of the last threat of invasion, in the year four, at the
time unaware of Temeraire's real breed or his particular
curious ability of the divine wind and thinking him instead
an Imperial: still a most valuable breed, but not as
vanishingly rare.
"So I had heard," Celeritas said. "Why are you here?"
"Oh," Temeraire said. "Well-"
Laurence let himself down and stepped forward. "I beg your
pardon, sir; we are here from London, for some of the
mushrooms: may I ask where they are kept?" They had
resolved on this brazen frontal assault, as offering the
best chance of success; even if Temeraire might look
daunted now.
Celeritas snorted. "They are nursing the things like eggs:
downstairs, in the baths," he said. "You will find Captain
Wexler at table, I believe; he is commander of the fort
now," and turned to Temeraire inquisitively, while
Temeraire went hunching steadily down. Laurence did not
like to leave him alone, to face all the pain of lying in
the face of the friendly, unwary curiosity of his old
training master, but there was no time: Celeritas would
soon begin to wonder, at the absence of their crew, and the
most hardened liar could scarcely have concealed this
treachery for long.
It was strange to walk the corridors again, now familiar
instead of alien; the cheerful roar of the communal diningtables, which he could hear around the corners, like the
blurred continuous noise of a distant cataract: welcoming,
and yet closed to him utterly; he felt himself already set
apart. There were no servants in the halls, likely all of
them busy with the dinner service, but for one small lad
running by with a stack of clean napkins, who did not give
him a second glance.
Laurence did not go to Captain Wexler: his excuse could not
withstand the absence of orders, of any real explanation;
instead he went directly to the narrow, humid stairway
which led down to the baths, and in the dressing room put
off swiftly his boots, his coat, flung down upon the
shelves with his sword laid down beside them; his trousers
and shirt he left on, and taking with him a towel went into
the great tiled steam room. He could see dimly a few
somnolent forms drowsing, but in the clouds no faces could
be easily made out, and he moved on with quick purpose; no
one spoke to him, until he had nearly reached the far door,
then a fellow lying with a towel over his face lifted it
off. Laurence did not know him: an older lieutenant
perhaps, or a younger captain, with a thick bristling
mustache dripping water off its corners. "Beg pardon," he
said.
"Yes?" Laurence said, stiffening.
"Be a good fellow and shut the door quick, if you mean to
go through," the man said, and putting himself down covered
his face again.
Laurence did not understand, until he had opened the door
to the large bathing-room beyond and the thick miasmic
stench of the mushrooms assaulted him, mingled with the
pungent smell of a dragon-midden. He pulled the door to
behind him quickly, and put his hand over his face,
breathing deep through his mouth. The room was deserted,
nearly; the dragon eggs sat gleaming wetly in their niches,
safe behind the wrought-iron fence along the back of the
room, and beneath them on the floor great tubs of black
fertile soil, speckled reddish brown with dragon waste for
fertilizer, and mushrooms like round buttons poking from
the dirt.
There were two young Marines, undoubtedly without much
seniority, standing guard: very unhappy, and nearly red
enough in the face to match their coats from the room's
intense heat; their white trousers were stained with lines
of running dye. They looked at Laurence rather hopefully
as, if nothing else, a distraction; he nodded to them and
said, "I am come from Dover, for more of the mushrooms;
pray bring out one of those tubs."
They looked dubious, and hesitated; the older ventured,
"Sir, we aren't supposed to, unless the commander says so,
himself."
"Then I beg your pardon for the irregularity; my orders
said nothing of the sort," Laurence said. "Be so kind as to
send and confirm them, with him, if you please; I will wait
here," he said to the younger soldier, who did not stay to
be invited again, much to the poorly stifled outrage of the
older man: but he had the key, hanging from the chain on
his belt, so he could not be allowed to go.
Laurence waited as the metal door swung to again; waited;
the ship turning slowly through the wind, her broadside
coming to bear, the enemy's stern in sight; the clang
sounded, as a bell, and he struck the Marine a heavy blow,
just below the ear, as the man gazed scowling after his
fellow.
The man fell staggering to one knee, his face turning up in
surprise, his mouth opening; Laurence struck him again,
hard, his knuckles bursting and leaving smears of blood
along the Marine's cheekbone and jaw; the soldier fell
heavily and was still. Laurence found that he was breathing
raggedly. He had to steady his hands before he could
unlatch the key.
The tubs were of varied sizes, half-barrels of wood filled
with dirt, most of them large and unwieldy; Laurence seized
the smallest, and threw over it the towel he had brought,
hot and damp already only from the moist air of the baths.
He went out by the far door, walking quickly through the
rest of the circuit, back to the dressing rooms: still
deserted, but dinner would by now be far advanced, and men
left the tables as they pleased. He could expect
interruption at any moment; sooner if the Marine were more
inclined to be dutiful than dawdling, and reached the
commander. Laurence flung on his boots and coat haphazardly
over his wet things, and went up the stairs with the tub
balanced on his shoulder, his other hand gripping tight to
the rail: not recklessly; he did not mean to do this much,
and fail. He burst out into the hall, and went hurriedly
around a corner to straighten his clothes: if he were not
so plainly disordered, he would not make a spectacle enough
to draw conscious attention, he hoped, despite the odd
burden of the tub. The stench was not wholly muffled by the
covering linen, but it wafted behind him rather than
before.
