His Majesty's Dragon(Temeraire #1)

Chapter 7  



LAURENCE  ROSE  EARLY  the  next  morning  and  breakfasted  alone,  to  have  a  little  time
before  the  training  would  begin.  He  had  examined  the  new  harness  carefully  last  night,
looking over each neat stitch and testing all the solid rings; Temeraire had also assured him
that  the  new  gear  was  very  comfortable,  and  that  the  crewmen  had  been  attentive  to  his
wishes. He felt some gesture was due, and so having made some calculations in his head, he
now walked out to the workshops.

Hollin was already up and working in his stall, and he stepped out at once on catching sight
of  Laurence.  "Morning  to  you,  sir;  I hope  there  is  nothing  wrong  with  the  harness?"  the
young man asked.

"No;  on  the  contrary,  I  commend  you  and  your  colleagues  highly,"  Laurence  said.  "It  looks
splendid, and Temeraire tells me he is very happy in it; thank you. Kindly tell the others for
me that I will be having an additional half-crown for each man disbursed with their pay."

"Why,  that  is  very  kind  of  you,  sir,"  Hollin  said,  looking pleased  but  not  terribly  surprised;
Laurence was very glad to see his reaction. An extra ration of rum or grog was of course not
a desirable reward to men who could buy liquor easily from the village below, and soldiers
and aviators were paid better than sailors, so he had puzzled over an appropriate amount:
he wanted to reward their diligence, but he did not want to seem as though he were trying
to purchase the men's loyalty.

"I  also  wish  to  commend  you  personally,"  Laurence  added,  more  relaxed  now.  "Levitas's
harness looks in much better order, and he seems more comfortable. I am obliged to you: I
know it was not your duty."

"Oh! Nothing to it," Hollin said, smiling broadly now. "The little fellow was made so happy, I
was  right  glad  to  have  done  it.  I'll  give  him  a  look  over  now  and  again  to  make  sure  he's
staying in good order. Seems to me he's a little lonely," he added.

Laurence  would  never  go  so  far  as  to  criticize  another  officer  to  a  crewman;  he  contented
himself  with  saying  merely,  "I  think  he  was  certainly  grateful  for  the  attention,  and  if  you
should have the time, I would be glad of it."

It  was  the last  moment  that  he  had  time  to  spare  concern  for  Levitas,  or  anything  beyond
the  tasks  immediately  before  him.  Celeritas  had  satisfied  himself  that  he  understood
Temeraire's  flying  capabilities,  and  now  that  Temeraire  had  his  fine  new  harness,  their
training began in earnest. From the beginning, Laurence was staggering straight to bed after
supper, and having to be woken by the servants at the first light of morning; he could barely
muster any sort of conversation at the dinner table, and he spent every free moment either
dozing with Temeraire in the sun or soaking in the heat of the baths.

Celeritas was merciless and tireless both. There were countless repetitions of this wheeling
turn,  or  that  pattern  of  swoops  and  dives;  then  flying  short  bombing  runs  at  top  speed,
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during  which  the  bellmen  hurled  practice  bombs  down  at targets  on the  valley  floor.  Long
hours  of  gunnery-practice,  until  Temeraire  could  hear  a  full  volley  of  eight  rifles  go  off
behind his ears without so much as blinking; crew maneuvers and drills until he no longer
twitched  when  he  was  clambered  upon  or  his  harness  shifted;  and  to  close  every  day's
work, another  long stretch of endurance training, sending him around and around until he
had nearly doubled the amount of time he could spend aloft at his quickest pace.

Even while Temeraire was sprawled panting in the training courtyard and getting his wind
back,  the  training  master  had  Laurence  practice  moving  about  the  harness  both  on
Temeraire's back  and upon rings hung over the cliff wall, to increase his skill at a task that
other aviators had been doing from their earliest years in the service. It was not too unlike
moving about the tops in a gale, if one imagined a ship moving at a pace of thirty miles in an
hour  and  turning  completely  sideways  or  upside  down  at  any  moment;  his  hands  slipped
free  constantly  during  the  first  week,  and  without  the  paired  carabiners  he  would  have
plummeted to his death a dozen times over.

And as soon as they were released from the day's flight training, they were handed straight
over to  an old captain, Joulson, for drilling in aerial signaling. The flag and flare signals for
communicating general instructions were much the same as in the Navy, and the most basic
gave Laurence no difficulty; but the need to coordinate quickly between dragons in mid-air
made  the  usual  technique  of  spelling  out  more  unusual  messages  impractical.  As  a  result,
there was a vastly longer list of signals, some requiring as many as six flags, and all of these
had to be beaten into their heads, for a captain could not rely solely upon his signal-officer.
A signal seen and acted upon even a moment more quickly might make all the difference in
the world, so both captain and dragon must know them all; the signal-officer was merely a
safeguard,  and  his  duty  more  to  send  signals  for  Laurence  and  call  his  attention  to  new
signals in battle than to be the sole source of translation.

