His Majesty's Dragon(Temeraire #1)

PART THREE

Chapter 9



THE  RIFLE-BALL PASSED  so  close  it  stirred  Laurence's  hair;  the  crack  of  return  fire
sounded  behind  him,  and  Temeraire  slashed  out  at  the  French  dragon  as  they  swept  past,
raking the deep blue hide with long gashes even as he twisted gracefully to avoid the other
dragon's talons.

"It's a Fleur-de-Nuit, sir, the  coloring," Granby shouted, wind whipping away at his hair, as
the  blue  dragon  pulled  away  with  a  bellow  and  wheeled  about  for  another  attempt  at  the
formation, its crew already clambering down to stanch the bleeding: the wounds were not
disabling.

Laurence nodded. "Yes. Mr. Martin," he called, more loudly, "get the flash-powder ready; we
will  give  them  a  show  on  their  next  pass."  The  French  breed  were  heavily  built  and
dangerous, but they were nocturnal by nature, and their eyes sensitive to sudden flashes of
bright light. "Mr. Turner, the flash-powder warning signal, if you please."

A  quick  confirmation  came  from  Messoria's  signal-ensign;  the  Yellow  Reaper  was  herself
engaged  in  fending  off  a  spirited  attack against  the  front  of  the  formation  by  a  French
middleweight.  Laurence  reached  out  to  pat  Temeraire's  neck,  catching  his  attention.  "We
are going to give the Fleur-de-Nuit a dose of flash-powder," he shouted. "Hold this position,
and wait for the signal."

"Yes,  I  am  ready,"  Temeraire  said,  a  deep  note  of  excitement  ringing  in  his  voice;  he  was
almost trembling.

"Pray  be  careful,"  Laurence  could  not  help  adding;  the  French  dragon  was  an  older  one,
judging by its scars, and he did not want Temeraire to be hurt through overconfidence.

The  Fleur-de-Nuit  arrowed  towards  them,  trying  once  again  to  barrel  between  Temeraire
and  Nitidus:  the  goal  was  clearly  to  split  apart  the  formation,  injuring  one  or  the  other
dragon  in  the  process,  which  would  leave  Lily  vulnerable  to  attack  from  behind  on  a
subsequent  pass.  Sutton  was  already  signaling  a  new  maneuver  which  would  bring  them
about and give Lily an angle of attack against the Fleur-de-Nuit, which was the largest of the
French assailants, but before it could be accomplished this next run had to be deflected.

"All hands at the ready; stand by on the powder," Laurence said, using the speaking-trumpet
to  amplify  his  orders,  as  the  massive  blue-and-black  creature  came  roaring  towards them.
The  speed  of  the  engagement  was  far  beyond  anything  Laurence  had  ever  before
experienced. In the Navy, an exchange of fire might last five minutes; here a pass was over
in less than one, and then a second came almost immediately. This time the French dragon
was angling closer towards Nitidus, wanting nothing more to do with Temeraire's claws; the
smaller Pascal's Blue would not be able to hold his position against the great bulk. "Hard to
larboard; close with him!" he shouted to Temeraire.
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Temeraire  answered  at  once;  his  great  black  wings  abruptly  swiveled  and  tilted  them
towards the Fleur-de-Nuit, and Temeraire closed more swiftly than a typical heavy-combat
dragon would have been able to do. The enemy dragon jerked and looked at them in reflex,
and Laurence shouted, "Light the powder," as he caught a glimpse of the pale white eyes.

He  only  just  closed  his  own  eyes  in  time;  the  brilliant  flash  was  visible  even  through  his
eyelids,  and  the  Fleur-de-Nuit  bellowed  in  pain.  Laurence  opened  his  eyes  again  to  find
Temeraire slashing fiercely  at the other dragon, carving deep strokes into its belly, and his
riflemen  strafing  the  bellmen  on  the  other  side.  "Temeraire,  hold  your  position,"  Laurence
called; Temeraire was in danger of falling behind in his enthusiasm for fighting off the other
dragon.

With  a  start,  Temeraire  beat  his  wings  in  a  flurry  and  lunged  back  into  his  place  in  the
formation;  Sutton's  signal-ensign  raised  the  green  flag,  and  as  a  unit  they  all  wheeled
around in a tight loop, Lily already opening her jaws and hissing: the Fleur-de-Nuit was still
flying blind, and streaming blood into the air as its crew tried to guide it away.

"Enemy  above!  Enemy  above!"  Maximus's  larboard  lookout  was  pointing  frantically
upwards; even as the boy shrilled, a terrible thick roaring like thunder sounded in their ears
and  drowned  him  out:  a  Grand  Chevalier  came  plummeting  down  towards  them.  The
dragon's  pale  belly  had  allowed  it  to  blend  into  the  heavy  cloud  cover  undetected  by  the
lookouts, and now it descended towards Lily, great claws opening wide; it was nearly twice
her size, and outweighed even Maximus.

