Demane showed them the trick of catching the plentiful
local pheasants, by driving them towards a waiting
collaborator with a net, and these, roasted quickly on a
spit and rounded out with ship's biscuit, made the company
a dinner pleasant enough: the birds not the least gamy,
having fed evidently only on the local grass-seeds and
berries.
Now the dragons had curled around the borders of their
camp; protection enough to ward off any nightly dangers;
the crews had arranged themselves for sleep on beds of
crumpled brush, coats used haphazardly for pillows, or were
playing at dice and cards in distant corners, murmuring
their wagers and occasionally a cry of victory or despair.
The boys, who had been eating like wolves, and already
looked rather better fleshed, were stretched upon the
ground at Mrs. Erasmus's feet. She had persuaded them to
put on some loose duck trousers, sewn by girls from the
mission; her husband was methodically laying out for them
on the ground, one at a time, stiff picture-cards showing
objects to be identified in their language, and rewarding
them with doled-out sweetmeats while she noted down the
answers in her log-book.
Warren prodded the fire with a long branch, idly, and
Laurence felt at last that they were near enough alone to
satisfy discretion; that he might speak, however awkwardly.
"No; I did not know about the child," Warren said, with not
the least discomfiture at the inquiry, but gloomily. "It is
a bad business: God forbid she should come to a bad pass
here; that little runner of yours is the only girl we have,
and she is no wise ready to make a captain, even if Lily
would have her. And what the devil we should do for
Excidium if she did, I would like to know; the admiral
cannot be running about having another child now, with
Bonaparte on the other side of the Channel, ready to toss
his glove across at any minute.
"I damned well hope you have been taking precautions? But I
am sure Roland knows her business," Warren added, without
waiting for reply; just as well, as Laurence had never been
asked a question he would have less liked to answer; all
the more as it had abruptly and appallingly illuminated
certain curious habits of Jane's, which he had never
brought himself to inquire into, and her regular
consultations of the calendar.
"Oh, pray don't take me wrong," Warren said,
misunderstanding Laurence's fixed expression. "I don't mean
to carp in the least; accidents will happen, and Harcourt
has had every excuse for distraction. Bad enough for us,
these last months, but what the devil was ever to become of
her? Half-pay would keep body and soul together, but money
don't make a woman respectable. That is why I asked you,
before, about the fellow; I thought, if Lily died, they
might make a match of it."
"She has no family?" Laurence asked.
"None left, none to speak of. She is old Jack Harcourt's
daughter-he was a lieutenant on Fluitare. He cut straps in
the year two, damned shame; but at least he knew she'd been
tapped for Lily, by then," Warren said. "Her mother was a
girl down Plymouth way, near the covert there. She went off
in a fever when Catherine was scarce old enough to crawl,
and no relations to take her in: that is how she was thrown
on the Corps."
Laurence said, "Then, under the present circumstances-I
know it is damned officious, but if she has no one else,
ought one not speak to him? Of the child, I mean," he added
awkwardly.
"Why, what is there for him to do?" Warren said. "If it is
a girl, God willing, the Corps needs her with both hands;
and if it is a boy, he could go to sea instead, I suppose;
but whatever for? It can only hurt him there, to be a byblow, and meanwhile a captain's son in the Corps is pretty
sure to get a dragon, if he has any merit of his own."
"But that is what I mean," Laurence said, puzzled to find
himself so misunderstood. "There is no reason the child
must be illegitimate; they might easily be married at
once."
"Oh, oh," Warren said, dawning wonder, confusion. "Why,
Laurence, no; there's no sense in it, you must see that. If
she had been grounded, it might have answered; but thank
God, no need to think of that anymore, or anything like,"
and he jerked his chin gladly at the tightly lidded box
which held the fruits of their day's labors, to be carried
back to Capetown in the morning: Lily would certainly be
the next recipient. "A comfortable wife she would make him,
with orders to follow and a dragon to look after; I dare
say they would not see one another one year in six, him
posted to one side of the world and she to the other, ha!"
Laurence was little satisfied to find his sentiments so
unaffectedly laughed at, but more so for the uncomfortable
sensation that there was some rational cause for so
dismissive an answer; and he was forced to go to sleep with
his resolution yet unformed.
Chapter 9
"MR. KEYNES," CATHERINE said, cutting through the raised
voices, "perhaps you will be so good as to explain to us
what alternative you prefer, to Mr. Dorset's suggestion."
Experience had improved on their rate of return, a little,
and Nitidus had carried their spoils back to Capetown
daily; so they returned, after a tired and dusty week, to
find Lily dosed, Messoria and Immortalis also, and a small
and putrid heap of mushrooms yet remaining. Of these, two
had been preserved in oil, two in spirits of wine, two only
wrapped in paper and oilcloth, and the lot boxed neatly up
with the receipt for the cure. They would be sent back to
England by the Fiona, which had been held back this long
for their report: she would go with the tide.
But there was no sentiment of triumph at their dinner back,
only muted satisfaction; at best the results of all their
hunting would not do for more than three dragons; six if
the surgeons back in Dover took the risk of halving the
dose, or used it on smaller beasts, and that only if all
three methods preserved whatever virtue the mushrooms held;
Dorset would have liked to dry some, also, but there were
not enough of them for this final experiment.
