for Lily's size. Maximus will be in no condition to do more
than a little easy flying for weeks yet."
"I understand perfectly, Mr. Keynes, let us say not another
word on the subject," she said, so Nitidus was fed upon the
posset, and Lily continued to cough miserably; Catherine
sat by her head all the night, stroking her muzzle,
heedless of the real danger to herself from the spatters of
acid.
Chapter 8
WHOLLY UNLIKELY-WHOLLY unlikely," Dorset said severely,
when Catherine in despair suggested, two weeks later, that
they had already acquired all the specimens which there
were in the world.
Nitidus had suffered less than most of the dragons,
although complained somewhat more, and he recovered with
greater speed even than Dulcia, despite a nervous
inclination to cough even after the physical necessity had
gone. "I am sure I feel a little thickness in my head again
this morning," he said fretfully, or his throat was a
little sensitive, or his shoulders ached.
"It is only to be expected," Keynes said of the last,
scarcely a week since he had been dosed, "when you have
been lying about for months with no proper exercise. You
had better take him out tomorrow, and enough of this
caterwauling," he added to Warren, and stamped away.
With this encouraging permission, they had promptly renewed
the search which had been curtailed by Chenery's injury,
confining the sphere a little closer to the immediate
environs of the Cape; but after two more weeks had gone by,
they had met with no more feral dragons and also with no
more success. They had brought back in desperation several
other varieties of mushroom, not entirely dissimilar in
appearance, two of which proved instantly poisonous to the
furry local rodents which Dorset made their first
recipients.
Keynes prodded the small curled dead bodies and shook his
head. "It is not to be risked. You are damned fortunate not
to have poisoned Temeraire with the thing in the first
place."
"What the devil are we to do, then?" Catherine demanded.
"If there is no more to be had-"
"There will be more," Dorset said with assurance, and for
his part, he continued to perform daily rounds of the
marketplace, forcing the merchants and stall-keepers there
to look at his detailed sketch of the mushroom, rendered in
pencil and ink. His steady perseverance was rewarded by the
merchants growing so exasperated that one of the Khoi,
whose Dutch and English encompassed only the numbers one
through ten, all he ordinarily required to sell his wares,
finally appeared at their gates with Reverend Erasmus in
tow, having sought his assistance to put a stop to the
constant harassment.
"He wishes you to know that the mushroom does not grow here
in the Cape, if I have understood correctly," Erasmus
explained, "but that the Xhosa-" He was here interrupted by
the Khoi merchant, who impatiently repeated the name quite
differently, incorporating an odd sort of clicking noise at
the beginning which reminded Laurence of nothing more than
some sounds of the Durzagh language, difficult for a human
tongue to render.
"In any case," Erasmus said, after another unsuccessful
attempt to repeat the name properly, "he means a tribe
which lives farther along the coast and, having more
dealings inland, may know where more is to be found."
Pursuing this intelligence, however, Laurence soon
discovered that to make any contact would be difficult in
the extreme: the tribesmen who dwelt nearest the Cape had
withdrawn farther and farther from the Dutch settlements,
after their last wave of assaults-not unprovoked-had been
flung back, some eight years before. They were now settled
into an uneasy and often-broken truce with the colonists,
and only at the very frontiers was any intercourse still to
be had with them.
"And that," Mr. Rietz informed Laurence, the two of them
communicating by means of equally halting German on both
sides, "the pleasure of having our cattle stolen: twice a
month we lose a cow or more, for all they have signed one
truce after another."
He was one of the chief men of Swellendam, one of the
oldest villages of the Cape, and still nearly as far inland
as any of the settlers had successfully established
themselves: nestled at the foot of a sheltering ridge of
mountains, which deterred incursions by the ferals. The
vineyards and farmland were close-huddled around the neat
and compact white-washed homes, only a handful of heavily
fortified farmhouses more widely flung. The settlers were
wary of the feral dragons who often came raiding from over
the mountains, against whom they had built a small central
fort bolstered with two six-pounders, and resentful of
their black neighbors, of whom Rietz further added, "The
kaffirs are all rascals, whatever heathenish name you like
to call them; and I advise you against any dealings with
them. They are savages to a man, and more likely will
murder you while you sleep than be of any use."
Having said so much mostly under the unspoken but no less
potent duress of Temeraire's presence on the outskirts of
his village, he considered this final and was by no means
willing to be of further assistance, but sat mutely until
Laurence gave it up and let him go back to his accounts.
"Those certainly are very handsome cows," Temeraire said,
with a healthy admiration of his own, when Laurence
rejoined him. "You cannot blame the ferals for taking them,
when they do not know any better, and the cows are just
sitting there in the pen, doing no-one any good. But how
are we to find any of these Xhosa, if the settlers will not
help? I suppose we might fly about looking for them?"-a
suggestion which would certainly ensure they did not catch
the least sight of a people who surely had to be deeply
wary of dragons, as likely as the settlers to be victims of
the feral beasts.
General Grey snorted, when Laurence had returned to
Capetown seeking an alternative, and reported Rietz's
reaction. "Yes; and I imagine if you find one of the Xhosa,
he will make you the very same complaint in reverse. They
are all forever stealing cattle from one another, and the
only thing they would agree on, I suppose, is to complain
of the ferals worse. It is a bad business," he added,
"these settlers want more grazing land, badly, and they
cannot get it; so they have nothing to do but quarrel with
the tribesmen over what land the ferals do not mind leaving
to them."
