not quite be separated one from another.
She advanced slowly into harbor, dwarfing all the shipping
in the port into insignificance, and a kind of grim silence
descended upon the town as she fired her salute to the
fort: a rolling thunder of guns that echoed back from the
face of the mountain, and settled gently upon the town like
a fog. Laurence could taste the powder-smoke at the back of
his mouth. The women and children had vanished from the
streets by the time her anchors were let plunging down.
It was dreadful to see how little they had truly to fear,
when Laurence went down to the shore and had himself rowed
across to aid with the maneuvers under way to get the
dragons transferred off the deck. The long cramped journey
had stiffened them all badly, and though the Allegiance had
made good time, still every day of the two months and more
had eaten steadily away at their strength. The castle was
established only steps from the sandy beach, the parade
grounds beside it, but even this short flight wearied them
now.
Nitidus and Dulcia, the smallest, came across first, to
give the others more room; they drew deep breaths and
lunged valiantly off the deck, their short wings beating
sluggish and slow, and giving them very little lift, so
that their bellies nearly scraped the top of the low fence
around the parade grounds; they landed heavily and sank
down into a heap on the warm ground without even folding
their wings back. Messoria and Immortalis then dragged
themselves up so wearily to their feet that Temeraire, who
was watching anxiously from the grounds, called out, "Pray
wait, and I will come and carry you in," and ferried them
one after another upon his back, heedless of the small
scrapes and scratches which he took from their claws, as
they clutched at him for balance.
Lily nosed Maximus gently, on the deck. "Yes, go on, I will
be there in a moment," he said sleepily, without opening
his eyes; she gave a dissatisfied rumble of concern.
"We will get him across, never fear," Harcourt said
coaxingly; and at last Lily was persuaded to submit to
their precautionary arrangements for her own transfer: a
muzzle had to be fitted over her head, from which a large
metal platter was suspended beneath her jaws, and this
covered with more of the oiled sand.
Riley had come to see them off; Harcourt turned to him and
held out her hand, saying, "Thank you, Tom; I hope we will
be coming back across soon, and you will visit us on land."
He took her hand in an awkward sideways grip and bowed over
it, somewhere between saluting her and shaking her hand,
and backed away stiffly; he still avoided looking at
Laurence at all.
Harcourt put her boot on the railing and jumped up to
Lily's back; she took hold of the harness to steady it, and
Lily unfurled her great wings, the feature from which the
breed took its name: rippled along the edges in narrow
bands of black and white with the dark blue of her body
shading across their length to a brilliant deep orange the
color of old marmalade; they shone iridescent in the sun.
Fully extended, they made double the length of her entire
body, and once she had fairly launched herself aloft, she
scarcely needed to beat them, but glided stately along
without great exertion.
They managed the flight across without spilling too much of
the sand, or dripping acid upon the castle battlements or
the dock; and then there was only Maximus left upon the
deck. Berkley spoke to him quietly, and with a great
heaving sigh the enormous Regal Copper pushed himself up to
his feet, the Allegiance herself rocking a little in the
water. He took two slow gouty steps to the edge of the
dragondeck and sighed again; his shoulder-muscles creaked
as he tried his wings, and then let them sink against his
back again; his head drooped.
"I could try," Temeraire offered, calling from shore; quite
impractically: Maximus still made almost two of him by
weight.
"I am sure I can manage it," Maximus said hoarsely, then
bent his head and coughed a while, and spat more greenish
phlegm out over the side. He did not move.
Temeraire's tail was lashing at the air, and then with an
air of decision he plunged into the surf and came swimming
out to them instead. He reared up with his forelegs on the
edge of the ship and thrust his head up over the railing to
say, "It is not very far: pray come in the water. I am sure
together we can swim to the shore."
Berkley looked at Keynes, who said, "A little sea-bathing
can do no harm, I expect; and perhaps even some good. It is
warm enough in all conscience, and we will have sun another
four hours at this time of year, to dry him off."
"Well, then, into the water with you," Berkley said,
gruffly, patting Maximus's side, and stepping back.
Crouching down awkwardly, Maximus plunged forequartersfirst into the ocean; the massive anchor-cables complained
with deep voices as the Allegiance recoiled from the force
of his leap, and ten-foot ripples swelled up and went
shuddering away from him to nearly overturn some of the
unsuspecting slighter vessels riding at anchor in the bay.
Maximus shook water from his head, bobbing up and down, and
paddled a few strokes along before stopping, sagging in the
water; the buoyancy of the air-sacs kept him afloat, but he
listed alarmingly.
"Lean against me, and we shall go together," Temeraire
said, swimming up to his side to brace him up; and little
by little they progressed towards the shore until the ocean
floor came up abruptly to meet them, clouds of white sand
stirring up like smoke, and Maximus could stop to rest,
half-submerged yet, with the waves lapping against his
sides.
"It is pleasant in the water," he said, despite another fit
of coughing. "I do not feel so tired here," but he had
still to be got out and onto the shore: no little task, and
he managed it only in slow easy stages, with all the
assistance which Temeraire and the oncoming tide could
offer, crawling the final dozen yards nearly on his belly.
Here they let him rest, and brought him the choicest cuts
from the dinner which Gong Su had spent the day preparing
to tempt the dragons' appetites after their exertion: local
cattle, fat and tender, spit-roasted with a crust of pepper
and salt pressed into their flesh, as a flavoring strong
enough to overcome the dulling effect of the illness on the
dragons' senses, and stuffed with their own stewed tripes.