"Well, we are not going to do any better, not unless we
hire an army of men and hounds; and where to get them, you
may tell me and much obliged," Warren said, holding the
bottle in one hand as he drained his glass in the other, so
he might refill the tumbler straight away. "Nemachaen is a
clever little beast," meaning the dog, who had acquired
this grandiose name after the lion, courtesy of some of the
younger ensigns presently being subjected to a haphazard
education in the classics, "but there is only so much
blasted forest we can hack through in a day, to find one
mushroom or two at a time when we need scores of the
things."
"We must have more hunters," Laurence said, but they were
rather in danger of losing those they had; the agreed-on
week having passed, Demane gave signs of wishing for
himself and Sipho to be returned to their home village with
their reward. Laurence with many unpleasant pangs of
conscience had refused to immediately understand his signs,
and instead had taken him to see the pen near the castle,
where the cow had been set aside: a large, handsome milch
cow, placid, with her six-months' calf browsing the grass
beside her; the boy ducked through the fence slats and
slipped in to touch her soft brown side with cautious,
almost wary delight. He looked at the calf, and back at
Laurence, a question in his face; Laurence nodded to say
they would give him the other, too. Demane came out,
protests silenced by this species of bribery, and Laurence
went away feeling that he had behaved himself like a
desperate scrub; he hoped very much the boys did not have
family to be made anxious for them, although he had rather
gained the impression they were orphaned, and at the very
least neglected.
"Too slow," Dorset said, very decidedly despite his
stammer. "Too slow, by half. All the searching in the
world-we will only help to stamp it out. It has been the
target of systematic eradication; we cannot hope to find
much nearby. Who knows how long, how many years, the
herdsmen have been digging it up. We must go away, farther
away, where it may yet grow in quantity-"
"Perfect speculation," Keynes snapped, "on which to
recommend the pursuit of wild chances. How much distance
will satisfy you? I dare say all the continent has been
used for herding, at some time or another. To risk the
formation, dragons scarcely risen from their sickbeds, and
go deep into feral territory, on such a hope? The height of
folly-"
The argument rose, grew warm, surged across the table;
Dorset's stammer grew more violent so he was scarcely
comprehensible, and Gaiters and Waley, Maximus's and Lily's
surgeons, were ranged with Keynes against him; until at
last Catherine had silenced all of them, standing up to
make her demand with her hands planted on the cloth.
"I do not quarrel with your concern," she added, more
quietly, "but we did not come here to find a cure only for
ourselves. You have heard the latest dispatches; nine more
dead since March, and by now more gone, when we could not
spare any of them in the least." She looked at Keynes
steadily. "Is there any hope?"
He was silent, displeased, and only with a surly lowering
look allowed there to be some chance of a better harvest,
farther away; she nodded and said, "Then we will endure the
risk, and be glad that our own dragons are well enough to
do so."
There was no question, yet, of sending Maximus, who had
only lately begun to try at flying again: with a deal of
flapping and kicking up dust, often ending only in an
exhausted collapse; he could not quite manage the launching
spring, which was necessary to get him aloft, although once
in the air could remain for some time. Keynes shook his
head and felt at his paunchy sides.
"The weight is coming back unevenly. You are doing your
exercises?" he demanded; Maximus protested that he was.
"Well, if we cannot get you in the air, we must find you
room to walk," Keynes said, and so Maximus had been set to
making a circuit of the town, back and forth several times
daily: the only stretch of cleared ground large enough for
him, as he could not go far up the mountain-slopes without
pulling them down in small avalanches.
No-one was very happy with this solution: ridiculous to
have a dragon the size of a frigate ambling about like a
lap-dog on an airing, and Maximus complained of the hard
ground, and the pebbles which introduced themselves into
his talons. "I do not notice them at first," he said
unhappily, while Berkley's runners struggled with hoofpicks and knives and tongs to pry them out from under the
hard, callused hide around the base of the claws, "not
until they are quite far down, and then I cannot easily say
how very unpleasant it becomes."
"Why do you not swim, instead?" Temeraire said. "The water
is very pleasant here, and perhaps you might catch a
whale," which suggestion brightened Maximus remarkably, and
infuriated the fishermen, particularly the owners of the
larger boats; they came in a body to protest.
"I am damned sorry to put you out," Berkley said to them.
"You may come with me, and tell him yourselves you do not
like it."
Maximus continued his outings, in peace, and might be seen
daily paddling about the harbor. Sadly the whales and
dolphins and seals, too clever by half, stayed well-clear
of him, much to his disappointment: he did not much like
tunny or sharks, the latter of which occasionally beat
themselves against his limbs in confused fits perhaps
provoked by some traces of blood or flesh from his latest
repast: on one occasion he brought back one of these to
show, a monster some nineteen feet in length, weighing
close on two tons, with its angry snoutish face full of
teeth. He had lifted the shark straight out of the water
whole, and when he laid it down on the parade grounds
before them, it abruptly went into a paroxysm of thrashing:
knocking over Dyer, two ensigns, and one of the Marines,
snapping and gnashing furiously at the air, before Dulcia
managed to pin it to the ground with her foretalons.
Messoria and Immortalis, both older beasts, were perfectly
happy to lie in the parade grounds and sleep in the sun,
after their short daily flights for exercise; but Lily,
having stopped coughing, shortly displayed that same
restless energy which had overcome Dulcia, and began to
insist on activity. But if she were to go flying anywhere,
she must go far abroad, where a stray lingering sneeze or
cough would not spray anyone below; Keynes, quite ignoring