To Laurence's embarrassment, Temeraire proved quicker to learn the signals than himself;
even Joulson was more than a little taken aback at the dragon's proficiency. "And he is old to
be  learning  them,  besides,"  he  told  Laurence.  "Usually  we  start  them  on  the  flags  the  very
day after hatching. I did not like to say so before, not to be discouraging, but I expected him
to have a good deal of trouble. If a dragonet is a bit slow and does not learn all the signals by
the end of their fifth or sixth week, he struggles with the last ones sadly; but here Temeraire
is already older than that, and learning them as though he were fresh from the egg."

But  though  Temeraire  had  no  exceptional  difficulty,  the  effort  of  memorization  and
repetition  was  still  as  tiring  as  their  more  physical  duties.  Five  weeks  of  rigorous  work
passed this way, without even a break on Sundays; they progressed together with Maximus
and Berkley through the increasingly complex maneuvers that had to be learned before they
could join the formation, and all the time the dragons were growing enormously. By the end
of this period, Maximus had almost reached his full adult size, and Temeraire was scarcely
one man's height less in the shoulder, though much leaner, and his growth was now mostly
in bulk and in his wings rather than his height.

He was beautifully proportionate throughout: his tail was long and very graceful; his wings
fit elegantly against his body and looked precisely the right size when fanned out. His colors
had  intensified,  the  black  hide  turning  hard  and glossy  save  for  the  soft  nose,  and the  blue
and  pale  grey  markings  on  the  edges  of  his  wings  spreading  and  becoming  opalescent.  To
Laurence's partial eye, he was the handsomest dragon in the entire covert, even without the
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great shining pearl blazoned upon his chest.

The  constant  occupation,  along  with  the  rapid  growth,  had  at  least  temporarily  eased
Temeraire's  unhappiness.  He  was  now  larger  than  any  of  the  other  dragons  but  Maximus;
even  Lily  was  shorter  than  he  was,  though  her  wingspan  was  still  greater.  Though
Temeraire  did  not  push  himself  forward  and  was  not  given  precedence  by  the  feeders,
Laurence  saw  on  the  occasions  when  he  observed  that  most  of  the  other  dragons  did
unconsciously give way to him at feeding times, and if Temeraire did not come to be friendly
with  any  of  them,  he  seemed  too  busy  to  pay  it  mind,  much  as  Laurence  himself  with  the
other aviators.

For  the  most part, they  were  company  for  each  other;  they  were  rarely  apart  except  while
eating  or  sleeping,  and  Laurence  honestly  felt  little  need  of  other  society.  Indeed,  he  was
glad enough for the excuse, which enabled him to avoid Rankin's company almost entirely.
By answering with reserve on all occasions when he was not able to do so, he felt he had at
least halted the progress of their acquaintance, if not partly undone it. His and Temeraire's
acquaintance  with  Maximus  and Berkley  progressed,  at  least,  which  kept  them  from  being
wholly  isolated  from  their  fellows,  though  Temeraire  continued  to  prefer  sleeping  outside
on the grounds, rather than in the courtyard with the other dragons.

They had already been assigned Temeraire's ground crew: besides Hollin as the head, Pratt
and  Bell,  armorer  and  leatherworker  respectively,  formed  the  core,  along  with  the  gunner
Calloway.  Many  dragons  had  no  more,  but  as  Temeraire  continued  to  grow,  the  masters
were  somewhat  grudgingly  granted assistants:  first  one  and  then  a  second  for  each,  until
Temeraire's  complement  was  only  a  few  men  short  of  Maximus's.  The  harness-master's
name was Fellowes; he was a silent but dependable man, with some ten years of experience
in  his  line,  and  more  to  the  point  skillful  at  coaxing  additional  men  out  of  the  Corps;  he
managed  to  get  Laurence  eight  harness-men.  They  were  badly  wanted,  as  Laurence
persisted in having Temeraire out of the gear whenever possible; he needed the full harness
put on and off far more often than most dragons.

Save  for  these  hands,  the  rest  of  Temeraire's  crew would  be  composed  entirely  of  officers,
gentlemen born; and even the hands were the equivalent of warrant officers or their mates.
It  was  strange  to  Laurence,  used  to  commanding  ten  raw  landsmen  to  every  able  seaman.
There  was  none  of  the  bosun's  brutal  discipline  here;  such  men  could  not  be  struck  or
started, and the worst punishment was to turn a man off. Laurence could not deny he liked
it  better,  though  he  felt  unhappily  disloyal  at  admitting  of  any  fault  in  the  Navy,  even  to
himself.

