farther bank, whose green eye was wide open and fixed upon
them; its flesh was evidently not a temptation to the
dragons, for it showed not the least sign of fear.
The dragons lay drowsing in the sun, their tails flicking
idly at the enormous clouds of flies which gathered round
them, their heads pillowed on their forelegs. Mrs. Erasmus
was speaking into Kefentse's ear; mid-sentence, he reared
abruptly up and began to make questions of her,
demandingly; she flinched back, and only shook her head,
refusing. At last he left off, and cast his eyes southward,
sitting up on his haunches like a coat of arms: a dragon
sejant erect, gules; then slowly he settled himself back
down; he spoke to her once more, and pointedly shut his
eyes.
"Well, I don't suppose we need ask what he thinks of
letting you go," Chenery said, when she had crept around to
them.
"No," she said, speaking low to keep from rousing the
dragons up again, "and matters are only worse: I spoke of
my daughters, and now Kefentse wants nothing more than to
go back for them also."
Laurence was ashamed to feel an eager leap of hope, at a
situation which naturally could cause her only the greatest
anxiety; but such an attempt would at least reveal to the
rest of the formation the identity of their captors. "And I
assure you, ma'am," he said, "that any such demand would be
received with the utmost scorn: I am confident that our
fellow officers and General Grey will consider your
children their own charge."
"Captain, you do not understand," she said. "I think he
would be ready to attack all the colony to get at them. He
thinks there may be more of their stolen kindred there,
too, among the slaves."
"I am sure I wish them much luck, if they like to try it,"
Chenery said. "Pray don't be worried for the girls: even if
these fellows have another few beauties like this
grandfather of yours at home, it would take a little more
than that to crack a nut like the castle. There are twentyfour-pounders there; not to speak of pepper guns, and a
full formation. I don't suppose he would like to come back
with us, instead; to England, I mean?" he added, with a
flash of cheerful optimism. "If he has taken to you so
strong, you ought to be able to persuade him."
But it was very soon clear that Kefentse, whatever else he
meant by calling himself her great-grandfather, certainly
considered himself in the light of her elder; even though
she thought now, that she vaguely recalled his hatching.
"Not well, but I am almost sure of it," she said. "I was
very young, but there were many days of feasting, and
presents; and I remember him often in the village, after,"
which Laurence supposed answered for her lack of fear of
dragons; she had been taken as a girl of some nine-years'
age, old enough to have lost the instinctive terror.
Remembering her only as a child, Kefentse, far from being
inclined to obey, had instead concluded from her efforts to
secure their freedom that she was their dupe, either
frightened or tricked into lying for their sake, and he was
grown all the angrier for it. "I beg you do not risk any
further attempts at persuasion," Laurence said. "We must be
grateful for his protection of you; I would have you make
no more fruitless attempts, which might cause him to
reconsider his sentiments."
"He would do nothing to hurt me," she said, a strange
certainty; perhaps the restoration of some childhood
confidence.
Having breakfasted on roasted hippo, they flew on some
hours more and landed again only a little while before
dark, beside what seemed to be a small farming village. The
clearing where they descended was full of children at play,
who shrieked with delight at their arrival, and ran eagerly
around the dragons, chattering away at them without the
slightest evidence of fear; although they peered very
nervously at the prisoners. A broad spreading mimosa tree
stood at the far end of the clearing, giving pleasant
shade, and beneath it stood an odd little shed with no
front, raised several feet from the ground and housing
within it a dragon egg of substantial size. Around it a
circle of women sat with mortar and pestle, pounding grain;
they put aside their tools and patted the dragon egg, as if
speaking to it, and rose to greet the visitors as they
leapt down from the smaller dragons' backs, and to stare
with curiosity.
Several men came in from the village, to clasp arms with
the handlers and greet the dragons. An elaborately carved
elephant's tooth hung from a tree, the narrow end cut open
to make a horn, and one of the villagers took this down and
blew on it, several long hollow ringing blasts. Shortly
another dragon landed in the clearing, a middle-weight of
perhaps ten tons, a delicate dusty shade of green with
yellow markings and sprays of red spots upon his breast and
shoulders, and two sets of long foreteeth which protruded
over his jaw above and below. The children were even less
shy of this newcomer, clustering close about his forelegs,
even climbing upon his tail and pulling on his wings, a
treatment which he bore with perfect patience while he
talked with the visiting dragons.
The four of them settled around the enshrined dragon egg,
in company with their handlers and the men of the village;
and one older woman also sat with them, her dress marking
her apart: a skirt of animal-skins and strings of long
beads like reed-joints, and many heaped necklaces of animal
claws and colored beads also. The rest of the women brought
a large steaming pot of porridge, the grain boiled up in
milk rather than broth, for their dinner; with fresh greens
cooked with garlic, and dried meat preserved in salt: a
little tough, but flavorful, vinegary and spiced.
Bowls were brought for the prisoners, and their hands were
untied to allow them to eat for themselves for once, their
captors less wary with so large a company around them; and
in the celebratory bustle, Mrs. Erasmus was able to slip
away from Kefentse to join them once again: he had been
given pride of place beside the dragon egg, and presented a
large cow to eat; and they seemed to hold the evening's
entertainment until he had finished. At least when the
remnants of the carcass on which he feasted had been
carried away, and fresh dirt scattered over the ground
before him to soak up the blood, only then did the old
woman stand up, the one oddly dressed, and coming to stand
before the dragon egg began to sing and clap.