Laurence  was  shocked  to  see  Messoria  and  Immortalis  both  suddenly  drop;  he  realized
belatedly  it  was  the  reflex  which  Celeritas  had  warned  them  of,  so  long  ago:  a  reaction  to
being startled from above. Nitidus had given a startled jerk of his wings, but recovered, and
Dulcia  had  kept  her  position,  but  Maximus  had  put  on  a  burst  of  speed  and  overshot  the
others,  and  Lily  herself  was  wheeling  around  in  instinctive  alarm.  The  formation  had
dissolved into chaos, and she was wholly exposed.

"Ready  all  guns;  straight  at  him!"  he  roared,  signaling  frantically  to  Temeraire;  it  was
unnecessary,  for  after  a  moment's  hovering,  Temeraire  had  already  launched  himself  to
Lily's  defense.  The  Chevalier  was too  close  to  deflect  him  entirely,  but  if  they  could  strike
him before he was able to latch on to Lily, they could still save her from a fatal mauling, and
give her time to strike back.

The  four  other  French  dragons  were  all  coming  about  again.  Temeraire put  on  a  burst  of
sudden  speed  and  just  barely  slid  past  the  reaching  claws  of  the  Pêcheur-Couronné,  and
collided  with  the  great  French  beast  with  all  his  claws  outstretched  even  as  the  Chevalier
slashed at Lily's back.

She shrieked in pain and fury, thrashing; the three dragons were all entangled now, beating
their  wings  furiously  in  opposite  directions,  clawing  and  slashing.  Lily  could  not  spit
upwards;  they  had  to  somehow  get  her  loose,  but  Temeraire  was  much  smaller  than  the
Chevalier,  and  Laurence  could  see  the  enormous  dragon's  claws  sinking  deeper  into  Lily's
flesh, even though her crew were hacking at the iron-hard talons with axes.

"Get  a  bomb  up  here,"  Laurence  snapped  to  Granby;  they  would  have  to  try  and  hurl  one
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into  the  Chevalier's  belly-rigging,  despite  the  danger  of  missing  and  striking  Temeraire  or
Lily.

Temeraire kept slashing away in a blind passion, his sides belling out for breath; he roared
so  tremendously  that  his  body  vibrated  with  the  force  and  Laurence's  ears  ached.  The
Chevalier shuddered with pain; somewhere on his other side, Maximus also roared, blocked
from  Laurence's  sight  by  the  French  dragon's  bulk.  The  attack  had  its  effect:  the  Chevalier
bellowed in his deep hoarse voice, and his claws sprang free.

"Cut loose," Laurence shouted. "Temeraire, cut loose; get between him and Lily." In answer,
Temeraire  pulled  himself  free  and  dropped.  Lily  was  moaning,  streaming  blood,  and  she
was  losing  elevation  rapidly.  Having  driven  off  the  Chevalier  was  not  enough:  the  other
dragons  were  now  as  great  a  danger  to  her  until  she  could  get  back  aloft  into  fighting
position.  Laurence  heard  Captain  Harcourt  calling  orders  whose  words  he  could  not  make
out; abruptly Lily's belly-rigging fell away like a great net sinking down through the clouds,
and bombs, supplies, baggage, all went tumbling down and vanished into the waters of the
Channel below; her ground crew were all tying themselves to the main harness instead.

Thus  lightened,  Lily  shuddered  and  made  a  great  effort,  beating  back  up  into  the  sky;  the
wounds were being packed with white bandages, but even at a distance Laurence could see
she  would  need  stitching.  Maximus  had  the  Chevalier  engaged,  but  the  Pêcheur-Couronné
and  the  Fleur-de-Nuit  were  falling  into  a  small  wedge  formation  with  the  other  French
middle-weight,  preparing  to  take  a  dash  at  Lily  again.  Temeraire  maintained  position  just
above  Lily  and  hissed  threateningly,  his  bloody  claws  flexing;  but  she  was  climbing  too
slowly.

The  battle  had  turned  into  a  wild  melee;  though  the  other  British  dragons  had  now
recovered  from  their  initial  fright,  they  were  in  no  sort  of  order.  Harcourt  was  wholly
occupied  with  Lily's  difficulties,  and  the  last  French  dragon,  a  Pêcheur-Rayé,  was  fighting
Messoria  far  below.  Clearly  the  French  had  identified  Sutton  as  the  commander,  and  were
keeping him out of the way; a strategy Laurence could grimly admire. He had no  authority
to  take  command,  he  was  the  most  junior  captain  in  the  party,  but  something  had  to  be
done.

"Turner,"  he  said,  catching  his  signal-ensign's  attention;  but  before  he  gave  any  order,  the
other British dragons were already wheeling around and in motion.

"Signal, sir, form up around leader," Turner said, pointing.