Nor was there any fault to be found in the caliber of his officers, as he had imagined; at least,
not  more  than  in  his  prior  experience.  Half  of  his  riflemen  were  completely  raw
midwingmen who had barely yet learned which end of a gun to hold; however, they seemed
willing enough, and were improving quickly: Collins was overeager but had a good eye, and
if Donnell and Dunne still had some difficulty in finding the target, they were at least quick
in  reloading.  Their  lieutenant,  Riggs,  was  somewhat  unfortunate:  hasty-tempered  and
excitable,  given  to  bellowing  at  small  mistakes;  he  was  himself  a  fine  shot,  and  knew  his
work, but Laurence would have preferred a steadier man to guide the others. But he did not
have  free  choice  of  men;  Riggs  had  seniority  and  had  served  with  distinction,  so  at  least
merited his position, which made him superior to several officers with whom Laurence had
been forced to serve in the Navy.
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The permanent aerial crew, the topmen and bellmen responsible for managing Temeraire's
equipage during flight, and the senior officers and lookouts, were not yet settled. Most of the
currently  unassigned  junior  officers  at  the  covert  would  first  be  given  a  chance  to  take
positions  upon  Temeraire  during  the  course  of  his  training  before  final  assignment  was
made;  Celeritas  had  explained  that  this  was  a  common  technique  used  to  ensure  that  the
aviators  practiced  handling  as  many  types  of  dragon  as  possible,  as  the  techniques  varied
greatly depending on the breed. Martin had done well in his stint, and Laurence had hopes
that  he  might  be  able  to  get  the  young  midwingman  a  permanent  berth;  several  other
promising young men had also recommended themselves to him.

The only matter of real concern to him was the question of his first lieutenant. He had been
disappointed in the first three candidates assigned him: all were adequate, but none of them
struck him as gifted, and he was particular for Temeraire's sake, even if he would not have
been for his own. More unpleasantly, Granby had just been assigned in his turn, and though
the lieutenant was executing his duties in perfect order, he was always addressing Laurence
as "sir" and pointedly making his obedience at every turn; it was an obvious  contrast with
the  behavior  of  the  other  officers,  and  made  them  all  uneasy.  Laurence  could  not  help  but
think with regret of Tom Riley.

That  aside,  he  was  satisfied,  though  increasingly  eager  to  be  done  with  maneuver  drills;
fortunately  Celeritas  had  pronounced  Temeraire  and  Maximus  almost  ready  to  join  the
formation.  There  were  only  the  last  complex  maneuvers  to  be  mastered,  those  flown
entirely  upside  down;  the  two  dragons  were  in  the  midst  of  practicing  these  in  a  clear
morning when Temeraire remarked to Laurence, "That is Volly over there, coming towards
us,"  and  Laurence  lifted  his  head  to  see  a  small  grey  speck  winging  its  way  rapidly  to  the
covert.

Volly  sailed  directly  into  the  valley  and  landed  in  the  training  courtyard,  a  violation  of  the
covert rules when a practice was in session, and Captain James leapt off his dragon's back to
talk  to  Celeritas.  Interested,  Temeraire  righted  himself  and  stopped  in  mid-air  to  watch,
tumbling  about  all  the  crew  except  Laurence,  who  was  by  now  used  to  the  maneuver;
Maximus kept going a little longer until he noticed that he was alone, then turned and flew
back despite Berkley's roared protests.

"What do you suppose it is?" Maximus asked in his rumbling voice; unable to hover himself,
he was obliged to fly in circles.

"Listen, you great lummox; if it is any of your affair you will be told," Berkley said. "Will you
get back to maneuvers?"

"I do not know; perhaps we could ask Volly," Temeraire said. "And there is no sense in our
doing maneuvers anymore; we already know all of these," he added. He sounded so mulish
that  Laurence  was  startled;  he  leaned  forward,  frowning,  but  before  he  could  speak,
Celeritas called them in, urgently.

"There has been an air battle in the North Sea, off Aberdeen," he said with no preliminaries,
when  they  had  scarcely  landed.  "Several  dragons  of  the  covert  outside  Edinburgh
responded  to  distress  signals  from  the  city;  though  they  drove  off  the  French  attack,
Victoriatus was wounded. He is very weak and having difficulty staying in the air: the two of
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you  are  large  enough  to  help  support  him  and  bring  him  in  more  quickly.  Volatilus  and
Captain James will lead you; go at once."

Volly  took  the  lead  and  flew  off  at  a  tearing  speed,  showing  them  his  heels  easily:  he  kept
only  just  within  the  limits  of  their  sight.  Maximus  could  not  keep  up  even  with  Temeraire,
however, so with flag-signals and some hasty shouting back and forth through the speaking-trumpets,  Berkley  and  Laurence  agreed  that  Temeraire  would  go  on  ahead,  and  his  crew
would send up regular flares to mark the direction for Maximus.

The  arrangements  made,  Temeraire  pulled  away  very  rapidly;  going,  Laurence  thought,  a
little too fast. The distance was not very great as the dragon flew; Aberdeen was some 120
miles  distant,  and  the  other dragons  would  be  coming  towards  them,  closing  the  distance
from the other side. Still, they would need to be able to fly the same distance again to bring
Victoriatus  in,  and  even  though  they  would  be  flying  over  land,  not  ocean,  they  could  not
land and rest with the wounded dragon leaning upon them: there would be no getting him
off the ground again. Some moderation of speed would be necessary.

Laurence glanced down at the chronometer strapped down to Temeraire's harness, waited
for the minute hand to shift, then counted wingbeats. Twenty-five knots: too high. "Gently, if
you please, Temeraire," he called. "We have a good deal of work ahead of us."

"I  am  not  tired  at  all,"  Temeraire  said,  but  he  slowed  regardless;  Laurence  made  his  new
speed  as  fifteen  knots:  a  good  pace,  and  one  that  Temeraire  could  sustain  almost
indefinitely.

