gladly have seen Temeraire suffering the torments of the
damned. Laurence would not disdain what protection from her
malice the public avowals of imperial gratitude might
provide.
It had certainly a more immediate effect: De Guignes had
scarcely left the room before Laurence was shifted to a
handsome chamber upstairs, appointed plainly but with some
eye to comfort; a pleasant view of the open harbor, gaily
stocked with sails, outside his window. The shirt and
trousers materialized by morning: of very fine linen and
wool, with silk thread, and with them clean stockings and
linen; in the afternoon arrived a notable coat to replace
his own much-battered and-stained article: cut of black
leather, with skirts lower than the tops of his boots, and
buttons in gold so pure they were already no longer quite
circular.
Temeraire admired the results, very much, when in the
morning they were reunited to be transferred to Paris; and
barring an inclination to complain that Laurence was not
permitted to ride upon him, for the journey, was perfectly
satisfied with their change of venue. He did glare
ferociously at the small and quailing Pou-de-Ciel who would
serve as transport, as if he suspected her of planning to
carry Laurence off for some nefarious ends. But the
precaution would have been wise even if Laurence had given
their parole, as without it he would have set a pace
impossible for his escort to match; even as it was, they
were hard-pressed. Temeraire outdistanced them, except in
fits and starts, when he doubled back to come alongside the
Pou-de-Ciel and call out remarks to Laurence; so the other
dragons, most of them showing early signs of the illness,
were rather exhausted when they came in sight of the Seine.
Laurence had not been to Paris since the year one, in the
last peace, and had never before seen it from the dragonheights; but even with so little familiarity, he could
scarcely have failed to notice transformation on such a
scale. A broad avenue, still more than half raw dirt, had
been driven straight through the heart of the city,
smashing through all the old medieval alley-ways. Extending
from the Tuileries towards the Bastille, it continued the
line of the Champs-Élysées, but dwarfed that into a
pleasant country lane: the new avenue perhaps half as wide
as that massive square of Peking, which stood before the
Forbidden City, and much longer; with dragons hovering over
and lowering great stacks of paving-stones into the street.
A triumphal arch of monumental scale was going up, in the
Place de l'Étoile, half still presently mocked up in wood,
and new embankments upon the Seine; more prosaically, in
other places the ground had been opened up to a great
depth, and new sewers were being laid in mortared
cobblestones. On the city's border an enormous bank of
slaughterhouses stood behind a newly raised wall, with a
plaza open beside them, and a handful of cows on spits
roasting; a dragon was sitting there eating one, holding it
on the spit like an ear of corn.
Below them directly, the gardens of the Tuileries had been
widened, out from the banks of the Seine nearly an
additional quarter-of-a-mile in the opposite direction,
swallowing up the Place Vendôme into their boundaries; and
overlooking the riverbank, at right corners to the palace,
a great pavilion in stone and marble was going up: an
edifice in the Roman style, but on a different scale. In
the grassy courtyard already laid down beside it, Lien lay
drowsily coiled in the shade, a thin white garden-snake
seen from so far aloft, easy to make out among the other
dragons who were scattered at decorous distance around her.
They were brought down in those gardens: not where Lien
slept, but in another plaza before the palace, with a
makeshift pavilion of wood and sailcloth hastily erected in
their honor. Laurence had scarcely time to see Temeraire
established, before De Guignes took his arm and smiling
invited him inside; smiling, but with a firm grip, and the
guards gripped their muskets tightly: still honored guest
and prisoner both.
The apartments where they conducted him would have befitted
a prince; he might have wandered blindfold through the room
for five minutes together without knocking into a wall.
Used as he was to cramped quarters, Laurence found their
scale irritating rather than luxurious: the walk from the
chamberpot to the dressing-table a nuisance, and the bed
too soft and overburdened with hangings for the hot
weather; standing alone under the high and muraled ceiling,
he felt an actor in a bad play, with eyes and mockery upon
him.
He sat down at the writing-table in the corner, to have
somewhere to put himself, and pushed up the cover: paper
aplenty, and good pens, and ink, fresh and liquid when he
opened the jar; he closed it slowly again. He owed six
letters; they would never be written.
Outside it grew dark; from his window he could see the
pavilion on the riverbank, illuminated with many colorful
lanterns. The workers had gone away; Lien was now lying
across the top of the stairway, her wings folded to her
back, watching the light on the water: a silhouette more
than a shape. She turned her head, and Laurence saw a man
come walking down the broad path towards her, and ascend
into the pavilion: lanterns shone red on the uniforms of
his guard, which he had left at the foot of the stair.
De Guignes came the next morning after breakfast, all
renewals of kindness and generous sentiments, and took him
walking down to see Temeraire, with only a moderate guard.
Temeraire was awake and by the lashing of his tail in a
state of near-agitation; "She has sent me an invitation,"
he said plaintively, as soon as Laurence had sat down. "I
do not know what she means by it; I am not going to go and
talk to her, at all."
The invitation was a handsomely calligraphed scroll, in
Chinese characters, tied with a tassel of red and gold; it
was not long, and merely requested the pleasure of the
company of Lung Tien Xiang at the Pavilion of the Seven
Pillars for drinking tea and restful repose, in the heat of
the day. "There is nothing evidently insincere in it;
perhaps she means it as a gesture of reconciliation,"
Laurence said, though he did not think much of the chances.