Laurence  looked  back  and  saw  Praecursoris  swinging  into  Maximus's  usual  place  with
signal-flags  waving:  not  being  limited  to the  formation's pace,  Choiseul  and  the  big dragon
had gone on ahead of them, but his lookouts had evidently caught sight of the battle and he
had  now  returned.  Laurence  tapped  Temeraire's  shoulder  to  draw  his  attention  to  the
signal. "I see it," Temeraire called back, and at once backwinged and settled into his proper
position.

Another  signal  flashed  out,  and  Laurence  brought Temeraire  up  and  in  closer;  Nitidus  also
pulled  in  more  tightly,  and  together  they  closed  the  gap  in  the  formation  where  Messoria
would  normally  have  been.  Formation  rise  together,  the  next  signal  came,  and  with  the
other  dragons  around  her,  Lily  took  heart  and  was  able  to  beat  up  more  strongly:  the
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bleeding had stopped at last. The trio of French dragons had separated; they could no longer
hope  to  succeed  with  a  collective  charge,  not  straight  into  Lily's  jaws,  and  the  formation
would be up to the level of the Chevalier in a moment.

Maximus break away , the signal flashed: Maximus was still engaged in close quarters with
the  Chevalier,  and  rifles  were  cracking  away  on  both  sides.  The  great  Regal  Copper  gave  a
final slash of his claws and pushed away: just a fraction too soon, for the formation was not
yet  high  enough,  and  another  few  moments  were  necessary  before  Lily  would  be  able  to
strike.

The  Chevalier's  crew  now  saw  his  fresh danger  and  sent  the  big  dragon  back  aloft,  a  great
deal  of  shouting  going  on  aboard  in  French.  Though  he  was  bleeding  from  many  wounds,
the Chevalier was so large that these did not hamper him severely,  and he was still able to
climb  quicker  than  the  injured  Lily.  After  a  moment,  Choiseul  signaled,  Formation  hold
elevation, and they gave up the pursuit.

The  French  dragons  came  together  at  a  distance  into  a  loose  cluster,  wheeling  around  as
they  considered  their  next  attack.  But  then  they  all  turned  as  one  and  fled  rapidly  north-east,  the  Pêcheur-Rayé  disengaging  from  Messoria  also.  Temeraire's  lookouts  were  all
calling  out  and pointing to  the  south,  and when  Laurence  looked  over  his  shoulder  he  saw
ten  dragons  flying  towards  them  at  great  speed,  British  signals  flashing  out  from  the
Longwing in the lead.

 

 

The Longwing was indeed Excidium; he and his formation accompanied them along the rest
of  the journey  to  the  Dover  covert,  the  two  heavyweight  Chequered  Nettles  among  them
taking  it  in  turn  to  support  Lily  on  the  way.  She  was  making  reasonable  progress,  but  her
head was drooping, and she made a very heavy landing, her legs trembling so that the crew
only barely managed to scramble off before she crumpled to the ground. Captain Harcourt's
face  was  streaked  with  unashamed  tears,  and  she  ran  to  Lily's  head  and  stood  there
caressing her and murmuring loving encouragement while the surgeons began their work.

Laurence directed Temeraire to land on the very edge of the covert's landing ground, so the
injured  dragons  might  have  more  room.  Maximus,  Immortalis,  and  Messoria  had  all  taken
painful  if  not  dangerous  wounds  in  the  battle,  though  nothing  like  what Lily  had  suffered,
and  their  low  cries  of  pain  were  very  difficult  to  hear.  Laurence  repressed  a  shudder  and
stroked Temeraire's sleek neck; he was deeply grateful for Temeraire's quickness and grace,
which had preserved him from the others' fate. "Mr. Granby, let us unload at once, and then
if  you  please,  let  us  see  what  we  can  spare  for  the  comfort  of  Lily's  crew;  they  have  no
baggage left, it looks to me."

"Very good, sir," Granby said, turning to give the orders at once.

It took several hours to settle the dragons down and get them unpacked and fed; fortunately
the  covert  was  a  very  large  one,  covering  perhaps  one  hundred  acres  when  including  the
cattle  pastures,  and  there  was  no  difficulty  about  finding  a  comfortably  large  clearing  for
Temeraire. Temeraire was wavering between excitement at having seen his first battle and
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deep anxiety for Lily's sake; for once he ate only indifferently, and Laurence finally told the
crew to take away the remainder of the carcasses. "We can hunt in the morning, there is no
need to force yourself to eat," he said.

"Thank  you;  I  truly  do not  feel  very  hungry  at  the moment,"  Temeraire  said,  settling down
his  head.  He  was  quiet  while  they  cleaned  him,  until  the  crewmen  had  gone  and  left  him
alone with Laurence. His eyes were closed to slits, and for a moment Laurence wondered if
he  had  fallen  asleep;  then  he  opened  them  a  little  more  and  asked  softly,  "Laurence,  is  it
always so, after a battle?"

