.
Having thus arranged to be outnumbered, the colonists now
exerted themselves to maintain the serenity of their
establishments by harsh restrictions and an absolutely free
hand with punishment. A resentment yet lingered that under
the previous British government, the torture of slaves had
been forbidden; on the further outskirts of the town might
yet be observed the barbaric custom of leaving the corpse
of a hanged slave upon his gibbet, as an illustrative
example to his fellows of the cost of disobedience. The
colonists were well informed, also, of the campaign against
the trade, which they viewed with indignation as likely to
cut them off from additional supply; and Lord Allendale's
name was not unknown to them as a mover of the cause.
"And if that were not enough," Grey said tiredly, when they
had been in residence a few days, "you brought this damned
missionary with you. Now half the town thinks the slave
trade has been abolished, the other half that their slaves
are all to be set free at once and given license to murder
them in their beds; and all are certain you are here to
enforce it. I must ask you to present me to the fellow; he
must be warned to keep more quiet. It is a miracle he has
not been already stabbed in the street."
Erasmus and his wife had taken over a small establishment
of the London Missionary Society, lately abandoned by the
death of its previous tenant, a victim of malarial fevers,
and in far from an ordered state. There was neither a
school nor a church building, yet, only a mortally plain
little house, graced by a few depressed and straggling
trees, and a bare plot of land around it meant for a
vegetable-garden, where Mrs. Erasmus was presently laboring
in the company of her daughters and several of the young
native women, who were being shown how to stake tomato
plants.
She stood up when Laurence and Grey came into view, and
with a quiet word left the girls at work while she led the
two of them inside the house: built in the Dutch style, the
walls made of thick clay, with broad wooden beams exposed
above supporting the thatched roof. The windows and door
all stood open to let air the smell of fresh whitewash;
inside the house was only a single long room, divided into
three, and Erasmus was seated in the midst of a dozen
native boys scattered around on the floor, showing them the
letters of the alphabet upon a slate.
He rose to greet them and sent the boys outside to play, an
eruption of gleeful yelling drifting in directly they had
gone spilling out into the street, and Mrs. Erasmus
disappeared into the kitchen, with a clatter of kettle and
pot.
"You are very advanced, sir, for three-days' residence,"
Grey said, looking after the horde of boys in some dismay.
"There is a great thirst for learning, and for the Gospel,
too," Erasmus said, with pardonable satisfaction. "Their
parents come at night, after they have finished working in
the fields, and we have already had our first service."
He invited them to sit: but as there were only two chairs,
it would have made an awkward division, and they remained
standing. "I will come at once to the point," Grey said.
"There have been, I am afraid, certain complaints made." He
paused, and repeated, "Certain complaints" uneasily, though
Erasmus had said nothing. "You understand, sir, we have but
lately taken the colony, and the settlers here are a
difficult lot. They have made their own farms, and estates,
and with some justice consider themselves entitled to be
masters of their own fate. There is some sentiment-in
short," he said abruptly, "you would do very well to
moderate your activity. You need not perhaps have so many
students-take three or four, most promising; let the rest
return to work. I am informed the labor of the students is
by no means easily spared," he added weakly.
Erasmus listened, saying nothing, until Grey had done; then
he said, "Sir, I appreciate your position: it is a
difficult one. I am very sorry I cannot oblige you."
Grey waited, but Erasmus said nothing more whatsoever,
offering no ground for negotiation. Grey looked at
Laurence, a little helplessly, then turning back said,
"Sir, I will be frank; I am by no means confident of your
continued safety, if you persist. I cannot assure it."
"I did not come to be safe, but to bring the word of God,"
Erasmus said, smiling and immovable, and his wife brought
in the tea-tray.
"Madam," Grey said to her, as she poured the cups at the
table, "I entreat you to use your influence; I beg you to
consider the safety of your children." She raised her head
abruptly; the kerchief which she had been wearing outside
to work had slipped, and by pulling her hair back away from
her face revealed a dull scarred brand upon her forehead,
the initials of a former owner blurred but legible still,
and superimposed on an older tattooed marking, of abstract
pattern.
She looked at her husband; he said gently, "We will trust
in God, Hannah, and in His will." She nodded and made Grey
no direct answer, but went silently back outside to the
garden.
There was of course nothing more to be said; Grey sighed,
when they had taken their leave, and said dismally, "I
suppose I must put a guard upon the house."
A heavy moist wind was blowing from the south-east, draping
the Table Mount in a blanket of clouds; but it abated that
evening, and the Allegiance was sighted the next afternoon
by the castle lookout, heralded by the fire of the signalguns. The atmosphere of suspicion and hostility was a
settled thing by then, throughout the town; although
sentiments less bitter would have sufficed to make her
arrival unsettling for the inhabitants.
Laurence watched her come in, by Grey's invitation, from a
pleasant cool antechamber set atop the castle, and seeing
her from this unfamiliar and reversed direction was struck
by the overwhelming impression of terrible force: not only
the sheer vastness of her size, but the hollow eyes of her
brute armament of thirty-two-pounders, glaring angrily out
of portholes, and what seemed at this distance a veritable
horde of dragons coiled upon her deck, uncountable for
their lying so intertwined that their heads and tails could