Maximus ate a little, drank a few swallows of the water
which they carried out to him in a large tub, and
afterwards fell back into sluggish torpor, coughing, and
slept the night through on shore, with the ocean still
coming in and his tail riding up on the waves like a
tethered boat. Only in the cool early hours of the morning
did they get him the rest of the way to the parade grounds,
and there settled him in the best place at its edge beneath
the young stand of camphor trees, where he might have a
little shade as well as sun, and very near the well which
had been sunk to easily bring them water.
Berkley saw him established, and then took off his hat and
went to the water trough, to duck his head and bring a
couple of cupped handfuls to his mouth to drink, and wipe
his red and sweating face. "It is a good place," he said,
his head bent, "a good place; he will be comfortable here-"
and ending abruptly went inside the castle, where they
breakfasted together in silence. They did not discuss the
matter, but no discussion was required; they all knew
Maximus would not leave again, without a cure, and they had
brought him otherwise to his grave.
Chapter 7
ABOARD, THEY HAD counted every day; they had hurried, they
had fretted; now they were arrived and could only sit and
wait, while the surgeons went through their fastidious
experiments, and refused to give any opinion whatsoever.
More outrageous local supplies were brought to them in
succession, presented to Temeraire, occasionally tried on
one of the sick dragons, and discarded again. This
proceeded without any sign of useful effect, and on one
unfortunate occasion again distressed Temeraire's digestive
system, so that the shared dragon-midden took on a very
unpleasant quality, and had at once to be filled in and a
new one dug. The old one promptly sprang up a thick carpet
of grass and a bright pink weedy flower, which to their
great exasperation could not be rooted out, and attracted a
species of wasps viciously jealous of their territory.
Laurence did not say so, but it was his private opinion
that all this experimentation was only half-hearted, and
meant to occupy their attention while Keynes waited for the
climate to do its work; though Dorset made careful notes of
each trial in his regular hand, going from one dragon to
the next in rounds thrice daily, and inquiring with
heartless indifference how much the patient had coughed
since the last inquiry, what pains he suffered, how he ate;
this last was never much.
At the close of the first week, Dorset finished his latest
interrogation of Captain Warren, on the condition of
Nitidus, and shut his book and went and spoke quietly with
Keynes and the other surgeons. "I suppose they are all
prodigious clever, but if they keep on with these secret
councils, and telling us nothing, I will begin to want to
push their noses in for them," Warren said, coming to join
the rest of them at the card-table, which had been set up
under a pavilion in the middle of the grounds. The game was
mostly a polite fiction to occupy the days: they did not
have much attention to the cards at any time, and now had
none, all of them instead watching the surgeons as they
huddled together in deep discussion.
Keynes evaded them skillfully for two more days, and
finally cornered into giving some report said crabbily, "It
is too soon to tell," but admitted that they had seen some
improvement, so far as they could determine merely from the
climate: the dragons had shown some resurrection of
appetite and energy, and they coughed less.
"It will be no joke, ferrying all the Corps down here,"
Little said quietly, after their first early jubilation.
"How many transports have we, in all?"
"Seven, I think, if the Lyonesse is out of dry-dock,"
Laurence said.
There was a pause; then he added strongly, "But consider,
we scarcely need a ship of a hundred guns only to move
dragons; transports are meant foremost to deliver them to
the front," this being not entirely a misrepresentation,
but only because there was little cause other than war to
go to the difficulty and expense of shifting dragons about.
"We can put them on barges at Gibraltar instead, and send
them along the coast, with an escort of frigates to keep
the French off them."
It sounded well enough, but they all knew that even if not
inherently impractical, still such an operation was wholly
unlikely to be carried out on the scale of the entire
Corps. They might return with the dragons of their own
formation preserved, but such a cure was likely to be
denied half their comrades or more. "It is better than
nothing," Chenery said a little defiantly, "and more than
we had; there is not a man of the Corps who would not have
taken such odds, if offered him," but the odds would be
unequal ones.
Longwings and Regal Coppers, heavy-combat dragons and the
rarer breeds, no expense or difficulty would be spared to
preserve; but for the rest-common Yellow Reapers or quickbreeding Winchesters; older dragons likely to be difficult
when their captains died; the weaker or less-skilled
flyers; these, a brutal political calculus would not count
worth the saving, and leave to die in neglect and misery,
isolated undoubtedly in the most distant quarantines which
could be arranged. Their cautious satisfaction was dimmed
by this shadow, and Sutton and Little took it worst; their
dragons were both Yellow Reapers, and Messoria was forty.
But even guilt could not extinguish all their eager hope;
they slept very little that night, counting coughs instead,
tallies to go into Dorset's book; and in the morning, with
only a little coaxing, Nitidus was persuaded to try his
wings. Laurence and Temeraire went with him and Warren, for
company and in case the little Pascal's Blue should exhaust
his strength; Nitidus was panting hoarsely from his mouth
and coughing, now and again, as they flew.
They did not go far. The local hunger for grazing land and
timber had scraped the fields and hillsides down to scrubby
low grass, all the way to the base of Table Mountain and
its satellite peaks, where the slopes grew prohibitive:
loose conglomerations of grey and yellow rock in stepped