Laurence  did  not  need  to  ask  what  he  meant;  Temeraire's  weariness  and  sorrow  were
apparent. It was hard to know how to answer; he wanted so very much to reassure. Yet he
himself was still tense and angry, and while the sensation was familiar, its lingering was not.
He had been in many actions, no less deadly or dangerous, but this one had differed in the
crucial respect: when the enemy took aim at his charge, they were threatening not his ship,
but his dragon, already the dearest creature to him in the world. Nor could he contemplate
injury  to  Lily  or  Maximus  or  any  of  the  members  of  the  formation  with  any  sort  of
detachment; they might not be his own Temeraire,  but they were full comrades-in-arms as
well.  It  was  not  at  all  the  same,  and  the  surprise  attack  had  caught  him  unprepared  in  his
mind.

"It  is  often difficult  afterwards,  I  am  afraid,  particularly  when  a  friend  has  been injured,  or
perhaps killed," he said finally. "I will say that I find this action especially hard to bear; there
was nothing to be gained, for our part, and we did not seek it out."

"Yes, that is true," Temeraire said, his ruff drooping low upon his neck. "It would be better if
I could think we had all fought so hard, and Lily had been hurt, for some purpose. But they
only came to hurt us, so we did not even protect anyone."

"That is not true at all; you protected Lily," Laurence said. "And consider: the French made a
very clever and skillful attack, taking us wholly by surprise, with a force equal to our own in
numbers  and  superior  in  experience,  and  we  defeated  it  and  drove  them  off.  That  is
something to be proud of, is it not?"

"I suppose that is true," Temeraire said; his shoulders settled as he relaxed. "If only Lily will
be all right," he added.

"Let us hope so; be sure that all that can be done for her, will be," Laurence said, stroking his
nose. "Come now, you must be tired. Will you not sleep? Shall I read to you a little?"

"I do not think I can sleep," Temeraire said. "But I would like you to read to me, and I will lie
quietly and rest." He yawned as soon as he had finished saying this, and was asleep before
Laurence had even taken the book out. The weather had finally turned, and the warm, even
breaths rising from his nostrils made small puffs of fog in the crisp air.

Leaving  him  to  sleep,  Laurence  walked  quickly  back  to  the  covert  headquarters;  the path
through  the  dragon-fields  was  lit  with  hanging  lanterns,  and  in  any  case  he  could  see  the
windows  up  ahead.  An  easterly  wind  was  carrying the  salt  air  in  from the  harbor,  mingled
with the coppery smell of the warm dragons, already familiar and hardly noticed. He had a
warm room on the second floor, with a window that looked out onto the back gardens, and
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his  baggage  had  already  been  unpacked.  He  looked  at  the  wrinkled  clothes  ruefully;
evidently  the  servants  at  the  covert  had  no  more  notion  of  packing  than  the  aviators
themselves did.

There  was  a  great  noise  of  raised  voices  as  he  came  into  the  senior  officers'  dining  room,
despite the late hour; the other captains of the formation were assembled at the long table
where their own meal was going largely untouched.

"Is  there  any  word  about  Lily?"  he  asked,  taking  the  empty  chair  between  Berkley  and
Dulcia's captain, Chenery; Captain Harcourt and Captain Little of Immortalis were the only
ones not present.

"He cut her to the bone, the great coward, but that is all we know," Chenery said. "They are
still sewing her up, and she hasn't taken anything to eat."

Laurence knew that was a bad sign; injured dragons usually became ravenous, unless they
were in very great pain. "Maximus and Messoria?" he asked, looking at Berkley and Sutton.

"Ate well, and fast asleep," Berkley said; his usually placid face was drawn and haggard, and
he  had  a  streak  of  dark  blood  running  across  his  forehead  into  his  bristly  hair.  "That  was
damned quick of you today, Laurence; we'd have lost her."

"Not  quick  enough,"  Laurence  said  quietly,  forestalling  the  murmur  of  agreement;  he  had
not  the  least  desire  to  be  praised  for  this  day's  work,  though  he  was  proud  of  what
Temeraire had done.

"Quicker  than  the  rest  of  us,"  Sutton  said,  draining  his  glass;  from  the  looks  of  his  cheeks
and nose, it was not his first. "They caught us properly flat-footed, damned Frogs. What the
devil they were doing to have a patrol there, I would like to know."

"The  route  from  Laggan  to  Dover  isn't  much  of a  secret,  Sutton,"  Little  said,  coming  to  the
table; they dragged chairs about to make room for him at their end of the table. "Immortalis
is  settled  and  eating,  by  the  by;  speaking  of  which,  please  give  me  that  chicken  here."  He
wrenched off a leg with his hands and tore into it hungrily.