"Pass the word for Mr. Granby," Laurence said; shortly, the lieutenant clambered forward to
Laurence's  position  at  the  base  of  Temeraire's  neck,  swapping  carabiners  quickly  to move
himself  along.  "What  is  your  estimate  of  the  best  rate  the  injured  dragon  can  be
maintaining?" Laurence asked him.

For once, Granby did not respond with cold formality, but thoughtfully; all the aviators had
immediately  become  very  grave  on  the  moment  of  hearing  of  the  injured  dragon.
"Victoriatus is a Parnassian," he said. "A large mid-weight: heavier than a Reaper. They don't
have  heavy-combat  dragons  at  Edinburgh,  so  the  others  supporting  him  must  be  mid-weights; they cannot be making more than twelve miles per hour."

Laurence  paused  to  convert  between  knots  and  miles,  then  nodded;  Temeraire  was  going
almost  twice  as  quickly,  then.  Taking  into  account  Volly's  speed  in  bringing  the  message,
they  had  perhaps  three  hours  before  they  would  need  to  start  looking  for  the  other  party.
"Very good. We may as well use the time; have the topmen and bellmen exchange places for
practice, and then I think we will try some gunnery."

He felt quite calm and settled himself, but he could feel Temeraire's excitement transmitting
itself  through  a  faint  twitching  along  the  back  of  his  neck;  of  course  this  was  Temeraire's
first  action,  of  any  sort,  and  Laurence  stroked  the  twitching  ridge  soothingly.  He  swapped
around his carabiners and turned to observe the maneuvers he had ordered. In sequence, a
topman climbed down to the belly-rigging at the same time as a bellman climbed up to the
back  on  the  other  side,  the  two  weights  balancing  each  other.  As  the  man  who  had  just
climbed  up  locked  himself  into  place,  he  tugged  on  the  signal-strap,  colored  in  alternating
sections  of  black  and  white,  and  pulled  it  ahead  a  section;  in  a  moment  it  advanced  again,
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indicating that the man below had locked himself in as well. All went smoothly:  Temeraire
was  presently  carrying  three  topmen and  three  bellmen,  and  the  exchange  took  less  than
five minutes all told.

"Mr. Allen," Laurence said sharply, calling one of the lookouts to order: an older cadet, soon
to  be  made  ensign, neglecting  his duty to watch  the  other  men  at  their  work.  "Can  you tell
me  what  is  in  the  upper  north-west?  No,  do  not  turn  round  and  look;  you  must  be  able  to
answer  that  question the  moment  it  is  asked.  I  will  speak  with  your  instructor;  mind  your
work now."

The riflemen took up their positions, and Laurence nodded to Granby to give the order; the
topmen began throwing out the flat ceramic disks used for targeting, and the riflemen took
turns  attempting  to  shoot  them  out  of  the  air  as  they  flew  past.  Laurence  watched  and
frowned.  "Mr.  Granby,  Mr.  Riggs,  I  make  twelve  targets  out  of  twenty;  you  concur?
Gentlemen, I hope I need not say that this will not do against French sharpshooters. Let us
begin again, at a slower rate: precision first, speed second, Mr. Collins, so pray do not be so
hasty."

He  kept  them  at  it  for  a full  hour,  then  had  the  hands  go  through  the  complicated  harness
adjustments  for  storm  flying;  afterwards  he  himself  went  down  below  and  observed  the
men  stationed  below  while  they  reverted  to  fair-weather  rigging.  They  did  not  have  the
tents aboard, so he could not have them practice going to quarters and breaking down full
gear, but they did well enough at the rigging changes, and he thought they would have done
well even with the additional equipment.

Temeraire  occasionally  glanced  around  to  watch  throughout  these  maneuvers,  his  eyes
bright; but for the most part he was intent on his flying, rising and falling in the air to catch
the best currents, driving himself forward with great steady beats, each thrust fully carried
through.  Laurence  laid  his  hand upon  the  long,  ropy  muscles  of  Temeraire's  neck,  feeling
them move smoothly as though oiled beneath the skin, and was not tempted to distract him
with conversation; there was no need. He knew without speaking that Temeraire shared his
satisfaction  at  putting  their  joint  training  to  real  purpose  at  last.  Laurence  had  not  wholly
realized  his  own  sense  of  quiet  frustration  to  have  been  in  some  sense  demoted  from  a
serving officer to a schoolboy, until he now found himself again engaged in active duty.

The three hours were nearly up by the chronometer, and it was time to begin preparing to
give  support  to  the  injured  dragon;  Maximus  was  perhaps  half  an  hour  behind  them,  and
Temeraire  would  have  to  carry  Victoriatus  alone  until  the  Regal  Copper  caught  up.  "Mr.
Granby,"  Laurence  said,  as  he  latched  himself  back  in  to  his  normal  position  at  the  base  of
the  neck,  "let  us  clear  the  back;  all  the  men  below,  save  for  the  signal-ensign  and  the
forward lookouts."

