darting in at the French dragons and away, setting up a
raucous caterwauling as they went, without very much actual
fighting to be seen. It would have done nicely to frighten
away a rival gang in the wild, Laurence supposed,
particularly one so outnumbered, but he did not think the
French were to be so easily diverted; indeed as he watched,
the five enemy dragons, all of them only little Pou-deCiels, drew into close formation and promptly bowled
through the cloud of ferals.
The ferals, still putting on a show of bravado, scattered
too late to evade the rifle-fire, and now some of their
shrill cries were for real pain. Temeraire was beating up
furiously, his sides belling out like sails as he heaved
for the breath to get himself so high aloft, but he could
not easily gain their height, and would be at a
disadvantage himself against the smaller French when he
had. "Give them a gun, quickly, and show the signal for
descent," Laurence shouted to Turner, without much hope;
but the ferals came plummeting down in a rush when Turner
put out the flags, none too reluctant to put themselves
around Temeraire.
Arkady was keeping up a low, indignant clamoring under his
breath, nudging anxiously at his second Wringe, the worsthit, her dark grey hide marred with streaks of darker
blood. She had taken several balls to the flesh and one
unlucky hit to the right wing, which had struck her on the
bias and scraped a long, ugly furrow across the tender
webbing and two spines; she was listing in mid-air
awkwardly as she tried to favor it.
"Send her below to shore," Laurence said, scarcely needing
the speaking-trumpet with the dragons crowded so close that
they might have been talking in a clearing, and not the
open sky. "And pray tell them again, they must keep wellclear of the guns; I am sorry they have had so hot a
lesson. Let us keep together and-" but this came too late,
as the French were coming down in arrow-head formation, and
the ferals followed too closely on his first instruction
and spread themselves out across the sky.
The French also at once separated; even together they were
not a match for Temeraire, whom they had surely recognized,
and by way of protection engaged themselves closely with
the ferals. It must have been an odd experience for them;
Pou-de-Ciels were generally the lightest of the French
combat breeds, and now they were finding themselves the
relative heavy-weights in battle against the ferals, who
even where their wingspan and length matched were all of
them lean and concave-bellied creatures, a sharp contrast
against the deep-chested muscle of their opponents.
The ferals were now more wary, but also more savage, hot
with anger at the injury to their fellow and their own
smaller stinging wounds. They used their darting lunges to
better effect, learning quickly how to feint in and provoke
the rifle volleys, then come in again for a real attack.
The smallest of them, Gherni and motley-colored Lester,
were attacking one Pou-de-Ciel together, with the more wily
Hertaz pouncing in every now and again, claws blackened
with blood; the others were engaged singly, and more than
holding their own, but Laurence quickly perceived the
danger, even as Temeraire called, "Arkady! Bnezh's'li
taqom-" and broke off to say, "Laurence, they are not
listening."
"Yes, they will be in the soup in a moment," Laurence
agreed; the French dragons, though they seemed on the face
of it to be fighting as independently as the ferals, were
maneuvering skillfully to put their backs to one another;
indeed they were only allowing the ferals to herd them into
formation, which should allow them to make another
devastating pass. "Can you break them apart, when they have
come together?"
"I do not see how I will be able to do it, without hurting
our friends; they are so close to one another, and some of
them are so little," Temeraire said anxiously, tail lashing
as he hovered.
"Sir," Ferris said, and Laurence looked at him. "I beg your
pardon, sir, but we are always told, as a rule, to take a
bruising before a ball; it don't hurt them long, even if
they are knocked properly silly, and we are close enough to
give any of them a lift to land, if it should go so badly."
"Very good; thank you, Mr. Ferris," Laurence said, putting
strong approval in it; he was still very glad to see Granby
matched off with Iskierka, even more so when dragons would
now be in such short supply, but he felt the loss keenly,
as exposing the weaknesses in his own abbreviated training
as an aviator. Ferris had risen to his occasions with nearheroism, but he had been but a third lieutenant on their
departure from England, scarcely a year ago, and at
nineteen years of age could not be expected to put himself
forward to his captain with the assurance of an experienced
officer.
Temeraire put his head down and puffed up his chest with a
deep breath, then flung himself down amongst the shrinking
knot of dragons, and barreled through with much the effect
of a cat descending upon an unsuspecting flock of pigeons.
Friend and foe alike went tumbling wildly; the ferals flung
into higher excitement. They flew around with much
disorderly shrilling for a few moments, and as they did,
the French righted themselves: the formation leader waved a
signal-flag, and the Pou-de-Ciels wheeled together and
away, escaping.
Arkady and the ferals did not pursue, but came gleefully
romping back over to Temeraire, alternating complaints at
his having knocked them about, with boastful prancing over
their victory and the rout of the enemy, which Arkady
implied was in spite of Temeraire's jealous interference.
"That is not true, at all," Temeraire said, outraged, "you
would have been perfectly dished without me," and turned
his back upon them and flew towards land, his ruff
stiffened up with indignation.
They found Wringe sitting and licking at her scarred wing
in the middle of a field. A few clumps of bloodstained
white wool upon the grass, and a certain atmosphere of
carnage in the air, suggested she had quietly found herself
some consolation; but Laurence chose to be blind. Arkady
immediately set up as a hero for her benefit, and paraded
back and forth to re-enact the encounter. So far as
Laurence could follow, the battle might have raged a
fortnight, and engaged some hundreds of enemy beasts, all
of them vanquished by Arkady's solitary efforts. Temeraire
snorted and flicked his tail in disdain, but the other
ferals proved perfectly happy to applaud the revisionary
account, though they occasionally jumped up to interject
stories of their own noble exploits.