Looking at him, Laurence felt the first stirrings of appetite; the other captains seemed to feel
the same way,  and for the next ten minutes there  was silence while they passed the plates
around and concentrated on their food; they had none of them eaten since a hasty breakfast
before dawn at the  covert near Middlesbrough. The wine was not very good,  but Laurence
drank several glasses anyway.

"I  expect  they've  been  lurking  about  between  Felixstowe  and  Dover,  just  waiting to  get  a
drop  on  us,"  Little  said  after  a  while,  wiping  his  mouth  and  continuing  his  earlier  thought.
"By  God,  if  you  ever  catch  me  taking  Immortalis  that  way  again;  overland  it  is  for  us  from
now on, unless we're looking for a fight."

"Right you are," Chenery said, with heartfelt agreement. "Hello, Choiseul; pull up a chair." He
shuffled over a little more, and the royalist captain joined them.

"Gentlemen, I am very happy to say that Lily has begun to eat; I have just come from Captain
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Harcourt," he said, and raised a glass. "To their health, may I propose?"

"Hear, hear," Sutton said, refilling his own glass; they all joined in the toast, and there was a
general sigh of relief.

"Here  you  all  are,  then;  eating,  I  hope?  Good,  very  good."  Admiral  Lenton  had  come  up  to
join  them;  he  was  the  commander-in-chief  of  the  Channel  Division,  and  thus  all  those
dragons  at  the  Dover  covert.  "No,  don't  be  fools,  don't  get  up,"  he  said  impatiently,  as
Laurence  and  Choiseul  began  to  rise,  and  the  others  belatedly  followed.  "After  the  day
you've had, for Heaven's sake. Here, pass that bottle over, Sutton. So, you all know that Lily
is eating? Yes, the surgeons hope she will be flying short distances in a couple of weeks, and
in  the  meantime  you  have  at  least  nicely  mauled a  couple  of  their  heavy-combat  beasts.  A
toast to your formation, gentlemen."

Laurence  was  at  last  beginning  to  feel  his  tension  and  distress  ease;  knowing  Lily  and  the
others were out of danger was a great relief, and the wine had loosened the tight knot in his
throat.  The  others  seemed  to  feel  much  the  same  way,  and  conversation  grew  slow  and
fragmented; they were all much inclined to nod over their cups.

"I am quite certain that the Grand Chevalier was Triumphalis," Choiseul was telling Admiral
Lenton quietly.  "I  have  seen  him  before;  he  is  one  of  France's  most  dangerous  fighters.  He
was certainly at the Dijon covert, near the Rhine, when Praecursoris and I left Austria, and I
must  represent  to  you,  sir,  that  it  bears  out  all  my  worst  fears:  Bonaparte would  not  have
brought  him  here  if  he  was  not  wholly  confident  of  victory  against  Austria,  and  I  am  sure
more of the French dragons are on their way to assist Villeneuve."

"I was inclined to agree with you before, Captain; now I am sure of it," Lenton said. "But for
the  moment,  all  we  can  do  is  hope  Mortiferus  reaches  Nelson  before  the  French  dragons
reach  Villeneuve,  and  that  he  can  do  the  job;  we  cannot  spare  Excidium  if  we  do  not  have
Lily.  I  would  not  be  surprised  if that was  what  they  intended  by  this  strike;  it  is the  clever
sort of way that damned Corsican thinks."

Laurence could not help thinking of the Reliant, perhaps even now under the threat of a full-scale French aerial attack, and the other ships of the great fleet currently blockading Cadiz.
So  many  of  his  friends  and  acquaintances;  even  if  the  French  dragons  did  not  arrive  first,
there  would  be  a  great  naval  battle  to  be  fought,  and  how  many would  be  lost  without  his
ever hearing another word from them? He had not devoted much time to correspondence in
the last busy months; now he regretted the neglect deeply.

"Have  we  had  any  dispatches  from  the  blockade  at  Cadiz?"  he  asked.  "Have  they  seen  any
action?"

"Not  that  I  have  heard  of,"  Lenton  said.  "Oh,  that's  right,  you're  our  fellow  from  the  Navy,
aren't you? Well, I will be starting those of you with uninjured beasts on patrolling over the
Channel Fleet anyway while the others recover; you can touch down for a bit by the flagship
and hear the news. They'll be damned glad to see you; we haven't been able to spare anyone
long enough to bring them the post in a month."

"Will  you  want  us  tomorrow,  then?"  Chenery  asked,  stifling  a  yawn,  not  entirely
successfully.
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"No,  I  can  spare  you  a  day.  See  to  your  dragons,  and  enjoy  the  rest  while  it  lasts,"  Lenton
said,  with  a  sharp,  braying  laugh.  "I'll  be  having  you  rousted  out  of  bed  at  dawn  the  day
after."