"Very good, sir," Granby said, nodding, and turned at once to arrange it. Laurence watched
him  work  with  mingled  satisfaction  and  irritation.  For  the  first  time  in  the  past  week,
Granby  had  been  going  about  his  duties  without  that  air  of  stiff  resentment,  and  Laurence
could  easily  perceive  the  effects:  the  speed  of  nearly  every  operation  improved;  myriad
small  defects  in  harness  placement  and  crew  positioning,  previously  invisible  to  his  own
inexperienced  eye,  now  corrected;  the  atmosphere  among  the  men  more  relaxed.  All  the
many  ways  in  which  an  excellent  first lieutenant  could  improve  the  life  of  a  crew,  and
Granby  was  now  proven  capable  of  them  all,  but  that  only  made  his  earlier  attitude  more
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regrettable.

Volatilus turned and came flying back towards them only shortly after they had cleared the
top;  James  pulled  him  about  and  cupped  his  hands  around  his  mouth  to  call  to  Laurence.
"I've sighted them, two points to the north and twelve degrees down; you'll need to drop to
come  up  under  them,  for  I  don't  think  he  can  get  any  more  elevation."  He  signaled  the
numbers with hand gestures as he spoke.

"Very good," Laurence called back, through his speaking-trumpet, and had the signal-ensign
wave a confirmation with flags; Temeraire was large enough now that Volly could not get so
close as to make verbal communication certain.

Temeraire  stooped  into  a  dive  at  his  quick  signal,  and  very  soon  Laurence  saw  a  speck  on
the horizon rapidly enlarge into the group of dragons. Victoriatus was instantly identifiable;
he  was  larger  by  half  than  either  of  the  two  Yellow  Reapers struggling  to  keep  him  aloft.
Though  the  injuries  were  already  under  thick  bandages  applied  by  his  crew,  blood  had
seeped  through  showing  the  slashing  marks  where  the  dragon  had  evidently  taken  blows
from the enemy beasts. The Parnassian's own claws were unusually large, and stained with
blood as well; his jaws also. The smaller dragons below looked crowded, and there was no
one aboard the injured dragon but his captain and perhaps half a dozen men.

"Signal the two supporters: prepare to stand aside," Laurence said; the young signal-ensign
waved  the  colored  flags  in  rapid  sequence,  and  a  prompt  acknowledgment  came  back.
Temeraire had already flown around the group and positioned himself properly: he was just
below and to the back of the second supporting dragon.

"Temeraire,  are  you  quite  ready?"  Laurence  called.  They  had  practiced  this  maneuver  in
training, but it would be unusually difficult to carry out here: the injured dragon was barely
beating his wings, and his eyes were half-shut with pain and exhaustion; the two supporters
were  clearly  worn  out  themselves.  They  would  have  to  drop  out  of  the  way  smoothly,  and
Temeraire dart in very quickly, to avoid having Victoriatus collapse into a deadly plummet
that would be impossible to arrest.

"Yes; please let us hurry, they look so very tired," Temeraire said, glancing back. His muscles
were tightly gathered, they had matched the others' pace, and nothing more could be gained
by waiting.

"Signal:  exchange  positions  on  lead  dragon's  mark,"  Laurence  said.  The  flags  waved;  the
acknowledgment came. Then on both sides of the foremost of the two supporting dragons,
the red flags went out, and then were swapped for the green.

The  rear  dragon  dropped  and  peeled  aside  swiftly  as  Temeraire  lunged.  But  the  forward
dragon went a little too slowly, his wings stuttering, and Victoriatus began to tilt forward as
the Reaper tried to descend away and make room. "Dive, damn you, dive!" Laurence roared
at  the  top  of  his  lungs;  the  smaller  dragon's  lashing  tail  was dangerously  near  Temeraire's
head, and they could not move into place.

The Reaper gave up the maneuver and simply folded his wings; he dropped out of the way
like  a  stone.  "Temeraire,  you  must  get  him  up  a  little  so  you  can  come  forward,"  Laurence
shouted  again,  crouched  low  against  the  neck;  Victoriatus's  hindquarters  had  settled  over
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Temeraire's  shoulders  instead  of  further  back,  and  the  great  belly  was  less  than  three  feet
overhead, barely kept up by the injured dragon's waning strength.

Temeraire  showed  with  a  bob of  his  head  that  he  had  heard  and  understood;  he  beat  up
rapidly  at  an  angle,  pushing  the  slumping  Parnassian  back  up  higher  through  sheer
strength, then snapped his wings closed. A brief, sickening drop: then his wings fanned out
again.  With  a  single  great  thrust,  Temeraire  had  himself  properly  positioned,  and
Victoriatus came heavily down upon them again.

Laurence  had  a  moment  of  relief;  then  Temeraire  cried  out  in  pain.  He  turned  and  saw  in
horror  that  in  his  confusion  and  agony,  Victoriatus  was  scrabbling  at  Temeraire,  and  the
great  claws  had  raked  Temeraire's  shoulder  and  side.  Above,  muffled,  he  heard  the  other
captain  shouting;  Victoriatus  stopped,  but  Temeraire  was  already  bleeding,  and  straps  of
the harness were hanging loose and flapping in the wind.