"Can the ferals not be deterred?" Laurence asked. He did
not know how ferals were managed, precisely; in Britain he
knew they were largely induced to confine themselves to the
breeding grounds, by the regular provision of easy meals.
"No; there must be too much wild game," Grey said. "They
are not tempted enough, at any rate, to leave the
settlements alone, and there have been trials made enough
to prove it. Every year a few young hotheads make a push
inland; for what good it does them, which is none." He
shrugged. "Most of our adventurers are not heard from
again, and of course the inaction of the government is
blamed. But they will not understand the expense and
difficulty involved. I tell you I should not undertake to
carve out any more sizable territory here without at the
least a six-dragon formation, and two companies of field
artillery."
Laurence nodded; there was certainly no likelihood of the
Admiralty sending such assistance at present, or for that
matter in the foreseeable future; even apart from the
disease, which had so wracked their aerial strength, any
significant force would naturally be committed to the war
against France.
"We will just have to make shift as best we can," Catherine
said, when he had grimly reported his lack of success that
night. "Surely Reverend Erasmus can help us; he can speak
with the natives, and perhaps that merchant will know where
we can find them."
Laurence and Berkley went to apply to him the next morning
at the mission, already much altered since the last visit
which Laurence had made: the plot of land was now a
handsome vegetable-garden, full of tomato and pepper
plants; a few Khoi girls in modest black shifts were
tending the rows, tying up the tomato plants to stakes, and
another group beneath a broad mimosa tree were sewing
diligently, while Mrs. Erasmus and another missionary lady,
a white woman, took it in turn to read to them out of a
Bible translated into their tongue.
Inside, the house was almost wholly given over to students
scratching laboriously away at writing on scraps of slate,
paper too valuable to be used for such an exercise. Erasmus
came walking outside with them, for lack of room to talk,
and said, "I have not forgotten to be grateful to you for
our passage here, Captain, and I would gladly be of service
to you. But there is likely as much kinship between the
Khoi tongue and that of the Xhosa as there is between
French and German, and I am by no means yet fluent even in
the first. Hannah does better, and we do remember a little
of our own native tongues; but those will be of even less
use: we were both taken from tribes much farther north."
"You still have a damned better chance to jaw with them
than any of us do," Berkley said bluntly. "It cannot be
that bloody difficult to make them understand: we have a
scrap of the thing left, and we can wave it in their faces
to show them what we want."
"Surely having lived neighbor to the Khoi themselves,"
Laurence said, "there may be those among them who speak a
little of that tongue, which would allow you to open some
communication? We can ask only," he added, "that you try: a
failure would leave us no worse than we stand."
Erasmus stopped before the garden gate, watching where his
wife was reading to the girls, then said low and
thoughtfully, "I have not heard of it, if anyone has
brought the Gospel to the Xhosa yet."
Though barred from much expansion inland, the settlers had
been creeping steadily out along the coast eastward from
Capetown. The Tsitsikamma River, some two long days' flight
away, was now a theoretical sort of border between the
Dutch and the Xhosa territories: there were no settlements
nearer than Plettenberg Bay, and if the Xhosa were lurking
in the brush five steps beyond the boundaries of the
outermost villages, as many of the settlers imagined they
were, no-one would have been any the wiser. But they had
been pushed across the river in the last fighting, it was a
convenient line upon a map, and so it had been named in the
treaties.
Temeraire kept to the coastline in their flight: a strange
and beautiful series of low curved cliffsides, thickly
crusted with green vegetation and in some places lichen of
bright red, cream and brown rocks spilling from their feet;
and beaches of golden sand, some littered with squat
penguins too small to be alarmed by their passage overhead:
they were not prey for dragons. Late in their second day of
flying they passed the lagoon of Knysna sheltered behind
its narrow mouth to the ocean, and arrived late in the
evening on the banks of the Tsitsikamma, the river driving
its way inland, deep in its green-lined channel.
In the morning, before crossing the river, they tied onto
two stakes large white sheets, as flags of parley, to avoid
giving provocation; and set these streaming out to either
side of Temeraire's wings. They flew cautiously onwards
into Xhosa territory, until they came to an open clearing,
large enough to permit them to settle Temeraire some
distance back, and divided by a narrow, swift-running
stream: no obstacle, but perhaps enough of a boundary to
provide comfort to someone standing on the other side.
Laurence had brought with him, besides a small but
substantial heap of gold guineas, a wide assortment of
those things which were commonly used in the local barter,
in hopes of tempting out the natives: foremost among them
several great chains of cowrie shells, strung on silk
thread; in some parts of the continent these were used as
currency, and the sense of value persisted more widely;
locally they were highly prized as jewellery. Temeraire was
for once unimpressed: the shells were not brightly colored
enough nor glittery nor iridescent, and did not awaken his
magpie nature; he eyed the narrow chain of pearls which
Catherine had contributed to the cause with much more
interest.
The whole collection the crew laid out upon a large
blanket, near enough the edge of the stream to be visible
plainly to an observer on the other bank, and with these
hoped to coax out some response. Temeraire crouched down as