Temeraire slept very heavily and late the next morning, leaving Laurence to occupy himself
for some hours after breakfast. He met Berkley at the table, and walked back with him to see
Maximus. The Regal Copper was still eating, a procession of fresh-slaughtered sheep going
down  his  gullet  one  after  another,  and  he  only  rumbled  a  wordless,  mouth-full  greeting  as
they came to the clearing.

Berkley  brought  out  a  bottle  of  rather  terrible  wine,  and  drank  most  of  it  himself  while
Laurence  sipped  at  his  glass  to  be  polite,  as  they  told  over  the  battle  again  with  diagrams
scratched in the dirt and pebbles representing the dragons. "We would do very well to add a
light-flyer, a Greyling if one can be spared, to fly lookout above the formation," Berkley said,
sitting  back  heavily  upon  a  rock.  "It  is  all  our  big  dragons  being  young;  when  the  big  ones
panic in that way, the little ones will have a start even if they know better."

Laurence  nodded.  "Although  I  hope  this  misadventure  will  at  least  have  given  them  some
experience  in  dealing  with  the  fright,"  he  said.  "In  any  event,  the  French  cannot  count  on
having  such  ideal  circumstances  often;  without  the  cloud cover  they  should  never  have
managed it."

"Gentlemen;  are  you  looking  over  the  plan  of  yesterday?"  Choiseul  had  been  walking  past
towards  the  headquarters;  he  joined  them  and  crouched  down  beside  the  diagram.  "I  am
very  sorry  to  have  been  away  at  the  beginning."  His  coat  was dusty  and  his neckcloth  was
stained  badly  with  sweat:  he  looked  as  though  he  had  not  shifted  his  clothes  since
yesterday, and a thin tracery of red veins stood out in the whites of his eyes; he rubbed his
face as he looked down.

"Have you been up all night?" Laurence asked.

Choiseul shook his head. "No, but I took it in turns with Catherine-with Harcourt-to sleep a
little,  by  Lily;  she  would  not  rest  otherwise."  He  shut  his  eyes  in  an  enormous  yawn,  and
nearly  fell  over.  "Merci  ,"  he said,  grateful  for  Laurence's  steadying  hand,  and  pushed
himself slowly to his feet. "I will leave you; I must get Catherine some food."

"Pray go and get some rest," Laurence said. "I will bring her something; Temeraire is asleep,
and I am at liberty."

Harcourt  herself  was  wide  awake,  pale  with  anxiety  but  steady  now,  giving  orders  to  the
crew  and  feeding  Lily  with  chunks  of  still-steaming  beef  from  her  own  hand,  a  constant
stream of encouragement coming from her lips. Laurence had brought her some bread with
bacon; she would have taken the sandwich in her bloody hands, unwilling to interrupt, but
he managed to coax her away long enough to wash a little and eat while a crewman took her
place. Lily kept eating, with one golden eye resting on Harcourt for reassurance.

Choiseul  came  back  before  Harcourt  had  quite  finished,  his  neckcloth  and  coat  gone  and  a
servant  following  with  a  pot  of  coffee,  strong  and  hot.  "Your  lieutenant  is  looking  for  you,
Laurence; Temeraire begins to stir," he said, sitting down again heavily beside her. "I cannot
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manage to sleep; the coffee has done me well."

"Thank you, Jean-Paul, if you are not too tired, I would be very grateful for your company,"
she  said,  already  drinking  her  second  cup.  "Pray  have  no  hesitation,  Laurence, I  am  sure
Temeraire must be anxious. I am obliged to you for coming."

Laurence bowed to them both, though he had a sense of awkwardness for the first occasion
since he had grown used to Harcourt. She was leaning with no appearance of consciousness
against Choiseul's shoulder, and he was looking down at her with undisguised warmth; she
was  quite  young,  after  all,  and  Laurence  could  not  help  feeling  the  absence  of  any  suitable
chaperone.

He consoled himself that nothing could happen with Lily and the crew present, even if they
had  not  both  been  so  obviously  done  in;  in  any  case,  he  could  hardly  stay  under  the
circumstances, and he hurried away to Temeraire's clearing.

The rest of the day he spent gratefully in idleness,  seated comfortably in his usual place in
the  crook  of  Temeraire's  foreleg  and  writing  letters;  he  had  formed  an  extensive
correspondence  while  at  sea,  with  all  the  long  hours  to  fill,  and  now  many  of  his
acquaintance  were  owed  responses.  His  mother,  too,  had  managed  to  write  him  several
hasty and  short  letters,  evidently  kept  from  his  father's  knowledge;  at  least  they  were  not
franked, so Laurence was obliged to pay to receive them.

Having  gorged  himself  to  compensate  for  his  lack  of  appetite  the  night  before,  Temeraire
then  listened  to  the  letters  Laurence  was  writing  and  dictated  his  own  contributions,
sending greetings to Lady Allendale, and to Riley. "And do ask Captain Riley to give my best
wishes to the crew of the Reliant," he said. "It seems so very long ago, Laurence, does it not?
I have not had fish in months now."