The audience took up the rhythm, with clapping and with
drums, and their voices joined with her on the refrains;
each verse was different, without rhyme or pattern that
Laurence could see. "She is saying, she is telling the
egg," Mrs. Erasmus said, staring at the ground, unseeing;
intent upon following the words. "She is telling him of his
life. She is saying, he was a founder of the village; he
brought them to a good safe country, past the desert, where
the kidnappers do not come. He was a great hunter, and
killed the lion with his own hands, when it would have
raided among the cattle; they miss his wisdom, in the
council, and he must hurry up and come back to them: it is
his duty-"
Laurence stared, entirely baffled. The old priestess had
finished her own verses, and began to lead one after
another some of the men of the village to stand in front of
the egg and recite, with a little prompting assistance from
her. "They say they are his sons," Mrs. Erasmus said,
"telling him they long to hear his voice again; that is his
grandson, born since his death," when one of them carried
an infant in swaddling to the egg, to pat its small hand
against the shell. "It is only some heathen superstition,
of course," Mrs. Erasmus added, but uneasily.
The dragons joined their own voices to the ceremony: the
local beast addressing the egg as his old friend, whose
return was eagerly awaited; the smaller dragons of the
distant border spoke of the general pleasures of the hunt,
of taking wing, of seeing their descendants prosper.
Kefentse was silent, until the priestess chided him, and
coaxed; then at last in his deep voice he gave warning
rather than encouragement, and spoke of grief at failing in
his duty: of coming back to the deserted village, the smoke
of dying fires, all the houses empty; his children lying in
the dust, still and not answering his calls, and the hyena
slinking through the herds. "He searched, and searched,
until he came to the shore, and at the ocean he knew-he
knew he would not find us," Mrs. Erasmus said, and Kefentse
put his head down and moaned, very low; abruptly she rose
and crossed the clearing to him, and put her hands upon his
lowered muzzle.
There was a certain sluggishness to the next morning's
preparations for departure, the dragons and men both having
indulged in some brewed liquor, late in the evening's
festivities, which now rendered them all dragging; the
small green dragon yawned and yawned, as if he would
unhinge his jaw.
Woven baskets were being brought out to the clearing, so
large they required two men each to carry, and full of
foodstuffs: small pale yellow kidney beans spotted black,
hard and dried; red-brown grains of sorghum; small onions
of yellow and purple-red; more strips of the pungent dried
meat. The men of their party nodded over the tribute, and
the baskets were covered with woven lids, tied securely on
with strips of tough thin rope braided of bark. The baskets
in pairs were slung over the necks of the smaller dragons,
who bent their heads to receive them.
There was at all times a watchful guard upon them, however;
and also upon the perimeters of the village: younger boys,
with a large cow-bell sort of contraption, which they could
have rung out in an instant. It was a shameful consequence
of the rapacity of the slave trade, that having exhausted
the natural supply of prisoners of war among the kingdoms
of the coast, the native suppliers of the trade had turned
to kidnapping and raiding, without even the thin excuse of
a quarrel over territory, solely to acquire more human
chattel. These efforts were extending further into the
interior with every year, and had evidently made the
villagers begin to be wary.
It was not a condition of long standing, for the village
was not designed upon defensible lines, being only a
collection of handsome but small, low houses made of clay
and stones and roofed in straw. These were circular, with
nearly a quarter of the circumference open to the elements
to let the smoke of their cooking-fires out, and would have
offered little shelter against a marauding band intent on
capture or slaughter. Indeed there was no great wealth
here, which they should have studied to protect: only a
small herd of cattle and goats, browsing idly beyond the
village boundaries under the attention of a few older
children; respectable fields, adequate for subsistence and
a little more; a few of the women and older men wore
handsome trinkets of ivory and gold and brightly woven
cloth. But nothing which would have tempted the rapacity of
an ordinary robber, save the inhabitants themselves, for
their being peaceful, healthy, and well-fleshed; and the
caution sat new and uneasily upon their shoulders.
"They have had no-one stolen here, yet," Mrs. Erasmus said.
"But three children were snatched from a village a day's
flight from here. One was hiding near-by, and slipped away
to give the warning; so the ancestors-the dragons-caught
them." She paused and said, oddly calm, "That is why the
slave-takers killed all my family, I think; the ones too
old or too young to sell. So they could not tell Kefentse
where we had gone."
She stood up and went to go stand watching the village,
while the packing went forward: the smallest children at
play before their grandmothers, the other women working
together, pounding flour out of sorghum, and singing. Her
dark, high-collared dress was dusty and torn, incongruous
among their bright if immodest garments, and Kefentse
lifted his head to watch her with anxious, jealous
attention.
"He must have gone half-mad," Chenery said to Laurence in
an undertone, "as though his captain and all his crew were
gone in an instant." He shook his head. "This is a kettle
and no mistake: he will never let her go."
"Perhaps she may find an opportunity to slip away,"
Laurence said grimly; he reproached himself bitterly that
they had ever involved her and Erasmus at all.
For another day and night they did not stop again, except
very briefly for water, and Laurence's heart sank at the
vast expanse of hard, dry desert which rolled away below