spend our time on the possibility, that a large company of
officers arranged to have themselves abducted, and a dozen
good men killed, so they could go and be offensive enough,
among a foreign nation where they did not speak a word, to
provoke them into assembling a dozen wings for immediate
assault? Which, I suppose, should have been accomplished
overnight, for Heaven knows there are no difficulties in
providing support, to a hundred dragons."
The questioning, with its grinding focus on minutiae, was
sullenly given up in another hour, when it had not provoked
confession. There were no official grounds for courtmartial, as no dragon had been lost, and if their Lordships
meant to seek a trial for the loss of the Cape, it would
have to be General Grey who faced it, and there was
certainly no public sympathy for such an inquest. There was
nothing left for them but to be deeply dissatisfied; and
nothing left for Laurence and his fellow-captains but to
sit and listen to their complaints.
Several measures of recapturing the ports were proposed
which had not the least chance of success, Jane forced to
recall to their Lordships, with poorly concealed
exasperation, the parade of failures which had been
occasioned by all the attempts to establish colonies in the
face of organized aerial hostilities: by Spain, in the New
World; the total destruction of Roanoke; the disasters in
Mysore. "You should need enough ships to throw twenty tons
of metal, and six formations, to take the Cape long enough
to secure the fort again, if they have not ripped it all
down," she said, "and when you were done, you should have
to leave two of those formations behind with a first-rate's
worth of guns, and I hardly like to think how many
soldiers; and somehow supply them monthly, if the enemy did
not have the bright notion of attacking the supply-ships
farther north."
The proposals subsided. "My Lords, you are already aware,
that I see no grounds to quarrel with Admiral Roland's
figures," Nelson said, "if I am perhaps, not so pessimistic
of our chances to succeed, where the attempts of a previous
century had failed. But even half such a force cannot be
easily mustered, and certainly not unobserved; nor could it
be transported from any civilized port, to any province of
Africa, without the knowledge of the Navy, and indeed
without its complaisance in the matter: I will stand surety
for it.
"If we cannot retake the Cape, therefore, or reestablish a
foothold upon the continent, we may nevertheless satisfy
ourselves that no other nation may do so. France,
certainly, cannot aspire to it. I will not say that
Napoleon may not conquer anyplace in the world from Calais
to Peking, so long as he can walk to it; but if he must put
to sea, he is at our mercy.
"Indeed," he added, "I will go further. Without in any way
ceasing to lament the dreadful loss we have suffered, in
property and lives, from the savagery of this unprovoked
assault, I will as a question of strategy declare myself
heartily content to exchange all the convenience of our
possession of the Cape, for the lack of any need to defend
that position, henceforth. We have spoken before,
gentlemen, in these halls, of all the expense and
difficulty of improving the fortifications and patrolling
the vast coastline against French incursion: an expense and
difficulty which will now be borne instead by our erstwhile
enemies."
Laurence was by no means disposed to argue with him, but he
could not comprehend at first, why the Admiralty should
have feared such an incursion at all. The French had never
shown the least ambition to seize the Cape, which if a
valuable port in general was unnecessary to them, holding
as they did the Île de France, off the eastern coast of
Africa, and certainly a difficult nut to crack; they had
enough to do to hold what maritime possessions they already
had.
Mulgrave pulled at his nose a little, without comment.
"Admiral Roland," he said at last reluctantly, as if he did
not like to pronounce her title, "what is our present
strength at the Channel, if you please?"
"From Falmouth to Middlesbrough, eighty-three I put at
fighting strength," she said, "and another twenty who could
rise to the occasion. Seventeen of those heavy-weight, and
three Longwings, besides the Kazilik and the Celestial. At
Loch Laggan we have another fourteen, hatchlings, in
training but old enough to bring up; and more, of course,
along the North Sea coast. We would be hard-put to feed
them, for an action of more than a day, but they would make
a good relief."
"What is your estimation of our chances, should he make
another attempt to invade by means of airships, such as he
used at the battle of Dover?" Nelson asked.
"If he don't mind leaving half of them on the ocean floor,
he might be able to land the rest, but I shouldn't
recommend it him," Jane said. "The militia will set them on
fire as quick as they can come in past us. No; I asked for
a year, and it has not been so long, but the cure makes up
for all that, and having back Lily and Temeraire in
fighting trim: the French cannot come by air."
"Yes, the cure," Nelson said. "It is I trust secured? There
is no chance it might be stolen? I believe I heard of an
incident-"
"Why, I beg you will not blame the poor fellow," Jane said.
"He is a lad of fourteen, and his Winchester was in a bad
way. There were some sorry rumors, I am afraid to say, that
there was not enough of the cure to go about, because we
began a little slowly, to see how small the dose might be
kept before we ran around pouring it down their gullets.
There was no harm done, and he confessed it all himself,
quite rightly, when I put it to all the captains. We put a
guard on the supply, afterwards, to keep anyone else from
temptation, and no one has gone poking about."
"But if another attempt should be made?" Nelson said.
"Might the guard be easily increased, and perhaps some
fortification arranged?"
"After feeding every blessed dragon in Britain and the
colonies on the stuff, there is precious little of it left
to steal, if anyone should want to," Jane said, "except
what the gentlemen of the Royal Society have managed to
persuade to take root up at Loch Laggan; and as for that,
if anyone likes to try and take it from the middle of a
covert, they are welcome."