Laurence smiled at this measure of time. "A great deal has happened, certainly; it is strange
to think it has not even been a year," he said, sealing the envelope and writing the direction.
"I  only  hope  they  are  all  well." It  was  the  last,  and he  laid  it  upon the  substantial  pile  with
satisfaction;  he  was  a  great  deal  easier  in  his  conscience  now.  "Roland,"  he  called,  and  she
came  running  up  from  where  the  cadets were  playing  a  game  of  jacks.  "Go  take  this to  the
dispatch post," he said, handing her the stack.

"Sir," she said, a little nervously, accepting the letters, "when I am done, might I have liberty
for the evening?"

He  was  startled  by  the  request;  several  of  the  ensigns  and  midwingmen  had  put  in  for
liberty, and had it granted, that they might visit the city, but the idea of a ten-year-old cadet
wandering  about  Dover  alone  was  absurd,  even  if  she  were  not  a  girl.  "Would  this  be  for
yourself  alone,  or  will  you  be  going  with  one  of  the  others?"  he  asked,  thinking  she might
have been invited to join one of the older officers in a respectable excursion.

"No,  sir,  only  for  me,"  she  said;  she  looked  so  very  hopeful  that  Laurence  thought  for  a
moment of granting it and taking her himself, but he could not like to leave Temeraire alone
to brood over the previous day.

"Perhaps  another  time,  Roland,"  he  said  gently.  "We  will  be  here  in  Dover  for  a  long  time
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now, and I promise you will have another opportunity."

"Oh," she said, downcast. "Yes, sir." She went away drooping so that Laurence felt guilty.

Temeraire  watched  her  go  and  inquired,  "Laurence,  is  there  something  particularly
interesting in Dover, and might we go and see it? So many of our crew seem to be making a
visit."

"Oh  dear,"  Laurence  said;  he  felt  rather  awkward  explaining  that  the  main  attraction  was
the abundance of harbor prostitutes and cheap liquor. "Well, a city has a great many people
in it, and thus various entertainments provided in close proximity," he tried.

"Do  you  mean  such  as  more  books?" Temeraire  said.  "But  I  have  never  seen  Dunne  or
Collins  reading,  and  they  were  so  very  excited  to  be  going:  they  talked  of  nothing  else  all
yesterday evening."

Laurence silently cursed the two unfortunate young midwingmen for complicating his task,
already planning their next week's duties in a vengeful spirit. "There is also the theater, and
concerts," he said lamely. But this was carrying concealment too far: the sting of dishonesty
was unpleasant, and he could not bear to feel he had been deceitful to Temeraire, who after
all  was  grown  now.  "But  I  am  afraid  that  some  of  them  go  there  to  drink,  and  keep  low
company," he said more frankly.

"Oh, you mean whores," Temeraire said, startling Laurence so greatly he nearly fell from his
seat. "I did not know they had those in cities, too, but now I understand."

"Where on earth had you heard of them?" Laurence asked, steadying himself; now relieved
of the burden of explanation, he felt irrationally  offended that someone else had chosen to
enlighten Temeraire.

"Oh, Victoriatus at Loch Laggan told me, for I wondered why the officers were going down
to  the  village  when  they  did  not  have  family  there,"  Temeraire  said.  "But  you  have  never
gone; are you sure you would not like to?" he added, almost hopefully.

"My dear, you must not say such things," Laurence said, blushing and shaking with laughter
at the same time. "It is not a respectable subject for conversation, at all, and if men cannot
be  prevented  from  indulging  the  habit,  they  at  least  ought  not  to  be  encouraged.  I  shall
certainly  speak  with  Dunne  and  Collins;  they  ought  not  to  be  bragging  about  it,  and
especially not where the ensigns might hear."

"I  do  not  understand,"  Temeraire  said.  "Vindicatus  said  that  it  was  prodigiously  nice  for
men, and also desirable, for otherwise they might like to get married, and that did not sound
very pleasant at all. Although if you very much wished to, I suppose I would not mind." He
made this last speech with very little sincerity, looking at Laurence sideways, as if to gauge
the effect.

Laurence's mirth and embarrassment both faded at once. "I am afraid you have been given
some  very  incomplete  knowledge,"  he  said  gently.  "Forgive  me;  I  ought  to  have  spoken  of
these matters to you before. I must beg you to have no anxiety: you are my first charge and
will always be, even if I should ever marry, and I do not suppose I will."
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He paused a moment to reflect if speaking further would give Temeraire more worry, but in
the end he decided to err on the side of full confidence, and added, "There was something of
an understanding between myself and a lady, before you came to me, but she has since set
me at liberty."

