merely clung, and were borne away along the gorge, back to
the more settled area.
Still no-one had come. They had among their pockets some
biscuit, a little dried fruit, which would not have made a
meal for even one man; it was pressed on Catherine, who at
first disdained it scornfully, until Dorset insisted upon
it as a medical matter.
The workmen did not return, but several dragons appeared in
a party upon the plain on the far side of the gorge, each
carrying a goodly sized bundle of wood, and laid down a
large bonfire; then one among them bent its head and
breathed out a flame, igniting the whole. It was not
perhaps a great stream of fire; but then none was called
for by the circumstances. "Oh, that is a pity," Chenery
said, rather low; understating the case.
They grew only sorrier when another pair arrived, carrying
what looked to be the component parts of three or four
elephants among them, butchered and neatly skewered on long
iron stakes, to roast over the bonfire. The wind was in
their quarter, carrying towards the caves. Laurence had to
wipe his mouth with his handkerchief, twice; even the very
back of the cavern offered no shelter from the torment of
the delicious smell. It was very disheartening to observe
the dragons cast away the scorched and cracked bones, when
they had done, into the massive thicket of jungle which
lined the floor of the gorge below; still more regrettable
were the satisfied growls and yelping which presently rose
up in reply, lions, perhaps, or wild dogs: a fresh obstacle
to any escape.
Two hours more passed, or nearly, by the cracked glass
which Turner had managed to salvage from the wreck of their
capture; it began to grow dark. Dragons came flying to many
of the plain cave-mouths near-by, carrying netting full of
men, whom they let down inside the caves just as the
aviators had been deposited: the dragons had a sort of
trick of setting their hind legs upon the lip of each
cavern, and setting their foreclaws into some ridges carved
above the mouth, while their riders unhooked the netting,
so they did not have to squeeze into some of these smaller
caverns. It bore some resemblance to the passenger-dragons,
which Laurence had seen in China, save for the perfect
disregard for the comfort of the passengers in the nets.
When these deliveries had finished, a small dragon flew
down the gorge towards them, with many baskets slung over
its shoulders. It halted in sequence at the cave-mouths,
leaving behind a few of the bundles every time, until at
last it reached their own. There was a single man upon its
back, who looked their number over with a critical eye,
then untied some three of the baskets before taking wing
again.
Each held a cold and thickened mass of sorghum-porridge
cooked in milk: filling if not savory, and the portions not
quite so large as desirable. "One basket for every ten
men," Harcourt said, counting cave-mouths, "so as many as
fifty men, in that large one: they must have near a
thousand prisoners here, spread out."
"A regular Newgate," Chenery said, "but less damp, for
which be thanked; do you suppose they mean to sell us? A
charming solution, if we could get ourselves shipped to
Cape Coast and not a French port; and if they were not
unpleasant about it."
"Maybe they will eat us," Dyer said thoughtfully, his
piping voice quite clear; all the other men were engaged
deeply with their dinners.
There was a general pause. "A thoroughly morbid suggestion,
Mr. Dyer; let me hear no more of this sort of speculation,"
Laurence said, taken aback.
"Oh, yes, sir," Dyer said, surprised, and went directly
back to his dinner, with no particular sign of dismay; some
of the younger ensigns looked greenly, and it required
perhaps a full minute before hunger once again overcame
their temporary qualms.
The line of sunlight crept up the far wall and slid away
over the edge; dusk came early into the narrow gorge. For
lack of anything else to do, they slept, while the sky
above was still a daylit blue, and the next morning roused
from an uneasy night into darkness, with the dreadful
buzzing of the drill suddenly muffled; Dyer's breathless,
"Sir, sir-" in Laurence's ear.
Kefentse was there; he had thrust as much of his head as
would fit into the opening of their cavern, blocking both
light and noise from outside. Mrs. Erasmus was with him,
difficult to recognize in the native dress which she had
been given, and weighted down as if she were in danger of
floating away: earrings, armbands like coiled snakes on
upper arms and lower, a great neck-collar of gold pieces
strung on wire, interspersed with pieces of ivory, dark
green jade, and ruby, certainly worth fifty thousand pounds
at least, and a great emerald like an egg, set in gold,
pinning a turban of silk upon her head.
Most of the native women which they had seen, from their
vantage point, had been carrying water, or hanging washing
to dry upon the steps, and wore only a kind of leather
skirt, reaching to the knees but leaving their breasts
quite bare: much to the covert interest of the younger
officers. Perhaps formal garments were of different style,
or she had prevailed upon them to give her others; she wore
instead a long skirt of plain white cotton, and over it
another length of cotton cloth woven of bright colors,
wrapped and folded elaborately about her shoulders.
She required the assistance of a hand on her elbow to climb
down from Kefentse's back. "They would have me wear more if
it would not make it impossible for me to walk: it is the
tribal property," she said. It was evasion; her expression
was uneasy, and after a moment's pause she said, low, "I am
sorry: Kefentse is here to take our leader, to go and speak
with the king."
Harcourt was pale but composed. "I am senior, ma'am; he may
take me."
"He may sooner go to the Devil," Chenery said. "Laurence,
shall we have lots for it?" Taking up a small twig from the
rushes he snapped it in two and held them out with the top
ends even, the lower concealed.
