one side of the fire and eating from bowls with their
fingers; when one of them rose to go to the boiling-pot
again, and the flames leapt with the sizzle of water,
Laurence glimpsed briefly Mrs. Erasmus on the other side of
the fire beside the dragon, sitting bent over a bowl in her
hands and eating, steadily and calmly. Her hair had come
loose from its ruthless restraints, and curved out around
her face in a stiff bell-shape; she had no expression at
all, and her dress was torn.
After their own meal, the men came over and in a handful of
bowls fed them all off the remnants, a kind of grain-porridge cooked in meat broth. There was not a great deal
for any of them, and humiliating to have to eat with their
faces bent forward into the bowl held for them, like
rooting in a trough, the remnants left dripping from their
chins. Laurence closed his eyes and ate, and when Dyer
would have left some broth in the bowl said, "You will
oblige me by eating everything you can; there is no telling
when they will feed us again."
"Yes, sir," Dyer said, "only they will put us back aboard,
and I am sure I will have it all up again."
"Even so," Laurence said, and thankfully it seemed that
their captors did not mean to set out again immediately.
They instead spread out woven blankets upon the ground, and
carried out a long bundle from among their things; they set
it down upon the blankets and undid the wrappings, and
Laurence recognized the corpse: the man whom Hobbes had
shot, the one who had murdered Erasmus. They laid him out
with ceremony, and washed him down with water carried from
the spring, then wrapped him again in the skins of the
antelope lately caught. The bloody spear they set beside
him, as a trophy perhaps. One of them brought out a drum;
others took up dry sticks from the ground, or began simply
clapping or stamping their feet, and with their hands and
voices made a chant like a single unending cry, one taking
up the thread when another paused for breath.
It was grown wholly dark; they were still singing. Chenery
opened his eyes and looked over at Laurence. "How far do
you suppose we have come?"
"A night and day, flying straight, at a good pace; making
steadily north by north-east, I think," Laurence said, low.
"I cannot tell more; what speed do you think he would make,
the big one?"
Chenery studied the red-brown dragon and shook his head.
"Wingspan equal to his length, not too thickset; thirteen
knots at a guess, if he didn't want to throw the lightweights off his pace. Call it fourteen."
"More than three hundred miles, then," Laurence said, his
heart sinking; three hundred miles, and not a track left
behind them to show the way. If Temeraire and the others
could have caught them, he would have had no fear, not of
this small rag-tag band; but in the vastness of the
continent, they could disappear as easily as if they had
all been killed and buried, and waste the rest of their
lives imprisoned.
Already they had scarcely any hope of making their way back
to the Cape overland, even setting aside the great
likelihood of pursuit. If they made directly westward for
the coast, avoiding all native perils and managing to find
food and water enough to sustain them over a more
reasonable month's march, they might at last reach the
ocean; then what? A raft, perhaps, might be contrived; or a
pirogue of a sort; Laurence did not set himself up as a
Cook or a Bligh, but he supposed he could navigate them to
a port, if they escaped gale and dangerous currents, and
bring back aid for the survivors. A great many ifs, all of
them unlikely in the extreme, and sure to only grow more so
the farther they were carried; and meanwhile Temeraire
would certainly have come into the interior after them,
searching in a panic, and exposing himself to the worst
sort of danger.
Laurence twisted his wrists against the ropes: they were
good stuff, strong and tightly woven, and there was little
yield. "Sir," Dyer said, "I think I have my pocket-knife."
Their captors were winding down their ceremony; the two
small dragons were digging a hole, for the burial. The
pocket-knife was not very sharp, and the ropes were tough;
Laurence had to saw for a long time to free one arm, the
thin wooden hilt slippery in his sweating hand, and his
fingers cramping around it as he tried to bend the knife
against the bindings around his wrist. At last he
succeeded, and passed it along to Chenery; with one arm
free he could work on the knots between him and Dyer.
"Quietly, Mr. Allen," Laurence said, on his other side; the
ensign was tugging clumsily at the knots holding him to one
of Catherine's midwingmen.
The mound was raised, and their captors were asleep, before
they had more than half disentangled themselves. There was
a noisy groaning of hippopotami in the darkness; it sounded
very near-by at times, and occasionally one of the dragons
would raise a sleepy head, listening, and make a quelling
growl, which silenced all the night around them.
They worked more urgently now, and those of them already
freed risked creeping from their places to help the others;
Laurence worked with Catherine, whose slim fingers made
quick work of the worst knots, and then he whispered
softly, when they had loosed her man Peck, the last, "Pray
take the others into the woods and do not wait for me; I
must try and free Mrs. Erasmus."
She nodded, and pressed the pocket-knife on him: dulled to
uselessness, but at least a moral support; and then they
quietly one by one crept into the forest, away from the
camp, except for Ferris, who crawled over to Laurence's
side. "The guns?" he asked softly.
Laurence shook his head: the rifles had unhappily been
bundled away, by their captors, into the rest of their
baggage, which lay tucked beside the head of one of the
snoring dragons: there was no way to get at them. It was
dreadful enough to have to creep past the sleeping men,
lying exhausted and sprawled upon the ground after the
catharsis of their wake: every ordinary snuffled noise of
sleep magnified a hundredfold, and the occasional low
crackles of the fire, burning down, like thunderclaps. His
knees were inclined to be weak, and some of his steps
sagged, involuntarily, almost so they brushed the ground;
he had to steady himself with a hand against the dirt.