They were losing elevation rapidly; Temeraire was struggling to keep flying under the other
dragon's weight. Laurence fought with his carabiners, yelling at the signal-ensign to let the
men below know. The boy scrambled partway down the neck-strap, waving the white-and-red  flag  wildly;  in  a  moment  Laurence  gratefully  saw  Granby  climbing  up  with  two  other
men  to  bandage  the  wounds,  reaching  the  gashes  more  quickly  than  he  could.  He  stroked
Temeraire,  called  reassurance  to  him  in  a  voice  that  struggled not to  break;  Temeraire  did
not  spare  the  effort  to  turn  and  reply,  but  bravely  kept  beating  his wings,  though  his  head
was drooping with the strain.

"Not  deep,"  Granby  shouted,  from  where  they  worked  to  pad  the  gashes,  and  Laurence
could  breathe  and  think clearly  again.  The  harness  was  shifting  upon  Temeraire's  back;
aside  from  a  great  deal  of  lesser  rigging,  the  main  shoulder-strap  had  been  nearly  cut
through,  saved  only  by  the  wires  that  ran  through  it.  But  the  leather  was  parting,  and  as
soon  as  it  went the  wires  would  break  under  the  strain  of  all  the  men  and  gear  currently
riding below.

"All of you; take off your harnesses and pass them to me," Laurence said to the signal-ensign
and  the  lookouts;  the  three  boys  were  the  only  ones  left  above,  besides  him.  "Take  a  good
grip  on  the  main  harness  and  get  your  arms  or  legs  tucked  beneath."  The  leather  of  the
personal  harnesses  was  thick,  solidly  stitched,  well-oiled;  the  carabiners  were  solid  steel:
not quite as strong as the main harness, but nearly so.

He  slung  the  three  harnesses  over  his  arm  and  clambered  along  the  back-strap  to  the
broader  part  of  the  shoulders.  Granby  and  the  two midwingmen were  still  working  on  the
injuries  to  Temeraire's  side;  they  spared  him  a  puzzled  look,  and  Laurence  realized  they
could  not  see  the  nearly  severed  shoulder-band:  it  was  hidden  from  their  view  by
Temeraire's  foreleg.  There  was  no  time  to  call  them  forward  to  help  in  any  case;  the  band
was rapidly beginning to give way.

He could not come at it normally; if he tried to put his weight on any of the rings along the
shoulder-band,  it  would  certainly  break  at  once.  Working  as  quickly  as  he  could  under  the
roaring pressure of the wind, he hooked two of the harnesses together by their carabiners,
then looped them around the back-strap. "Temeraire, stay as level as you can," he shouted;
then,  clinging  to  the  ends  of  the  harnesses,  he  unlocked  his  own  carabiners  and  climbed
carefully out onto the shoulder, held by nothing more secure than his grip on the leather.
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Granby  was  shouting  something  at  him;  the  wind  was  tearing  it  away,  and  he  could  not
make out the words. Laurence tried to keep his eyes fixed on the straps; the ground below
was  the  beautiful,  fresh  green  of  early  spring,  strangely  calm  and  pastoral:  they were  low
enough that he could see white dots of sheep. He was in arm's reach now; with a hand that
shook  slightly,  he  latched  the  first  carabiner  of  the  third  loose  harness  onto  the  ring  just
above the cut, and the second onto the ring just below. He pulled on the straps, throwing his
weight against them as much as he dared; his arms ached and trembled as if with high fever.
Inch  by  inch,  he  drew  the  small  harness  tighter,  until  at  last  the  portion  between  the
carabiners  was  the  same  size  as  the  cut  portion  of  the  band  and  was  taking  much  of  its
weight: the leather stopped fraying away.

He  looked  up;  Granby  was  slowly  climbing  towards  him,  snapping  onto  rings  as  he  came.
Now that the harness was in place, the strain was not an immediate danger, so Laurence did
not wave him off, but only shouted, "Call up Mr. Fellowes," the harness-master, and pointed
to the spot. Granby's eyes widened as he came over the foreleg and saw the broken strap.

As  Granby  turned  to  signal  below  for  help,  bright  sunlight  abruptly  fell  full  on  his  face;
Victoriatus was shuddering above them, wings convulsing, and the Parnassian's chest came
heavily  down  on  Temeraire's  back.  Temeraire  staggered  in  mid-air,  one  shoulder  dipping
under the blow, and Laurence was sliding along the linked harness straps, wet palms giving
him  no  purchase.  The  green  world  was  spinning  beneath  him,  and  his  hands were  already
tired and slick with sweat; his grip was failing.

"Laurence,  hold  on!"  Temeraire  called,  head  turned  to  look  back  at  him;  his  muscles  and
wing-joints were shifting as he prepared to snatch Laurence out of the air.

"You  must  not  let  him  fall,"  Laurence  shouted,  horrified;  Temeraire  could  not  try  to  catch
him  except  by  tipping  Victoriatus  off  his  back,  and  sending  the  Parnassian  to  his  death.
"Temeraire, you must not!"

