said very softly, his yellow hair darkened with rubbed-in
dirt and water. "Let me have your boots." Laurence nodded
silently, and handed them over, and Martin tied them up
with his own.
Martin's hand on his ankle guided his foot to one of the
narrow holds: a rough shallow scrape in the face of the
rock, which just admitted the grip of his toes; another, to
the right. Laurence eased himself over the edge, groping
for hand-holds beneath the lip; he could not see the face
of the cliff beneath him, his own body blocking what little
glimmer the stars gave, and could only rely on the sense of
touch: the stone cold, beneath his cheek, and his breathing
very loud in his own ears, with the strange amplified
quality of being underwater; blind, deaf, he pressed his
body flat as he could against the rock.
There was a dreadful moment when Martin touched his ankle
again, and waited for him to lift it from the cliff;
Laurence thought he would not be able to make himself yield
the support. He willed the movement; nothing happened, then
he took another breath and at last his foot moved; Martin
drawing him gently downward, toes brushing lightly over the
rock, to another hold.
The second foot, then one hand, then the next, mindlessly.
It was easier to continue, once he had gone into motion, so
long as he did not again allow himself to settle into a
fixed position. A slow deep bruising ache began between his
shoulders, and in his thighs. The tips of his fingers
burned a little, as he went; he did not wonder if it was
some trace of the acidic fluids left, or tried not to; he
did not trust his grip well enough to wipe them against the
rag hanging uselessly from his waistband.
Bailes, Dulcia's harness-man, was near beside him, a little
way farther down; a heavy-set man, going cautiously; ground
crewmen did not ordinarily go into combat, and had less
practice of climbing. He gave suddenly a queer, deep grunt,
and jerked his hand; Laurence looked down and saw his face
pressed open-mouthed into the rock, making a horrible, low,
stifled sound, his hand clawing madly at the stone:
clawing, and coming to shreds, there was white bone
gleaming at the fingertips, and abruptly Bailes flung out
his arm and fell away, his bared teeth clenched and
visible, for a brief moment.
Branches cracked, below. Martin's hand was on his ankle,
but not moving, a faint tremor. Laurence did not try to
look up, only held to the rock face and breathed, softly,
softly; if they were lost, there was nothing to be done:
one sweep of a dragon's foreleg would scrape them off the
wall.
At last they resumed. Down again; and to the side, Laurence
caught the gleam of translucent rock at the surface: a vein
of quartz, perhaps, on which the venom might have pooled,
unabsorbed.
Some time later, some ages later, a dragon flew by, going
quickly through the night. It was well overhead: Laurence
felt its passing only as wind and the sound of wings. His
hands were numb with cold and raw. There were pockets of
grass beneath his seeking fingers; in a few more steps a
slope, scarcely less than vertical; then a tree-root
beneath his heel, and they were nearly down: their feet
were in dirt, and the bushes were catching at them. Martin
tapped his ankle, and they turned and slithered down on
their rumps, until they could stand up to put back on their
boots. The water could be heard somewhere below, rushing;
the jungle a tangle of palm leaves and tough-skinned vines
hanging across their path. A clean, damp smell of moving
water, fresh earth, and dew trembling and thick upon the
leaves; their shirts were soon wet through and chill
against their skin. A different world entirely than the
dusty brown and ochre of the cliffs above.
They had all agreed none should wait for long, but go on
ahead in small parties, hoping if they were discovered at
this stage, at least some might yet escape. Winston, one of
his harness-men, was waiting a little way on, squatting and
rising to stretch out his legs; also young Allen, nervous
and gnawing on the side of his thumb, and his fellow ensign
Harley. The five of them went on together, following the
course of the cliff wall: the earth was soft, and the
vegetation full of juice, compliant; easier by far to work
through than the dry underbrush, if the vines reached up to
trip them from time to time. Allen stumbling almost
continuously, his latest growth making him gangly and
awkward, all long coltish limbs. They could not avoid some
degree of noise; they could not cut their way through, but
from time to time were forced to haul upon the vines to
make enough slack to get through them, with corresponding
groans of protest from the branches on which they hung.
"Oh," Harley breathed out very softly, frozen; they looked,
and eyes looked back: cat-pupiled, bright green. They
regarded the leopard; it regarded them; no one moved. Then
it turned its head and melted away, solitary and
unconcerned.
They went on a little faster, still following the channel
of the gorge, until at last the jungle thinned out and
dredged up to a point where the river's course had divided,
and two channels followed separate paths: and he could see
through the last stretch of jungle Lily and Temeraire
waiting there anxiously, astride the narrow banks, and
squabbling a little.
"But what if you had missed?" Temeraire was muttering, a
little disconsolate and critical, while he stretched his
neck to try and peer into the jungle. "You might have hit
the cave-mouth, or some of our crew."
Lily mantled at this suggestion, her eyes very orange. "I
hope I do not need to be near-by to hit a wall," she
replied quellingly, and then leaned eagerly forward, as
Harcourt came stumbling down the wet slope towards her.
"Catherine, Catherine; oh, are you well? Is the egg all
right?"
"Hang the egg," Catherine said, putting her head against
Lily's muzzle. "No, there, dearest; it has only been a
nuisance, but I am so very glad to see you. How clever you
were!"
"Yes," Lily said complacently, "and indeed it was much
easier than I thought it would be; there was no-one about
to pay any mind, except that fellow on the hill, and he was
asleep."
