them, a succession of red-brown sands and arid scrubland,
and great white salt pans barren of all life. Their course
continued north-east, bearing them still farther inland and
away from the coast; their thin hopes of escape or rescue
wasting away entirely.
At last they left behind the wastelands, and the desert
yielded to milder scenery of green trees and yellow ground
overgrown with thick grasses; late in the morning, the
belly of the dragon rumbled loud above them with his roar
of greeting: answered momentarily with several voices from
up ahead, and they came abruptly into view of an
astonishing prospect: a vast moving herd of elephants,
creeping slowly across the savannah as they tore at the
shrubs and low-hanging branches in their path, and enduring
with perfect docility the supervision of two dragons and
some thirty men, who ambled along comfortably behind, only
a few lengths short of the rear of the herd.
The herdsmen carried long sticks with dangling rattles, by
which means they kept the herd from turning back; a little
farther along, perhaps a quarter-of-a-mile into the
wreckage the herd had left behind, women worked busily,
spreading great bushels of red-stained manure and planting
young shrubs: they sang as they worked, rhythmically.
The prisoners were let down. Laurence almost was distracted
from the water-bag for staring at the fat, sluggish
creatures, larger than any he had ever heard bragged of. He
had visited India twice, as a naval officer, and once seen
an impressive old creature carrying a native potentate and
his retinue upon its head, some six tons in weight. The
most impressive here would have he guessed outweighed that
one by half again, and rivaled Nitidus or Dulcia in size,
with great ivory tusks jutting out like spears some three
feet beyond its head. Another of the behemoths put its head
down against a young tree, of no mean size, and with a
groaning implacable push brought it crashing to the ground;
pleased with its success, the elephant ambled lazily down
its length, to devour at leisure the tender shoots from the
crown.
After some little conversation with their captors, the
herd-dragons went aloft and chivvied away a few of the
beasts from the main body of the herd: older animals, by
the length of their tusks, without young. These having been
coaxed downwind and behind the line of herdsmen, Kefentse
and the two other dragons fell upon them skillfully: a
single piercing of talons slew the creatures, before they
could make any outcry which might have distressed the rest.
The dragons made their repast greedily, murmuring with
satisfaction, as might a contented gentleman over his
pleasing dinner; when they were done, the hyenas crept out
of the grass to deal with the bloody remains, and cackled
all through the night.
Throughout the next two days, they were scarcely an hour
aloft without sight of some other dragons, calling
greetings from afar; more villages flashed past beneath
them, and occasionally some small fortification with walls
of clay and rock, until in the distance they glimpsed a
tremendous plume of smoke rising, like a great grass-fire,
and a thin silvery line winding away over the earth.
"Mosi oa Tunya," Mrs. Erasmus had told them, was the name
of their destination, meaning smoke that thunders; and a
low and continuous roaring built higher around them as
Kefentse angled directly towards the plume.
The narrow shining line upon the earth resolved itself
swiftly into a river of great immensity: slow and very
broad, fractured into many smaller streams, all winding
together past rocks and small grassy islets towards a
narrow crack in the earth like an eggshell broken down the
middle, where the river suddenly boiled up and plunged into
the thunder of a waterfall more vast than anything Laurence
might have conceived, the gorges of its descent so full of
white-plumed spray that its base could not be seen.
Into these narrow gorges, which seemed barely wide enough
for him to go abreast, Kefentse dived at speed, pocket
rainbows gleaming in puddles collected upon his hide
through the first clouds of steam. Pressed hard up against
the netting, Laurence wiped water from his face and oneweek's beard, and palmed it away from the hollows of his
eyes, squinting as they broke through into a widening
canyon.
The lower slopes were thickly forested, a jewel-green
tangle of tropical growth reaching some halfway up the
walls, where abruptly the vegetation ended and the cliff
faces rose sheer and smooth to the plain above, gleaming
like polished marble and pockmarked only by the gaping
holes of caverns. And then Laurence realized he was not
looking at caverns, but at great carved archways, mouths
for vaulted halls which penetrated deep within the
mountain-side. The cliff walls did not gleam like polished
marble; they were polished marble, or as good as: a smooth
speckled stone, with quantities of ivory and gold inlaid
directly into the rock in fantastical pattern.
Façades were carved and sculpted around the openings,
ornamented gorgeously in vivid color and odd abstract
patterns, and towering more vast than Westminster or St.
Paul's, the only and inadequate measures of comparison
which Laurence possessed. Narrow stairs, their railings
carved of stone and smoothed by the water-spray, climbed
between the archways to give the perspective: five ordinary
town-houses, laid foundation-to-roof atop one another,
might have approximated the heights of the largest.
Kefentse was going at a lazy speed now, the better to avoid
collision: the gorge was full of dragons. Dragons flew back
and forth busily among the halls, some carrying baskets or
bundles, some carrying men on their backs; dragons lay
sleeping upon the carved ledges, tails drooping downward
from the mouths. Upon the stairways and in the halls, men
and women stood talking or at labor, dressed in animalskins or wrapped cloth garments of dazzling-bright colors,
indigo and red and yellow ochre against their dark brown
skin, many with elaborate chains of gold; and softly
running above the sounds of all their mingled speech came
the unending voice of the water.