"Laurence!" Temeraire cried again, his claws flexing; his eyes were wide and distressed, and
his  head  waved  back  and  forth  in  denial.  Laurence  could  see  he  did  not  mean  to  obey.  He
struggled to keep hold of the leather straps, to try and climb up; if he fell, it was not only his
own life which would be forfeit, but the injured dragon and all his crew still aboard.

Granby  was  there  suddenly,  seizing Laurence's  harness  in  both  his  hands.  "Lock  onto  me,"
he shouted. Laurence saw at once what he meant. With one hand still clinging to the linked
harnesses,  he  locked  his  loose  carabiners  onto  the  rings  of  Granby's  harness,  then
transferred  his  grip  to  Granby  's  chest-straps.  Then  the  midwingmen  reached  them;  all  at
once there were many strong hands grabbing at them, drawing Laurence and Granby back
up  together  to  the  main  harness,  and  they  held  Laurence  in  place  while  he  locked  his
carabiners back onto the proper rings.

He could scarcely breathe yet, but he seized his speaking-trumpet and called urgently, "All is
well." His voice was hardly audible; he pulled in a deep breath and tried again, more clearly
this  time:  "I  am  fine,  Temeraire;  only  keep  flying."  The  tense  muscles  beneath  them
unwound  slowly,  and  Temeraire  beat  up  again,  regaining  a  little  of  the  elevation  they  had
lost. The whole process had lasted perhaps fifteen minutes; he was shaking as if he had been
on deck throughout a three-day gale, and his heart was thundering in his breast.
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Granby  and  the  midwingmen  looked  scarcely  more  composed.  "Well  done,  gentlemen,"
Laurence  said  to  them,  as  soon  as  he  trusted  his  voice  to  remain  steady.  "Let  us  give  Mr.
Fellowes  room  to  work.  Mr.  Granby,  be  so  good  as  to  send  someone  up  to  Victoriatus's
captain and see what assistance we can provide; we must take what precautions we can to
keep him from further starts."

They  gaped  at  him  a  moment;  Granby  was  the  first  to  recover  his  wits,  and  began  issuing
orders. By the time Laurence had made his way, very cautiously, back to his post at the base
of Temeraire's neck, the midwingmen were wrapping Victoriatus's claws with bandages to
prevent  him  from  scratching  Temeraire  again,  and  Maximus  was  coming  into  sight  in  the
distance, hurrying to their assistance.

The rest of the flight was relatively uneventful, if the effort involved in supporting a nearly
unconscious  dragon  through  the  air  were  ever  to  be  considered  ordinary.  As  soon  as  they
landed  Victoriatus  safely  in  the  courtyard,  the  surgeons  came  hurrying  to  see  to  both  him
and Temeraire; to Laurence's great relief, the cuts indeed proved quite shallow. They were
cleaned  and  inspected,  pronounced  minor,  and  a  loose  pad  placed  over  them  to  keep  the
torn  hide  from  being  irritated;  then  Temeraire  was  set  loose  and  Laurence  told  to  let  him
sleep and eat as much as he liked for a week.

It was not the most pleasant way to win a few days of liberty, but the respite was infinitely
welcome. Laurence immediately walked Temeraire to an open clearing near the covert, not
wanting to strain him by another leap aloft. Though the clearing was upon the mountain, it
was relatively level, and covered in soft green grass; it faced south, and the sun came into it
nearly the entire day. There the two of them slept together from that afternoon until late in
the  next,  Laurence  stretched  out  upon  Temeraire's  warm  back,  until  hunger  woke  them
both.

"I  feel  much  better;  I  am  sure  I  can  hunt  quite  normally,"  Temeraire  said;  Laurence  would
not  hear  of  it.  He  walked  back  up  to  the  workshops  and  roused  the  ground  crew  instead.
Very shortly they had driven a small group of cattle up from the pens and slaughtered them;
Temeraire devoured every last scrap and fell directly back to sleep.

Laurence a little diffidently asked Hollin to arrange for the servants to bring him some food;
it  was  enough  like  asking  the  man  for  personal  service  to  make  Laurence  uncomfortable,
but  he  was  reluctant  to  leave  Temeraire.  Hollin  took  no  offense;  but  when  he  returned,
Lieutenant Granby was with him, along with Riggs and a couple of the other lieutenants.

"You should go and have something hot to eat, and a bath, and then sleep in your own bed,"
Granby  said  quietly,  having  waved  the  others  off  a  little  distance.  "You  are  all  over  blood,
and it is not warm enough yet for you to sleep outside without risk to your health. I and the
other officers will take it in turns to stay with him; we will fetch you at once if he wakes, or
if any change should occur."

Laurence blinked and looked down at himself; he had not even noticed that his clothes were
spattered  and  streaked  with  the  near-black  of  dragon  blood.  He  ran  a  hand  over  his
unshaven  face;  he  was  clearly  presenting  a  rather horrible  picture  to  the world.  He  looked
up at Temeraire; the dragon was completely unaware of his surroundings, sides rising and
falling  with  a  low,  steady  rumble.  "I  dare  say  you  are  right,"  he  said.  "Very well;  and  thank
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you," he added.