Temeraire nuzzled Laurence gratefully, too, all his
quibbling silenced: he still wore the thick iron collar,
much to his disgust, and a few clubbed lengths of cable
dangling off it, blackened and brittle at the ends where
Lily's acid had weakened the metal enough for the two of
them to break it. "But we cannot leave without Mrs.
Erasmus," Laurence said to him, low; but Dulcia was landing
among them, and Mrs. Erasmus was clutching to the harness
on her back.
They fled cautiously but quickly homeward, the rich
husbanded countryside providing: Temeraire savage and
quick, cutting out elephants from a herd, while the smaller
herd-dragons yelled angry imprecations but did not dare
give pursuit when he had roared them down; Lily doubling
back sharp on herself, when a heavy-weight roused up in a
village on their course and bellowed challenge, to spit
with unerring precision at a branch of the great sprawling
bao-bab tree beside him. Her acid sent it crashing down
upon his shoulders: he jumped and thought better of giving
chase; looking back he might be seen gingerly nosing the
thick branch, large as an entire tree, away from the
clearing.
The aviators wove grasses into makeshift cords, to tie
themselves on with, and pinned their limbs under straps of
harness so that whenever they paused for water, they all
went down in staggering heaps, pounding on their thighs to
drown out the prickling of returning blood. The desert they
flew across almost without a pause, pale rock and yellow
dust, the curious heads of small animals popping up from
holes in the ground in hopes of rain as the dragon-shadows
passed by like racing clouds. Temeraire had taken all of
Dulcia's crew but Chenery himself; and also some of Lily's;
the three of them made all the haste which could be
imagined, and they broke over the mountains into the narrow
coastal province of the settlements in the hour before dawn
on the sixth day of flight, and saw the tongues of flame,
where the cannon at the Cape were speaking.
Narrow pillars of smoke were lying back against the face of
Table Mountain as they came across the bay driving into the
city, drifting before a hard wind blowing into the bay, and
fires all through the city: ships beating desperately out
of the harbor into the wind, close-hauled as they could go.
The cannon of the castle were speaking without cease,
thunder-roll of broadsides from the Allegiance in the
harbor also, her deck swathed deeply in grey powder-gusts
spilling down her sides and rolling away on the water.
Maximus was fighting in mid-air, above the ship: his sides
still gaunt, but the enemy dragons gave him still a wide
and respectful berth, and fled from his charges; Messoria
and Immortalis flanked him, and Nitidus was darting beneath
their cover to harry the enemy in their retreat. So far
they had preserved the ship, but the position was
untenable; they were only trying to hold long enough to
carry away those who could be saved: the harbor full of
boats, crammed and wallowing boats, trying to get to her
shelter.
Berkley signaled, from Maximus's back, as they came on:
holding well, retrieve company; so they flashed on past and
towards the shore, where the castle lay under full siege: a
vast body of spearmen, crouched beneath great shields of
oxhide and iron. Many of their fellows lay dead in the
fields just before the walls, cut dreadfully apart by
canister shot, and musketry; other corpses floated in the
moat. They had failed to carry the walls by climbing, but
the survivors had withdrawn past the substantial rubble
that had been made of the nearby houses by the cannon-fire,
and now sheltered there from the guns, waiting with
terrible patience for a breach in the walls.
Another corpse lay dreadfully stretched, upon the parade
grounds: a yellow-and-brown dragon, its eyes cloudy and its
body half-burst upon the ground by impact, a gaping hole
torn into its side by the round-shot which had brought it
down; scraps of bloody hide stood on the grass even a
hundred yards distant. Some thirty dragons more were in the
air, now making their passes from very high, dropping not
bombs but sacks of narrow iron blades, flat and triangular
and sharpened along every edge, which drove even into
stone: as Temeraire dropped into the courtyard, Laurence
could see them bristling from the earth as if it had been
sowed with teeth; there were many dead soldiers upon the
heights.
King Mokhachane was standing on the lower slopes of Table
Mountain clear of cannon-shot, observing grimly, and
occasionally mantling her wings in yearning when one of the
men or dragons were struck; of course she was a dragon of
no great age, and all instinct would have driven her to the
battlefield. There were men hovering around her flanks, and
others running back and forth to the company gathered
before the fortress walls, with orders. Laurence could not
see if the prince was by her side.
The city itself had been left untouched: the castle alone
bore the attack, although the streets had nevertheless been
deserted. Some large boulders lay also strewn in the
corners, bloodstained, and others trailing behind them a
line of smashed bricks, red under their yellow paint. The
soldiers were mostly on the walls, sweating as they worked
the guns, and a great crowd of settlers, men and women and
children together, huddled in the shelter of the barracks
waiting for the boats to return.
Mrs. Erasmus sprang almost at once from Temeraire's back
when they had landed, scarcely a hand to the harness;
General Grey, hurrying to greet them, looked with
astonishment as she went past him without a word.
"She has gone for her children," Laurence said, sliding
down himself. "Sir, we must bring you off, at once; the
Allegiance cannot hold the harbor long."
"But who the devil is she?" Grey said, and Laurence
realized she must have been quite unrecognizable to him,
still in her native dress. "And damn the bloody savages,
yes; we cannot hit a one of those beasts, as high as they
are keeping, even with pepper-shot; they will have the
walls down soon if the place does not catch, first. This
has not been built to hold against three companies of
dragons. Where have they all come from?"
He was already turning, giving orders, his aides running to
organize the withdrawal: an orderly, formal retreat, the