Laurence meanwhile had dismounted; his new surgeon Dorset,
a rather thin and nervous young man, bespectacled and given
to stammering, was going over Wringe's injuries. "Will she
be well enough to make the flight back to Dover?" Laurence
inquired; the scraped wing looked nasty, what he could see
of it; she uneasily kept trying to fold it close and away
from the inspection, though fortunately Arkady's theatrics
were keeping her distracted enough that Dorset could make
some attempt at handling it.
"No," Dorset said, with not the shade of a stammer and a
quite casual authority. "She needs lie quiet a day or so
under a poultice, and those balls must come out of her
shoulder presently, although not now. There is a courierground outside Weymouth, which has been taken off the
routes and will be free from infection; we must find a way
to get her there." He let go the wing and turned back to
Laurence blinking his watery eyes.
"Very well," Laurence said, bemused; at the change in his
demeanor more than the certainty alone. "Mr. Ferris, have
you the maps?"
"Yes, sir; though it is twelve miles straight flying to
Weymouth covert across the water, sir, if you please,"
Ferris said, hesitating over the leather wallet of maps.
Laurence nodded and waved them away. "Temeraire can support
her so far, I am sure."
Her weight posed less difficulty than her unease with the
proposed arrangement, and, too, Arkady's sudden fit of
jealousy, which caused him to propose himself as a
substitute: quite ineligible, as Wringe outweighed him by
several tons, and they should not have got a yard off the
ground.
"Pray do not be so silly," Temeraire said, as she dubiously
expressed her reservations at being ferried. "I am not
going to drop you unless you bite me. You have only to lie
quiet, and it is a very short way."
Chapter 3
BUT THEY REACHED Weymouth covert only a little short of
dusk, in much perturbation of spirit, Wringe having
expressed the intention, five or six times during the
course of their flight, of climbing off mid-air to fly the
rest of the way herself. Then she had accidentally
scratched Temeraire twice, and thrown a couple of the
topmen clean off his back with her uneasy shifting, their
lives saved only by their carabiner-locked straps. On
landing, they were both handed down bruised and ill from
the knocking-about they had taken, and helped away by their
fellows to be dosed liberally, with brandy, at the small
barracks-house.
Wringe put up a singular fuss to having the bullets
extracted, sidling away her hindquarters when Dorset
approached knife in hand, insisting she was quite well, but
Temeraire was sufficiently exasperated by now to have no
patience with her evasions; his low rumbling growl,
resonating upon the dry, hard-packed earth, made her meekly
flatten to the ground and submit to being picked over with
a lantern suspended overhead. "That will do," Dorset said,
having pried out the third and final of the balls. "Now
some fresh meat, to be sure, and a night's quiet rest. This
ground is too hard," he added, with disapproval, as he
climbed down from her shoulder with the three balls
rattling bloodily in his little basin.
"I do not care if it is the hardest ground in Britain; only
pray let me have a cow and I will sleep," Temeraire said
wearily, leaning his head so Laurence could stroke his
muzzle while his own shallow cuts were poulticed. He ate
the cow in three tremendous tearing gulps, hooves-to-horns,
tipping his head backwards to let the last bite of the
hindquarters go down his throat. The farmer who had been
prevailed upon to bring some of his beasts to the covert
stood paralyzed in a macabre sort of fascination, his mouth
gaping, and his two sons likewise with their eyes starting
from their heads. Laurence pressed a few more guineas into
the man's unresisting hand and hurried them all off; it
would do Temeraire's cause no good to have fresh and lurid
tales of draconic savagery spreading.
The ferals disposed of themselves directly around the
wounded Wringe, sheltering her from any draft and pillowing
themselves one upon the other as comfortably as they could
manage, the smaller ones among them crawling upon
Temeraire's back directly he had fallen asleep.
It was too cold to sleep out, and they had not brought
tents with them on patrol; Laurence meant to leave the
barracks, small enough in all conscience without dividing
off a captain's partition, to his men, and take himself to
a hotel, if one might be had; in any case he would have
been glad of a chance to send word back to Dover by the
stage, that their absence would not occasion distress. He
did not trust any of the ferals to go alone yet, with their
few officers so unfamiliar.
Ferris approached as Laurence made inquiry of the few
tenants of the covert. "Sir, if you please, my family are
here in Weymouth; I am sure my mother would be very happy
if you chose to stay the night," he said, adding, with a
quick, anxious glance that belied the easy way in which he
issued this invitation, "I should only like to send word
ahead."
"That is handsome of you, Mr. Ferris; I would be grateful,
if I should not be putting her out," Laurence said. He did
not miss the anxiety. In courtesy, Ferris likely felt
compelled to make the invitation, if his family had so much
as an attic corner and a crust of bread to spare. Most of
his younger gentlemen, indeed most of the Corps, were drawn
from the ranks of what could only be called the shabbygenteel, and Laurence knew they were inclined to think him
higher than he did himself: his father kept a grand state,
certainly, but Laurence had not spent three months together
at home since taking to sea, without much sorrow on either
side, except perhaps his mother's, and was better
accustomed to a hanging berth than a manor.
Out of sympathy he would have spared Ferris, but for the
likely difficulty of finding any other lodgings, and his
own weary desire to be settled, even if it were only in an