The noise of the dining hall was indeed already less; he
heard voices, nearer, in the corridors; and passed a pair
of servants laden down with dirty dishes. Looking down
another corridor which crossed his own, he saw a couple of
young midwingmen go racing across from one door to the
next, shouting like boys, gleefully; in another moment he
heard more running footsteps, boots falling heavily, fresh
shouting: but the tone was very different.
He abandoned circumspection and ran, clumsy with the tub
and shifting it every moment, until he burst out onto the
ledge. Celeritas looked over at him with his dark green
eyes perplexed and doubtful; Temeraire said in a sudden
rush, "Pray forgive me, it is all a hum, we are taking them
to France so all the dragons there do not die, and tell
them Laurence did not like to do it, at all, only I
insisted upon it," not a pause for breath or punctuation,
and snatching Laurence with the tub up in his talons, he
flung himself away into the air.
They went rushing away bare moments before five men charged
out after them; bells were ringing madly, and Temeraire had
not settled Laurence back upon his neck before the beaconfire went alight and dragons came pouring out of the castle
grounds like smoke.
"Are you safe?" Temeraire cried.
"Go, go at once," Laurence shouted for an answer, lashing
harness-straps around the tub to hold it down before him,
and Temeraire whipped himself straight and flew, flew; the
pursuit was hot upon them. Not dragons whom Laurence knew:
there was one gangly-looking Anglewing, nearly in the lead,
and a few Winchesters gaining on them: not to much purpose,
but perhaps able to interfere a little with their flight,
and delay them for the others. Temeraire said, "Laurence, I
must go higher; are you warm enough?"
He was soaked through, and chilled to the skin already by
their flight, despite the overhanging sun. "Yes," he said,
and pulled his coat closer about him. A bank of clouds
pressed down upon the crowns of the mountains, and
Temeraire pushed into them, the clinging mist springing up
in fat droplets on the buckles, the waxed and oiled leather
of the harness, Temeraire's glossy scales. The dragons
chasing called to one another, roaring, and plunged in
after them, distant obscure shadows in the fog, their
voices echoing and muffled at odd alternate turns, so he
was scaling upwards through a strange and formless
landscape without direction, haunted by their ghostly
images.
He burst clear just short of a towering white mountainface, stark against the open blue, and Temeraire roared as
he came: a hammer-blow against the solid-packed ice and
snow; Laurence clung to the harness, shivering
involuntarily, as Temeraire pulled up nearly vertical,
climbing along the face of the mountain, and the pursuit
came chasing out of the clouds only to recoil from the
thundering, rolling, steady roar of avalanche, coming down
upon them like a week's snowstorm compressed into a
heartbeat: the Winchesters all squalling alarmed, and
scattering away from it like a flock of sparrows.
"South, due south," Laurence said, calling forward to
Temeraire, pointing him the way as they came over the peak
and broke away, losing the more distant followers. But
Laurence could see the beacons going up already down the
long line to the coast: the beacons which ordinarily would
have warned of invasion, instead now carrying the warning
in the other direction and ahead of them. Every covert,
every dragon would be alert, even without knowing what was
the matter precisely, and would try to stop them in their
flight. They could not fly in any direction which would
bring them upon a covert, and see them headed off and
caught between two forces; their only hope for an escape
lay along the more sparsely guarded North Sea coast, short
of Edinburgh. Yet they had also to be near enough to make
it across to the Continent; with Temeraire already tired.
Night would come, soon; three hours more would give them
the safety of dark. Three hours; Laurence wiped his face
against his sleeve, and huddled down.
Temeraire came at last exhausted to ground, in darkness,
six hours later; his pace had slackened, little by little,
the slow measured flap of his wings like a timepiece
winding down, until Laurence looking over had seen not a
single flickering light; not a shepherd's bonfire, not a
torch, as far as his sight could reach, and said at last,
"Down, my dear; you must have some rest."
He thought they were in Scotland still, or perhaps
Northumberland; he was not certain. They were well south of
Edinburgh and Glasgow, somewhere in a shallow valley; he
could hear water trickling nearby, but they were too tired
to go find it. He ate all his biscuit, ravenous suddenly,
and took the last of his grog, huddled up against the curve
of Temeraire's neck: it sprawled out untidily from his
body, his draggled wings; he slept as he had landed.
Laurence stripped to the skin, and laid his wet things out
on Temeraire's side, to let the native heat of the dragon's
body do what it might to dry them; then rolled himself in
his coat to sleep. The wind was cool enough, among the
mountains, to keep the chill upon his skin. Temeraire gave
a low rumbling murmur, somewhere in his belly, and
twitched; there was distantly a hurried rustling, a clatter
of frightened small hooves; but Temeraire did not wake.
The next he knew it was morning, and Temeraire was feasting
red-mouthed upon a deer, with another lying dead beside it;
he swallowed down his meal and looked at Laurence
anxiously. "It is quite nice raw, too, and I can tear it up
for you small; or perhaps you can use your sword?" he
suggested.
"No; I pray you eat it all. I have not been at hard labor
as have you: I can stand to be parted from my dinner a
little longer," Laurence said, getting up to scrub his face
in the small trickling creek, some ten paces only from
where they had collapsed, and to put back on his clothes.
Temeraire had attempted to spread them out upon a warm
sunny rock, with his claws: they were not very damp
anymore, but a little mauled about; at least the tears did
not show much, under the long coat.
After Temeraire had finished his breakfast, Laurence
sketched out the line of the North Sea coastline, and the
Continent. "We cannot risk going much south of York,"
Laurence said. "Once past the mountains the country is too