mid-thigh.
They did not move to attack, and when Hobbes turned and
beckoned, Reverend Erasmus climbed out of the cave, and
gave his wife his hand to assist her. They joined the
lieutenants, and Mrs. Erasmus began speaking, slowly and
clearly: she had taken a mushroom from the cave, and held
it out to them to show. The red-brown dragon stooped
suddenly, its head bending towards her, and spoke; she
looked directly up at him, startled but not visibly afraid,
and it jerked its head back with an ugly, squawking cry:
not a roar or a growl, wholly unlike any sound Laurence had
ever heard from a dragon's throat.
One of the men reached out and catching her by the arm drew
her towards him. His other hand pressed her forehead
backwards, bending her neck in an awkward exposed curve,
and his hand pushed her hair away from her face, where the
scar and the tattoo marred her forehead.
Erasmus sprang forward, and Hobbes on his other side, to
pull her free. The man let her go, without resistance, and
took a step towards Erasmus, speaking low and rapidly,
pointing at her. Ferris caught her in his arms as she fell
back shaking, supporting her.
Erasmus spread his hands, placating, continuing to speak
even while he carefully sought to interpose himself before
her. He was plainly not understood; he shook his head and
tried again, in the Khoi language. This was not understood,
either; at last he tried another, haltingly, and tapping
his own chest said, "Lunda." The dragon snarled, and with
no other warning, the man took up his spear and drove it
directly through Erasmus's body, in one unbroken and
terrible motion.
Hobbes fired; the man fell; Erasmus also went toppling to
his knees. He had an expression of only mild surprise on
his face; his hand was on the spear-haft, protruding from
just above his breastbone. Mrs. Erasmus gave a single
hoarse cry of horror; he turned his head a little in her
direction, tried to lift his hand towards her; it fell,
limply, and he dropped to the ground.
Ferris half-carried, half-dragged Mrs. Erasmus back towards
the cave, the red-brown dragon lunging after them; Hobbes
went down in spraying blood under that raking claw. Then
Ferris was pushing Mrs. Erasmus into the cavern, backing
her into their waiting arms just as the dragon flung itself
at the entrance again: roaring at a wild, shrieking pitch,
its talons scrabbling madly at the opening and shaking all
the hollow hill.
Laurence caught Ferris by the arm as he fell stumbling
backwards from the impact, blood in a thin streak crossing
his shirt and face. Harcourt and Warren had Mrs. Erasmus.
"Mr. Riggs," Laurence shouted, over the rattling din
outside, "a little fire; and Mr. Calloway, let us have
those flares, if you please."
They gave the dragon another volley and a blue light,
straight into the face, which at least made it recoil
momentarily; the two smaller dragons leapt into the breach
and made an effort to herd the larger one back from the
cavern, speaking to it in shrill voices, and at last it
drew away again, its sides heaving, and dropped back into
its crouch at the far end of the clearing.
"Mr. Turner, do you have the time?" Laurence asked his
signal-officer, coughing: the clouds from the flare were
not dying away.
"I'm sorry, sir, I forgot to turn the glass for a while,"
the ensign said unhappily "but it is past four in the
afternoon watch."
Temeraire and Lily had not left until past one: a fourhours' flight in either direction, and a great deal of
labor and packing to be done in Capetown, before they would
even begin the return journey. "We must try and get a
little sleep by watches," Laurence said quietly to Harcourt
and Warren; Dorset had taken charge of Mrs. Erasmus and
guided her deeper into the cave. "We can hold them at the
fissure, I think, but we must stay vigilant-"
"Sir," Emily Roland said, "beg pardon, sir, but Mr. Dorset
says to tell you, there is smoke coming into the cave, from
the back."
A narrow vent, at the back, higher up than they could
reach: propped up on Mr. Pratt's broad shoulder, Laurence
could see, through the thin stream of black smoke, the
orange glow of the fire which the men had set to smoke them
out. He dropped back to his own feet and cleared out of the
way: Fellowes and Larring, Harcourt's ground-crew master,
were trying together with their men to block the vent with
scraps of harness and leather, using their own coats and
shirts besides. They were having little success, and time
worked against them; already the cavern was nearly
unbreathable, and the rising heat only worsened the natural
stench.
"We cannot last long this way," Catherine said, hoarse but
steady, when Laurence had come back to the front of the
cave. "I think we had better make a dash for it, while we
still can, and try and lose them in the forest."
Outside the entrance, the thorny brush which they had torn
up to make their camp was now being heaped up closer by the
dragons, forming stacks higher than a man's head all around
the cavern-mouth, and the dragons had arranged themselves
carefully behind this barrier: screened from rifle-fire,
and blocking their avenues of escape. There would be
precious little hope of breaking through; but no better
alternative would offer itself.
"My crew is the largest," Laurence said, "and we have eight
rifles. I hope you will all agree we should make the first
attempt, and the rest of you come upon our heels: Mr.
Dorset, perhaps you will be so kind as to wait with Mrs.
Erasmus until we have cleared a little way, and I am sure
Mr. Pratt will assist you," he added.
The order of emergence was settled upon, in haste; they
agreed upon a rendezvous point in the woods, consulting
their compasses. Laurence felt his neckcloth, to be sure it
was tied, and shrugged back into his coat in the dark,
adjusting the gold bars upon his shoulders; his hat was
gone. "Warren, Chenery; your servant, Harcourt," he said,
shaking their hands. Ferris and Riggs were crouched by the
opening, ready; his own pistols were loaded. "Gentlemen,"
he said, and drawing his sword went through the cavern
exit, a roar of God and King George behind him.
