where stood a low table of enormous size, no higher than
his knee but some twelve feet long and across. The women
folded away the wooden covers, and a hollow space perhaps a
foot deep was revealed, like a sort of display-case; inside
lay a strange sculpture in the shape of the African
continent. It was a map, an enormous map in thick relief to
show elevation, gold-dust for sand and mountains of bronze,
jewel-chip forests and rivers of silver; and with great
dismay Laurence perceived the puff of white featherdown
used to stand for the falls. It stood almost halfway
between the tip of the continent, where Capetown lay, and
the sharp jutting prominence of the African Horn: in his
worst fears, he had not thought they had been brought so
far into the interior.
They did not let him look at it long; instead they drew him
to the other end, where the table had been lately extended:
the wood was darker, and the sections of the map laid down
only in soft painted wax. He did not at first know what to
make of it, until by relative position he understood the
blue oval stretch of water at the top of the continent must
be the Mediterranean, and realized it was meant to figure
as Europe: the outlines of Spain and Portugal and Italy
misshapen and the whole continent shrunk; Britain itself
nothing but a scattering of small whitish lumps in the
upper corner. The Alps and the Pyrenees stood in pinched-up
relief, approximately correct, but the Rhine and Volga were
strangely meandering, and smaller than he was used to see
them marked.
"They wish you to draw it properly," Mrs. Erasmus said, and
one of the prince's men handed him a stylus; Laurence gave
it back. The man repeated the instructions in his own
tongue, exaggeratedly, as if Laurence were a slow child;
and attempted to press the stylus on him once more.
"I beg your pardon; I will not," Laurence said, shaking off
his hand; the man spoke loudly and struck him abruptly
across the face. Laurence pressed his lips together and
said nothing, his heart pounding in a furious temper. Mrs.
Erasmus had turned to speak urgently to Kefentse; the
dragon was shaking his head.
"Having been taken prisoner, in what I must consider an act
of war, I must refuse under these conditions to answer any
questions whatsoever," Laurence said.
Moshueshue shook his head, while the dragon-king lowered
her head and fixed him with a glittering and furious eye,
her head so close that he could see that what he had taken
for tusks in Kefentse were a kind of jewelry: ivory rings
banded with gold, set in the flesh of her upper lip like
ear-rings. She snorted hot breath across his face, and
bared serrated teeth; but he had too much use of being so
close to Temeraire to be frightened thus, and her eyes
slitted down angrily as she drew her head back.
The king said coldly, "You were taken as a thief, and a
kidnapper, in our country; you will answer, or-" and Mrs.
Erasmus paused and said, "Captain, you will be flogged."
"Brutality and further ill-usage will in no wise alter my
determination," Laurence said, "and I beg your pardon,
ma'am, if you are forced to witness it."
His answer provoked her only further; Moshueshue laying a
hand on the king's foreleg spoke in low tones, but she
shivered her skin impatiently, and threw him off. She spoke
in a low angry continuous rumble, which Mrs. Erasmus could
only manage piecemeal to convey: "You speak of ill-usage to
us, kidnapper, invader-you will answer-we will hunt you
all, we will break your ancestors' eggs."
She finished and violently cracked her tail above her back,
issuing orders. Kefentse held his forehand out to Mrs.
Erasmus; she threw Laurence one look of deep concern before
she was carried briskly away, which he would have been glad
to think unmerited, and then his arms were seized, on
either side; his coat cut away down the middle of the back,
also his shirt, and he was forced to his knees with the
rags still hanging from his shoulders.
He fixed his gaze out through the archway, which opened
upon the loveliest prospect he had ever beheld: the sun
still low in the sky beyond the falls, newly risen, and
glowing small and molten through the gusting clouds of
mist. The torrents of water churned to pure white were
roaring steadily over the verge, the tangled branches of
trees yearning out towards the water, from the canyon-walls
where they had taken root; the gauzy insubstantial
suggestion of a rainbow, which refused to be seen head-on,
but clung to the edge of his vision. His shoulders ached as
they drew him taut.
He had seen men take a dozen lashes without a sound;
foremast hands, under his very own orders, he reminded
himself after every stroke: by the tenth, however, the
argument lost its potency, and he was only trying raggedly
to endure, in an animal sort of way, the pain which no
longer ceased between the strokes but only ebbed and
flowed. The whip struck awry once; the man holding his
right arm cursed, the edge of his hand having been caught
by the lash, by the sound of it, and yelled a complaint at
the flogger, good-natured. The whip did not cut the skin,
but the weals broke, after some time; blood ran down over
his ribs.
Laurence was not precisely insensible when another dragon
returned him to the cave, only very far away, his throat
raw and stretched to ruin. He was grateful for it, or would
have been; otherwise he would have screamed again when they
put hands on him, to lift him face-downwards onto the
ground, even though they did not touch his torn back: every
nerve had been woken to pain. Sleep did not come, only a
kind of murky absence of thought, which darkened by degrees
into unconsciousness.
Water was put to his lips. With sharp authority Dorset
ordered him to drink; the habit of obedience carried
Laurence through the effort. He faded again, and for a long
time a grey heat stifled him. He thought perhaps he drank a
little more, and another time dreamt his mouth was welling
up with salty blood, and choking half-woke to Dorset
squeezing cold broth into his mouth from a rag, before
again he slept and wandered in fever-dreams.