"Very good; so, gentlemen," Nelson said, turning to the
other commissioners, "you see that as a result of these
events, deplorable as they may be in themselves, we may now
be quite certain in our control of the cure: at least as
certain as our own efforts could have made us."
"I beg your pardon," Laurence said, making sense at last he
thought of the preoccupation, and with dismay, "is there
reason to believe the disease has been communicated to the
Continent? Are the French dragons taken ill?"
"We hope so," Nelson said, "although we yet lack
confirmation upon the point; but the spy-courier, the
Plein-Vite whom we captured, was sent over to them two days
ago, and we hope any day to receive word that they have
been inoculated with the disease."
"The only damned silver lining to the bloody mess," Gambier
said, to a general murmur of agreement. "It will be some
reparation to see the Corsican's face, when his own beasts
are all coughing blood."
"Sir," Laurence managed; beside him Catherine was sicklywan with horror, the back of her hand pressed to her mouth.
"Sir, I must protest against-" He felt as though he were
choking. He remembered little Sauvignon, who had kept
Temeraire company that long dreadful week when they thought
all hope was lost; when Laurence had expected to see his
dragon coughing blood, at any moment.
"I should damned well hope so," Jane said, standing up.
"This is why you had her sent to Eastbourne, I suppose, and
none of closing the quarantine-grounds at all; a splendid
creeping business. Will we be driving a plague-ship into
their harbor, next, pray tell me, or poisoning their
convoys of grain? Like a parcel of damned scrubs-"
Musgrave, straightening outraged in his chair, snapped,
"Ma'am, you are out of order," and Admiral Gambier said,
"This is what comes of-"
"Why damn you, Gambier, come around here and say so," she
said, putting her hand to her sword, and the room devolved
very quickly to shouting and scorn, so even the Marines
outside the door put in their heads timidly.
"You cannot mean to do this," Laurence said. "Your Grace,
you have met Temeraire, spoken to him; you cannot imagine
they are not thinking creatures, beasts to be put to the
slaughter-"
Palmerston said, "Tenderhearted womanish folly-" seconded
by Gambier, and Ward; "-the enemy," Nelson said, over the
noise, trying to reply, "and we must seize the opportunity
which has been offered us, to level the distinction between
our aerial forces and theirs-"
The sly, underhanded way it had all been managed, proved
well enough that the commissioners had expected opposition,
and chosen to avoid it; they were not more ready to be
harangued after the fact, and when Jane had shortly grown a
little louder, they had reached the limits of their
tolerance. "-and this," Jane was shouting, "is how I am
told, days past the event; when the stupidest scuttling
crab might conceive that, as soon as Bonaparte knows what
has happened, as soon as he sees his beasts growing sick,
he will come across at once; at once, if he is not a
gawping fool-and you drag me here to Dover, with two
Longwings and our Celestial, and the damned Channel hanging
open like Rotten Row-" when Musgrave rising beckoned to the
guards, to stand open the door.
"Then we must not keep you," he said, rather icily, and
added, when Jane would have gone on, "You are dismissed,
madam," holding out the formal orders for the defense of
the Channel, the papers crumpling savagely in Jane's fist
as she stormed out from the room.
Catherine leaned heavily on Chenery's arm as they left,
pale with her lip bitten to dark red. Nelson, following,
stopped Laurence in the hall before he could go far after
them, with a hand to his arm; and spoke to him at length:
about what, Laurence did not entirely follow; a cutting-out
expedition which he proposed to make, to Copenhagen, the
Danish fleet to be seized there. "I would be glad to have
you, Captain," he finished, "and Temeraire, if you can be
spared from the defense of the Channel, at least for a
week's time."
Laurence stared at him, feeling heavy and stupid, baffled
at Nelson's easy manner: he had met Temeraire, had spoken
with him; he could not plead ignorance. He might not have
been the prime mover of this experiment; but he was no
opponent of it, whose opposition might have been
everything, would have been everything, surely.
The silence grew strained, then oppressive. Nelson paused,
said, with a little more hauteur, "You are fresh from a
long voyage, and I am sure tired from all this questioning;
I have considered it an unnecessary waste, from the first.
We will speak again tomorrow; I will come to the covert in
the morning, before you must return."
Laurence touched his hat; there was nothing he could say.
Out of the building and into the street, sick to his heart
and wretched, seeing nothing; the touch on his elbow made
him startle, and he stared at the small, shabby man
standing next to him. The expression Laurence wore must
have shown some sign of what he felt; the small man bared a
mouthful of wooden teeth in an attempt at a placating
smile, thrust into Laurence's hand a packet of papers, and
touching his own forelock dashed away, without a word
spoken.
Mechanically Laurence unfolded it: a suit for damages in
the amount of ten thousand three hundred pounds, two
hundred six slaves valued at fifty pounds a head.
Temeraire was asleep in the lingering, slanted light;
dappled. Laurence did not wake him, but sat down on the
rough-hewn log bench beneath the shelter of the pine-trees,
facing him, and silently bent his head: in his hands he
turned over the neat roll of crisp rice paper, the seal in
red ink already affixed, which Dyer had handed him. The
letter could not be allowed to go, he supposed; too much
chance of interception, or that the intelligence might find
its way back somehow to Lien, if she yet retained any
allies in the Chinese court.
The clearing was empty: the men still out on their leave.
From the small forge, past the trees, Blythe's hammer
steadily rang on the harness-buckles, a thin metallic sound
exactly like the odd voice of the African bird, calling
along the river, and Laurence found the dust of the