Granby  nodded;  and  with  a  last  look  up  at  the  sleeping  Temeraire,  Laurence  took  himself
back  to  the  castle.  Now  that  it  had  been  brought to  mind,  the  sensation  of  dirt  and  sweat
was unpleasant upon his skin; he had gotten soft, with the luxury of daily bathing at hand.
He  stopped  by  his  room  only  long  enough  to  exchange  his  stained  clothes  for  fresh,  and
went straight to the baths.

It was shortly after dinner, and many of the officers had a habit of bathing at this hour; after
Laurence  had  taken  a  quick  plunge  into  the  pool,  he  found  the  sweat-room  very  crowded.
But as he came in, several fellows made room for him; he gladly took the opened place, and
returned the nods of greeting around the room before he laid himself down. He was so tired
that it only occurred to him after his eyes were closed in the blissful heat that the attention
had been unusual, and marked; he almost sat up again with surprise.

"Well  flown;  very  well  flown,  Captain,"  Celeritas  told  him  that  evening,  approvingly,  when
he belatedly came to report. "No, you need not apologize for being tardy. Lieutenant Granby
has given me a preliminary account, and with Captain Berkley's report I know well enough
what  happened.  We  prefer  a  captain  be  more  concerned  for  his  dragon  than  for  our
bureaucracy. I trust Temeraire is doing well?"

"Thank you, sir, yes," Laurence said gratefully. "The surgeons have told me there is no cause
for  alarm,  and  he  says  he  is  quite  comfortable.  Have  you  any  duties  for  me  during  his
recovery?"

"Nothing  other  than  to  keep  him  occupied,  which  you  may  find  enough  of  a  challenge,"
Celeritas said, with the snort that passed for a chuckle with him. "Well, that is not quite true;
I  do  have  one  task  for  you.  Once  Temeraire  is  recovered,  you  and  Maximus  will  be  joining
Lily's  formation  straightaway.  We  have  had  nothing  but  bad  news  from  the  war,  and  the
latest is worse: Villeneuve and his fleet have slipped out of Toulon under cover of an aerial
raid against Nelson's fleet; we have lost track of them. Under the circumstances, and given
this lost week, we cannot wait any longer. Therefore it is time to assign your flight crew, and
I  would  like  your  requests.  Consider  the  men  who  have  served  with  you  these  last  weeks,
and we will discuss the matter tomorrow."

Laurence walked slowly back out to the clearing after this, deep in thought. He had begged a
tent  from  the  ground  crews  and  brought  along  a  blanket;  he  thought he  would  be  quite
comfortable  once  he  had  pitched  it  by  Temeraire's  side,  and  he  liked  the  idea  better  than
spending  the  whole  night  away.  He  found  Temeraire  still  sleeping  peacefully,  the  flesh
around the bandaged area only ordinarily warm to the touch.

Having satisfied himself on this point, Laurence said, "A word with you, Mr. Granby," and led
the  lieutenant  some  short  distance  away.  "Celeritas  has  asked  me to  name  my  officers,"  he
said,  looking  steadily  at  Granby;  the  young  man  flushed  and  looked  down.  Laurence
continued,  "I  will  not  put  you  in  the  position  of  refusing  a  post;  I  do  not  know  what  that
means  in  the  Corps,  but  I  know  in  the  Navy  it  would  be  a  serious  mark  against  you.  If  you
would have the least objection, speak frankly; that will be an end to the matter."

"Sir," Granby began, then shut his mouth abruptly, looking mortified: he had used the term
so  often  in  veiled  insolence.  He  started  over  again.  "Captain,  I  am  well  aware  I  have  done
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little enough to deserve such consideration; I can only say that if you are willing to overlook
what my past behavior has been, I would be very glad of the opportunity." This speech was
a little stilted in his mouth, as if he had tried to rehearse it.

Laurence  nodded,  satisfied.  His  decision  had  been  a  near  thing;  if  it  had  not  been  for
Temeraire's sake, he was not sure he could have borne to thus expose himself to a man who
had behaved disrespectfully towards him, despite Granby's recent heroics. But Granby was
so clearly the best of the lot that Laurence had decided to take the risk. He was well-pleased
with the reply; it was fair enough and respectful even if awkwardly delivered. "Very good,"
he said simply.

They  had  just  begun  walking  back  when  Granby  suddenly  said,  "Oh,  damn  it; I  may  not  be
able  to  word it  properly,  but  I  cannot  just  leave  things  at  that:  I  have  to  tell  you  how  very
sorry I am. I know I have been playing the scrub."

Laurence  was  surprised  by  his  frankness,  but  not  displeased,  and  he  could  never  have
refused  an  apology  offered  with  so  much  sincerity  and  feeling  as  was  obvious  in  Granby's
tone. "I am very happy to accept your apology," he  said, quietly but with real warmth. "For
my  part,  all  is  forgotten,  I  assure  you,  and  I  hope  that  henceforth  we  may  be  better
comrades than we have been."

They  stopped  and  shook  hands;  Granby  looked  both  relieved  and  happy,  and  when
Laurence tentatively inquired for his recommendations for other officers, he answered with
great enthusiasm, as they made their way back towards Temeraire's side.

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