Mrs. Erasmus was lying apart from the men, to one side of
the fire, very near the head of the great red-brown dragon;
his forelegs were curled shallowly to either side of her.
She was huddled very small, with her hands tucked beneath
her head; but Laurence was glad to see she did not seem to
have been injured. She jerked almost loose when Laurence's
hand came over her mouth, the whites of her eyes showing
all around, but her trembling quieted at once when she saw
him; she nodded, and he lifted his hand away again, to help
her to her feet.
They crept as softly away, and slowly, around the great
taloned claw, the black horny edges serrated and gleaming
with the red firelight, the dragon's breath coming deep and
evenly; his nostrils flared in their regular pace, showing
a little pink within. They were ten paces away, eleven; the
dark eyelid cracked, and the yellow eye slid open upon
them.
He was up and roaring at once. "Go!" Laurence shouted,
pushing Mrs. Erasmus onward with Ferris; his own legs would
not answer quickly, and one of the men waking leapt upon
him, taking him by the knees and to the ground. They fell
wrestling in the dust and dirt, near the fire; Laurence
grimly hoping for nothing more, now, than to cover the
escape. It was a clumsy, drunken struggle, like the last
rounds of a mill with both parties weaving and bloodied;
both of them exhausted, and Laurence's weakness matched by
his opponent's confusion of having been woken from sound
sleep. Rolling upon his back, Laurence managed to lock an
arm around the man's throat, and pulled with all his might
upon his own wrist to hold it; he lashed out with his
booted foot to trip another who was snatching for his
spear.
Ferris had pushed Mrs. Erasmus towards the forest; a dozen
of the aviators were running out, to come to her aid, and
to Laurence. "Lethabo!" the dragon cried-whatever the
threat or meaning, it brought her to a distracted halt,
looking around; the dragon was lunging for Ferris.
She called out in protest herself and, running back where
Ferris had dived to the ground to evade in desperation,
threw herself between, holding up a hand; the claw,
descending, stopped, and the dragon put it down again
before her.
This time the men set a watch, learning from their mistake,
and tied them up closer by the fire: there would be no
second attempt. The two small dragons had herded them back
to the camp with contemptuous ease, and an air of practice;
if in the process they had also stampeded a small herd of
antelope, they did not mind that, and made a late supper to
console themselves for the effort. They missed only
Kettering, one of Harcourt's riflemen, and Peck and Bailes,
both harness-men; but the latter two stumbled demoralized
back into camp and surrendered, early in the morning, with
the intelligence that Kettering had been killed, trying to
ford the river, by a hippo; their pale and nauseated
expressions precluded any wish of knowing more.
"It was my name," Mrs. Erasmus said, her hands tight around
her cup of dark red tea. "Lethabo. It was my name when I
was a girl."
She had not been permitted to come and speak to them, but
at her pleading they had at length consented to bring
Laurence over, hobbled at the ankles with his wrists tied
together before him, and one of the spearmen standing watch
lest he try to reach towards her. The red-brown dragon
himself was bent over their conversation alertly, with a
malevolent eye on Laurence at every moment.
"Are these men of your native tribe, then?" he asked.
"The men, no. They are of a tribe, I think, cousins to my
own, or allied. I am not very sure, but they can understand
me when I speak. But-" She paused, and said, "I do not
understand it properly myself, but Kefentse," she nodded
towards the great hovering beast, "says he is my greatgrandfather."
Laurence was baffled, and supposed she had misunderstood;
or translated wrong. "No," she said, "no; there are many
words I do not remember well, but I was taken with many
others, and some of us were sold together also. We called
all the older men Grandfather, for respect. I am sure that
is all it means."
"Have you enough of the tongue to explain to him we meant
no harm?" Laurence asked. "That we only sought the
mushrooms-"
She made the halting attempt, but the dragon snorted in a
disdainful manner before she had even finished. He at once
insinuated his great taloned forehand between them, glaring
as if Laurence had offered her an insult, and spoke to the
men: they at once pulled Laurence to his feet and dragged
him back to the line of prisoners.
"Well," Chenery said, when Laurence had been tied up with
them again, "it sounds a little promising: I dare say when
she has had a chance to talk to him, she will be able to
bring him round. And in the meantime, at least they do not
mean to kill us, or I expect they would have done so
already and saved themselves the trouble of our keep."
For what motive they had been preserved, however, was quite
unclear; there was no attempt made to question them, and
Laurence was growing bewildered as their journey extended
further and further, past what could ever have been the
reasonable extent of the territory of a small tribe, even
one in the possession of dragons. He might have thought
they were circling about, to lose pursuit, but the sun
during the day and the Southern Cross at night gave it the
lie: their course was steady and purposeful, always north
by north-east, veering only to bring them to a more
comfortable situation for the night, or to running water.
Early the next day they stopped by a wide river, looking
almost orange from its muddy bottom, and populated by more
of the noisy hippopotami, which darted away through the
water with surprising speed from the pouncing dragons,
submerging through wide ripples to evade. At last one of
them was served out, by the two small dragons cornering it
from both sides, and laid down to be butchered in the
clearing. Their captors had grown confident enough to untie
a few of them to assist with the tedious labor, Dyer and
Catherine's young runner Tooke set to carrying water back
and forth in a bowl, fetching it uneasily from the water's
edge: there was a substantial crocodile sleeping on the