It was at least a good deal more comfortable to be carried
in Kefentse's talons, than in the former netting; and
Laurence did not feel his appearance wholly disgraceful:
the idleness and heat of the day had left them nothing but
time, and thanks to the convenience of the water-pool, he
had sponged his coat as best he could, and thoroughly
washed his breeches and his linen. He had not shaved, but
that could not be helped.
The roar of the falls increased steadily, and the tangle of
jungle below, until they were brought at last to a curve of
the gorge very near the falls; here a great hall stood
open, three times the width of the other archways, the
entryway pillared for support. Kefentse dived low and
swiftly within, and coming to a stop rolled him
unceremoniously out of his talons onto the damp floor,
before more carefully setting Mrs. Erasmus onto her feet.
Laurence had already come to expect these indignities, and
picked himself up without more than irritation, an emotion
promptly vanquished in favor of concern. A makeshift
workshop had been established recently, it seemed, along
the right side of the chamber, and besides the rifles which
the aviators themselves had lost, some sixty or seventy
muskets more were laid out upon the floor on woven mats, in
various states of disassembly and repair; and worse, far
worse: a six-pound gun, its housing cracked but not gone,
and a barrel of gunpowder besides. A small group of men
were working upon the collection, taking apart a musket and
pressing low harsh questions on a man sitting dejectedly on
a stool before them; his back, turned to Laurence, was
marked with half-a-dozen bloody weals, and flies crawled
upon it.
A young man was overseeing their work with great attention;
he left off, as Kefentse landed, and came over towards
them: tall, with a long face infused with a certain quality
of sorrow, not by emotion but only the angle of his
cheekbones, like a hound; the nose sculpted and a narrow
black beard around the full mouth. He had a small escort of
warriors, all of them bare-chested and armed with short
spears, leather-skirted; he was distinguished from the rest
of them by a thick neck-collar of gold with a fringe of
what looked to be the claws of some great cat, and a
leopard-skin cape draped over the shoulders: physically
powerful, and his eyes were shrewd.
Laurence bowed; the young man ignored him, looking to the
other side of the great hall, and from a chamber within
came a great creature of golden-bronze hide, the underside
of her wings lined in purple like royalty. She was in
battle-array formidable as a Crusader, great heavy plates
of iron slung across the vulnerable expanse of her breast,
with a fine mesh of chain beneath to protect the belly, and
the spikes bristling down her spine were sheathed in caps
of iron, as were her talons, and these were yet discolored
a little with blood; Mrs. Erasmus gave him to understand
that this was the king, Mokhachane, and his eldest son
Moshueshue.
She-or he?-Laurence was at a loss; he was standing scarcely
half-a-length away, and the king was quite certainly, quite
visibly a female dragon-seated herself sphinx-like on the
floor, her tail curling along her flanks, and regarded
Laurence with a cold and amber eye. The young man,
Moshueshue, seated himself on a wooden throne, which was
brought to him and set by her side, and several older women
trailing after settled themselves on wooden stools behind
him: these identified as the king's wives.
Kefentse lowered his head respectfully, and began to speak,
evidently giving his account of their capture and journey,
which Mrs. Erasmus with great courage dared to dispute, at
several points, on their behalf; while trying to help
Laurence understand the accusations which had been made.
That they had stolen medicines, cultivated for the use of
the king's own subjects, was only the least offense; the
foremost, that they had offered a territorial challenge, by
invading in the company of their own ancestors, as Kefentse
considered the dragons of the formation to be; and in
league with enemy tribes had been stealing their children,
for which he offered as one portion of evidence that they
had been traveling with a man of the Lunda, notorious
kidnappers-
Mrs. Erasmus paused and said unevenly, "-he means my
husband."
She did not continue her translation at once, but pressed a
fold of her gown briefly to her face, while Kefentse bent
low and anxiously over her, crooning, and snapping at
Laurence with a hiss, when he would have offered his arm
for her support.
"The medicine we took only for necessity, because our own
dragons were ill; and without knowing the mushroom
cultivated," Laurence said, but he did not know how else to
defend himself. He could not very well deny they had
brought dragons; they had, and in any case, this seemed
rather to stand in for making a territorial claim, which he
could certainly not as a serving-officer deny. The British
and the Dutch would alike have been surprised to know their
colony had been thought unworthy of notice, and casually to
be violated, until the arrival of the formation.
And he was in no fair way armed to justify the practice of
slavery, or to deny that it was carried on at the behest of
white men, if he might refute some few of the particulars
which were leveled against them-"No, good God, of course we
do not eat them," he said, but beyond this could make very
little more argument. The dreadful incident of the Zong,
where more than a hundred slaves had been deliberately
flung overboard, for the sake of insurance-money, chose the
moment to come uncomfortably to his mind, with a blush for
the guilt and shame of his nation; made him look a liar, if
they had not already thought him so.
He could only repeat, that he was not himself a slaver, and
was not surprised to find this excuse hold no water with
them, nor even when Mrs. Erasmus had explained to them her
husband's perfect innocence; the objection plainly was
wider than such personal acts. There was no sympathy
offered, for the illness which had driven them to seek the
medicine; Laurence rather received the impression that they
thought it little more than just deserts, drawing as they
did no particular distinction between the British and their
dragons, and their temper grew rather more fixed, than
less, for all Laurence's attempts to explain.
The king turned, and, in response to a beckoning flick of
her tail, Laurence was led farther back into the chamber,