Chapter 10
LAURENCE STUMBLED AS the rough hands dragged him up; his
legs would not answer, and when he was flung forward they
crumpled at once, casting him full-length on the ground,
beside the other prisoners. They were being flung roughly
into a rig much like their own belly-netting, but of
coarser rope and designed less for passengers than for
baggage. In a few sharp jerks, they were hauled up and
slung below the red-brown dragon's belly, their arms and
legs left to dangle through the large haphazardly knotted
gaps, and their bodies crammed in one atop another. The
netting was loose, and swung in great sickening curves with
every shift in the wind or direction, every sudden diving
movement.
There was no guard set to watch them, nor any personal
restraint, but they were thoroughly immobilized regardless,
and had no opportunity to shift their positions or
converse. He was low in the netting, with his face pressed
directly into the raw cords, which scraped him now and
again; but he was grateful for the air despite the thin
ribbons of blood which came dripping past him, and the
wider arc of swinging. Dyer was pushed up against his side;
Laurence had his arm around the boy, to keep him in: the
netting was uneven, and the cords moving might have easily
let him slip through to plunge to his death.
The wounded had been thrown in with the whole. A young
midwingman from Chenery's crew, badly clawed, lay with his
jaw pressed against Laurence's arm, blood seeping slowly
from the corner of his mouth and soaking through the cloth.
Some time during the night he died, and his corpse
stiffened slowly as they flew on. Laurence could
distinguish no-one else around him, only the anonymous
pressure of a boot in the small of his back, a knee jammed
up against his own, so that his leg was bent back upon
itself.
He had glimpsed Mrs. Erasmus only briefly, in the dreadful
confusion of their taking, as the nets were flung down upon
them from the trees; she had certainly been dragged away
alive. He did not wish to think on it; he could do little
else, and Catherine's fate weighed on him heavily.
They did not stop. He slept, or at least passed into a
state more distant from the world than wakefulness, the
wind passing over his face in gusts, the rocking of the
netting not wholly unlike the querulous motion of a ship
riding at anchor in a choppy cross-sea. A little while
after dawn, the dragon brought up sharp, cupping the wind
in its wings as it descended, bird-like, and came to the
ground jarringly, skipping a few steps along the earth
before dropping onto its forelegs.
The netting was cut loose, roughly, and they were picked
over quickly and efficiently, the men prodding them with
the butt ends of their spears and heaving away the corpses.
Laurence could not have risen to his legs with all the
liberty in the world to do so, his knee afire with
returning blood, but he raised his head, and saw Catherine
lying a little way distant: flat upon her back, pale and
her eyes shut, with blood on the side of her face. There
were two bloody rents in her coat also, near the arm, but
she had kept it, and buttoned; her hair was still tightly
plaited, and there was no sign she had been distinguished.
No time for anything more: a little water was splashed in
their faces, and the netting folded back over their heads;
the dragon stepped over them and they were hoisted back up
with quick, jerking pulls. Away again. The motion was worse
in daylight, and they were a lighter load now, swaying more
easily with the wind and every slight change of direction;
the Corps was a service that hardened the stomach, but even
so filth trickled down now through the press of bodies, the
sour smell of bile. Laurence breathed through his mouth so
far as he could, and turned his face to the ropes when he
himself had to vomit.
There was no more sleep, until at last with the sun they
descended again, and this time at last they were taken out
from the netting one and two at a time, weak and ill, and
lashed together at wrists, upper arms, and ankles, into a
human chain. They were fixed to a pair of trees at either
end, and their captors came around with water in dripping
leather bags, fresh and delicious, the spout dragged too
soon away from their seeking mouths; Laurence held the last
swallow on his parched tongue as long as he could.
He leaned forward and glanced down the line: he did not see
Warren at all, but Harcourt looked up at him, a quick nod;
Ferris and Riggs looked as well as could be expected, and
Roland was tied on at the very end, her head drooping
against the tree to which she was fastened. Chenery was
tied the other side of Dyer from him; his head was tipped
awkwardly onto his own shoulder, his mouth hung open in
exhaustion; he had a great purpling bruise all across his
face, and he had his hand clenched upon his thigh, as
though the older wound pained him.
They were near the banks of a river, Laurence gradually
became aware, hearing the slow soft gurgling of the water
behind him though he could not turn about to look, a
torment when they were all still thirsty. They were in a
matted grassy clearing; sending his eyes to the side he
could see a border of large stones encircling the flattened
grounds, and a fire-pit blackened with use: a hunting camp,
perhaps, used regularly; the men were walking around the
boundary, tearing up the greenery which had sent
encroaching tendrils into the clearing.
The great red-brown beast settled itself at the far side of
the fire-pit, and closing its eyes down to slits went to
sleep; the other two took wing again: a mottled green, and
a dark brown creature, both with pale grey underbellies
gilded with a kind of iridescence, which quickly made them
melt into the deepening sky above on their leap.
A long-legged plover wandered through the clearing, picking
at the ground for seeds and chirping, a high metallic sound
like a small bell struck with a hammer. In a little while
the smaller dragons returned, carrying the limp bodies of
several antelope; two of these were respectfully deposited
before the red-brown dragon, who tore into them with
appetite; another they shared amongst themselves; and the
last was given to the men, butchered quickly, and put into
a large cauldron already steaming.
Their captors were quiet over their dinner, clustering to