"Laurence, Laurence," Temeraire said, through the haze, in
a strange hollow voice, and Ferris was hissing in his ear,
saying, "Captain, you must wake up, you must, he thinks
you're dead-" His voice was full of so much fear that
Laurence tried to speak to comfort him, although his mouth
would not quite form words properly, then the dream fell
away again into a terrible roaring; he felt as though the
earth shook; then all gone, into a comfortable darkness.
Chapter 12
THE NEXT HE knew of the world was a cup of clean water held
for him by Emily Roland. Dorset was kneeling on the floor
beside him, and bracing him up by the waist. Laurence
managed to put a hand around the cup and guide it to his
mouth, spilling a little; he was palsied as an old man and
trembling. He was lying on his stomach on a thin pallet of
gathered straw covered with shirts, bare to the chest
himself; and he was desperately hungry.
"A little at a time," Dorset said, giving him small round
balls of cooled porridge, one after another. They had eased
him onto his side to eat.
"Temeraire?" Laurence said, around an involuntary and
desperate gluttony, wondering if he had only dreamed. He
could not move his arms freely: his back had scabbed over,
but if he reached too far forward the edges split, fresh
blood trickling down the skin.
Dorset did not at once answer. "Was he here?" Laurence said
sharply.
"Laurence," Harcourt said, kneeling down by him, "Laurence,
pray do not get distressed; you have been ill a week. He
was here, but I am afraid they ran him off; I am sure he is
quite well."
"Enough; you must sleep," Dorset said, and for all the will
in the world, Laurence could not resist the command; he was
already fading again.
When he woke it was daylight outside, and the cavern nearly
empty, except for Roland and Dyer and Tooke. "They take the
others to work, sir, in the fields," she said. They gave
him a little water, and reluctantly at his insistence the
support of their shoulders, so he might stagger to the edge
of the cave and look outside.
The cliff face, opposite, was cracked, and the dark stains
of dragon blood looked deep burnt orange-red on the
striated walls. "It is not his, sir, or not much," Emily
said anxiously, looking up at him.
She could tell him nothing more: not how Temeraire had
found them, nor if he had been quite alone, nor his
condition; there had been no time for conversation. With
the number of dragons flying at all hours through the
gorges, Temeraire had passed for a few moments as one in
the throng, but he was too large and remarkably colored to
escape notice, and when he had put his head into the cave
to see them, he had at once raised an alarm.
Temeraire had penetrated so far only because their captors
evidently did not anticipate an incursion of dragons, so
deep into their stronghold; but there was a guard now,
newly stationed above their cell: Laurence could see its
tail, hanging down from the top of the cliff, if he
painfully turned his neck, as far as he could, to look
directly upwards. "And I expect that means he got clear
away from them," Chenery said comfortingly, when the others
had been returned, late in the afternoon. "He can fly rings
around half the Corps, Laurence; I am sure he gave them the
slip."
Laurence would have liked to believe it, more than he did;
three days had gone by since that delirious state had
broken, and if Temeraire had been able, Laurence knew very
well he would have made another attempt in the teeth of any
opposition; perhaps had, and out of their sight had been
injured again, or worse.
Laurence was not taken, the next morning, with the others:
they had been set along with the other prisoners of war to
working in the elephant-fields, spreading the manure, much
to the satisfaction of the young women to whom the work
ordinarily fell. "Nonsense; I would be perfectly ashamed if
I could not manage it," Catherine said, "when all those
girls do: a good many of them are further along than I am,
and it is not as though I have not been brought up to work.
Besides, I am perfectly stout; indeed I am much better than
I was. But you have been very sick, Laurence, and you are
to listen to Dr. Dorset and stay lying down, when they
come."
She was very firm, and Dorset also; but they had been gone
a little more than an hour when another dragon came for
Laurence: the rider issuing peremptory commands, and
beckoning. Roland and Dyer were ready to back him into the
depths of the cave, but the dragon was a smallish creature,
not much bigger than a courier, and could easily have put
himself inside. Laurence struggled to his feet, and for
decency's sake took one of the sweat-and blood-stained
shirts which had helped make up his pallet to cover
himself, if he was not truly fit to be seen.
He was carried back to the great hall: the king was not
there, but the iron-works were in full swing under the
supervision of Prince Moshueshue; the smiths were engaged
in pouring bullets, with the help of another dragon, who
nursed their forge regularly with narrow breathed tongues
of flame, rousing the coals within to a fever-pitch of
heat. They had somehow acquired several bullet-molds, and
there were still more muskets stacked upon the floor, if
marked here and there with bloody fingerprints. The room
was sweltering, even with a couple of smaller dragons
fanning away vigorously to make the air move; but the
prince looked satisfied.
He took Laurence back towards the map again; it had been
already a little improved, and an entirely new addition
made to the west: a vague distance allowed for the
Atlantic, and then the approximate shapes of the American
continents drawn out: the great harbor of Rio most
prominently marked, and the islands of the West Indies
placed a little tentatively somewhere to the north. There
was none of the exactness needed to make it of practical
use for navigation, Laurence was glad to see; he was far
from that earlier complacency, during their abduction,
which had dismissed their captors as a threat against the
colony itself: there were too many dragons here.
Mrs. Erasmus had also been brought, and Laurence braced
himself for a further interrogation, to which he would not
allow himself to feel unequal, but Moshueshue did not
repeat the king's demands or his violence; his servants
instead gave Laurence a drink, oddly sweet, of pressed