"No, she does not," Temeraire said darkly. "I am sure if I
go, the tea will be very unpleasant, at least my tea will
be, and I will have to drink it or look ill-mannered; or
she will make remarks which do not seem offensive, until I
have gone away and thought them over; or she will try and
have you murdered while I am not there: you are not to go
anywhere without a guard, and if anyone tries to murder
you, you must call for me very loud," he added. "I am sure
I could knock down a wall of that palace, if I had to, to
reach you," a remark which left De Guignes with a peculiar
rigid expression; he could not forbear a glance at the
substantial stone wall of the Tuileries, overlooking the
pavilion.
"I assure you from my heart," he said, recovering his
aplomb, "that no one could be more sensible of the
generosity which you have shown to France; Madame Lien has
been among the first, to receive the cure which you have
delivered us-"
"Oh," Temeraire said, disgruntled.
"-and, as all of the nation, welcomes you with open arms,"
De Guignes carried on manfully.
"Stuff," Temeraire said. "I do not believe it at all; and I
do not like her anyway, even if she does mean it, so she
may keep her invitations and her tea; and her pavilion,
too," he added, low, with an envious twitch of his tail.
De Guignes coughed, and did not attempt further to persuade
him; instead he said, "I will make your regrets, then; in
any event, you may be occupied with preparations, as
tomorrow morning His Majesty wishes to meet you, and to
convey to you all the thanks of the nation. He wishes you
to know it grieves him very much that the formalities of
war should attend such a meeting; and that for his part, he
welcomes you as brothers, and not as prisoners at all," he
added, with a look at once tactful and significant: a
delicate hinting that they need not be prisoners for their
part, either, if they chose.
The whole speech, his earnest manner, had a vaguely
mercenary quality, which, to do justice to the man's
humanity, he gave with a very faint, dismissive air; so to
accept would have needed only a nod. Laurence looked away
instead; to hide his expression of distaste; but Temeraire
said, "If he does not like us to be prisoners, it seems to
me he is the Emperor, and can let us go if he likes. We are
not going to fight for you against our own friends back in
England, if that is what you mean."
De Guignes smiled without any sign of offense. "His Majesty
would never invite you to any dishonorable act." A pretty
sentiment, and one which Laurence was inclined to trust
from Bonaparte as much as from the Lords of the Admiralty:
less. De Guignes rose gracefully and said, "I hope you will
excuse me now to my other duties: Sergeant Lasalle and his
men will escort you to your quarters for dinner, Captain,
when you have finished your conversation," and so quitted
them strategically, to let them contemplate his vague
suggestions alone.
They did not say anything a while; Temeraire scratched at
the ground. "I suppose we cannot stay," he muttered, halfashamedly, "even if we did not fight? I thought we would go
back to China, but then we have still left everything in
Europe as it is. I am sure I can protect you from Lien, and
perhaps I might help work upon that road; or I might write
books. It seems very nice here," he added. "One could go
walking, here in the gardens, or in the road, and meet
people."
Laurence looked down at his hands, which held no answer. He
did not mean to grieve Temeraire, or to distress him, but
he had known his own fate since first they had embarked
upon this adventure; and at last he said quietly, "My dear,
I hope you will stay, and have whatever profession you
desire; or that Bonaparte will give you passage back to
China if you prefer it. But I must go home to England."
Temeraire paused, and then he said uncertainly, "But they
will hang you-"
"Yes," Laurence said.
"I will not, I will never let them," Temeraire said.
"Laurence-"
"I have committed treason," Laurence said. "I will not now
add cowardice to that crime, nor let you shield me from its
consequences." He looked away; Temeraire was silent and
trembling, and it was painful to look at him. "I do not
regret what we have done," he said quietly. "I would not
have undertaken the act, if I were not willing to die for
it; but I do not mean to live a traitor."
Temeraire shuddered, and drew himself back onto his
haunches, staring blindly out into the gardens; motionless.
"And if we stay," he said, eventually, "they will say it
was all self-interest-that we brought the cure for a
reward, so that we should have a pleasant life, here or in
China; or perhaps that we were cowards, and thought
Napoleon would win the war, and we did not want to fight.
They will never admit that they were in the wrong; and that
we have sacrificed our own happiness, to repair what never
ought have been done, in the first place."
Laurence had not so articulated his instinctive decision;
he did not need to, to know what he must do. For his own
part, he did not care what should be thought of it, and
said so. "What will be thought of it, I already know, and I
do not suppose anything now will alter those sentiments; if
that were of any importance, we should not have gone. I am
not returning to make a political gesture, but because it
must be done; if there is any honor to be preserved after
such an act."
"Well, I would not give a button for honor," Temeraire
said. "But I do care about the lives of our friends, and
that those lords should learn to be ashamed of what they
have done; which I suppose they will never do, but others
might, if they were not given so convenient an excuse to
dismiss the whole matter." He bowed his head. "Very well;
we will tell him no, and if he will not set us free, we can
escape and return, on our own."
"No," Laurence said, recoiling. "My dear, there is no sense
in it; you had much better go back to China. They will only
throw you in the breeding grounds."
"Oh! certainly! that I should run away, but not you, when
you have done it for me, you never thought of it but for
me?" Temeraire heaped scorn upon the notion. "No; if they
mean to put you to death, they will have to put me to death
also; I am as guilty or more, and I will certainly not let