Chapter 11
KEFENTSE DEPOSITED THEM rudely within one of the smaller
caverns dug into the face of the rock: he could not fit
inside himself, but only balanced upon the lip of the cave
while the netting was undone. They were shaken out onto the
floor in a heap, still tied up, and he flew at once away,
taking poor Mrs. Erasmus with him, and abandoning them to
work themselves loose. There was no sharp edge to help
them; the cavern walls were smoothed. Dyer and Roland and
Tooke managed eventually to squirm their smaller hands out
of their bindings, and began to help untie the others.
Thirty of them left all together, from four crews. They
were not crowded, nor could their circumstances be called
cruel; the floor was strewn liberally with dry straw to
soften the hard rock, and despite the lingering day's heat
outside, the chamber remained cool and pleasant. A
necessary-pit was carved out of the stone at the back of
the chamber; it must surely have connected with a drainage
channel somewhere beneath, but the opening was small, and
drilled through solid rock: there was no way to get to it.
There was a small pool also, in the back, refreshed
continuously from a trickling channel and waist-deep on a
man, large enough to swim across a few strokes: they would
by no means die of thirst.
It was a strange prison, with neither guard nor bars upon
the door, but as impregnable as any fortress; there were
none of the carved steps leading to their cavern, and
nothing but the yawning gorge beneath. The scale of the
whole, the carved and gothic ceiling vaulting overhead,
would have made a comfortable stall for a small dragon; it
ought to have seemed an airy and spacious environment, but
had the effect of making them feel rather Lilliputian than
comfortable, children wandering in a giant's house, with
their numbers so painfully small and dwindled.
Dorset was alive, with a terrible bruising down along the
side of his face, and he pressed his hand now and again to
his side, as if his ribs or his breathing pained him. "Mr.
Pratt is dead, Captain," he said. "I am very sorry to be
sure: he tried to stand before Mrs. Erasmus, and the beast
carved him to the hip," a grievous loss, the smith's quiet
capability no less than his immense strength.
There was no way to be certain of the full extent of their
losses: Hobbes killed before their eyes, and Laurence had
seen Chenery's midwingman Hyatt dead; Chenery's lieutenant
Libbley remembered the surgeon Waley fallen also; but
another dozen at least had been heaved out after that first
night, the rest of them too sick and dazed to recognize in
dim lighting, and more had been left dead upon the field;
others still, they hoped, had slipped away in the general
confusion, to leave at least some faint direction behind.
There was no-one who had seen Warren.
"But I hope to God that Sutton will have the sense to turn
back straightaway for the Cape," Harcourt said. "No-one
could ever conceive we had been brought so far; they will
wear themselves to rags with fretting, and never find a
trace: we must find some way to get them word, at least.
Those men knew something about guns, did you notice? There
must be some trade, some merchants must be tempted to come:
more ivory than they know what to do with, when they build
their walls out of the stuff."
They ventured cautiously to the edge of the cavern-mouth to
look out again into the gorges. The first impression of
immensity and splendor was not to be undone, but the degree
perhaps fell off a little here, farther from the falls and
near the end of the inhabited portion of the gorges; the
façade of their own prison was plain rock, although the
native cliff wall had been polished to a smoothness that
would have defied a monkey to climb.
Chenery bent down over the ledge and rubbed his hand over
the wall, as far down as he could reach, and came up
discouraged. "Not a finger-hold to be had: we are not going
anywhere, until we manage to sprout wings of our own."
"Then we had better rest, while we may," Harcourt said, in
practical tones, "and if you gentlemen will be so good as
to give me your backs, I am going to bathe."
They were roused up early not by any attentions paid to
them, for there were none, but by a dreadful noise which
could most easily be compared to a swarm of horse-flies in
continuous agitation. The sun had not yet penetrated into
the twisting canyons, though the sky above was the
thorough-going blue of mid-morning, and a faint glaze of
mist yet clung to the smooth rock near the cavern mouth.
Across the gorge, a pair of dragons were engaged in a
peculiar exercise, flying back and forth hauling
alternately upon what looked to be a thick grey hawser
coiled about and passed through the end of a tremendous
iron shaft, spinning it steadily. The other end of the
shaft was plunged into the depths of a cavern only
partially hollowed-out, and from here issued the malevolent
buzzing. Dust and chalky powder blew out in great gusts,
speckling the dragons' hides so they were coated thickly
ochre; occasionally one or the other would turn his head
and sneeze powerfully, without ever losing the rhythm.
A great cracking noise heralded a leap forward: loose
pebbles and great stones came spilling from the mouth of
the hall into a large sack stretched out upon a frame to
catch them. The dragons paused in their labor, and withdrew
the enormous drill; one clung on to the rough, unpolished
cliff, holding the mechanism suspended, while the other
perched upon the ledge and scraped out the boulders and
loose rock which had shattered. A third dragon, smaller,
came winging down the gorge when the operation was
complete; he carried away the laden sack, to let the pair
resume.
While this work proceeded, almost directly above them
another cavern, already sunk deep within the hillside,
crawled with human masons finishing the rough work, the
distant musical plink-plink of tapping hammers on the rock
drifting across the divide; each man bringing his own
discards to the cave-mouth as they smoothed down the walls.
They were very industrious all the morning; then mid-day
arriving they quitted their work. Their tools were heaped
inside the cavern, the vast drill also; and the dragons
flying up collected the men, who without any harness leapt
with casual fearlessness onto the dragon's backs, wings,
limbs, and clapped on to the handful of woven straps, or