"Do  you  mean  she  has  refused  you?"  Temeraire  said,  very  indignantly,  by  way  of
demonstrating that dragons might be as contrary as men. "I am very sorry, Laurence; if you
like to get married, I am sure you can find someone else, much nicer."

"This  is  very  flattering,  but  I  assure  you,  I  have  not  the  least  desire  to  seek  out  a
replacement," Laurence said.

Temeraire ducked his head a little, and made no further demurrals, quite evidently pleased.
"But Laurence-" he said, then halted. "Laurence," he asked, "if it is not a fit subject, does that
mean I ought not speak of it anymore?"

"You  must  be  careful  to  avoid  it  in  any  wider  company,  but  you  may  always  speak  of
anything you like to me," Laurence said.

"I am merely curious, now, if that is all there is in Dover," Temeraire said. "For Roland is too
young for whores, is she not?"

"I  am  beginning  to  feel  the  need  of  a  glass  of  wine  to  fortify  myself  against  this
conversation," Laurence said ruefully.

Thankfully, Temeraire was satisfied with some further explanation of what the theater and
concerts might be, and the other  attractions of a city; he turned his attention willingly to a
discussion  of  the  planned  route  for  their  patrol,  which  a  runner  had  brought  over  that
morning, and even inquired about the possibility of catching some fish for dinner. Laurence
was glad to see him so recovered in spirit after the previous day's misfortunes, and had just
decided that he would take Roland to the town after all, if Temeraire did not object, when he
saw her returning in the company of another captain: a woman.

He had been sitting upon Temeraire's foreleg in what he was abruptly conscious was a state
of  disarray;  he  hurriedly  climbed  down  on  the  far  side  so  that  he  was  briefly  hidden  by
Temeraire's body. There was no time to put back his coat, which was hung over a tree limb
some distance away in any  case, but  he tucked his  shirt back into his trousers and tied his
neckcloth hastily back round his neck.

He  came  around  to  make  his  bow,  and  nearly  stumbled  as  he  saw  her  clearly;  she  was  not
unhandsome, but her face was marred badly by a scar that could only have been made by a
sword; the left eye drooped a little at the corner where the blade had just missed it, and the
flesh was drawn along an angry red line all the way down her face, fading to a thinner white
scar along her neck. She was his own age, or perhaps a little older; the scar made it difficult
to tell, but in any case she wore the triple bars which marked her as a senior captain, and a
small gold medal of the Nile in her lapel.

"Laurence,  is  it?"  she  said,  without  waiting  for  any  sort  of  introduction,  while  he  was  still
busy striving to conceal his surprise. "I am Jane Roland, Excidium's captain; I would take it
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as a personal favor if I might have Emily for the evening-if she can possibly be spared." She
glanced pointedly at the idle cadets and ensigns; her tone was sarcastic, and she was clearly
offended.

"I beg your pardon," Laurence said, realizing his mistake. "I had thought she wanted liberty
to  visit  the  town;  I  did  not  realize-"  And  here  he  barely  caught  himself;  he  was  quite  sure
they  were  mother  and  daughter,  not  only  because  of  the  shared  name  but  also  a  certain
similarity  of  feature  and  expression,  but  he  could  not  simply  make  the  assumption.
"Certainly you may have her," he finished instead.

Hearing his explanation, Captain Roland unbent at once. "Ha! I see, what mischief you must
have  imagined  her  getting  into,"  she  said;  her  laugh  was  curiously  hearty  and  unfeminine.
"Well, I promise I shan't let her run wild, and to have her back by eight o'clock. Thank you;
Excidium and I have not seen her in almost a year, and we are in danger of forgetting what
she looks like."

Laurence  bowed  and  saw  them  off;  Roland  hurrying  to  keep  up  with  her  mother's  long,
mannish stride, speaking the whole time in obvious excitement and enthusiasm, and waving
her  hand  towards  her  friends  as she  went  away.  Watching  them  go,  Laurence  felt  a  little
foolish; he had at last grown used to Captain Harcourt, and should have been able to draw
the  natural  conclusion.  Excidium  was  after  all  another  Longwing;  presumably  he  too
insisted on a female captain just as did Lily, and with his many years of service, his captain
could  scarcely  have  avoided  battle.  Yet  Laurence  had  to  own  he  was  surprised,  and  not  a
little  shocked,  to  see  a  woman  so  cut  about  and  so  forward;  Harcourt,  his  only  other
example  of  a  female  captain,  was  by  no  means  missish,  but  she  was  still  quite  young  and
conscious of her early promotion, which perhaps made her less assured.

With  the  subject  of  marriage  so  fresh  in  his  mind  after  his  discussion  with  Temeraire,  he
also  could  not  help  wondering  about  Emily's  father;  if  marriage  was  an  awkward
proposition  for  a  male  aviator,  it  seemed  nearly  inconceivable  for  a  female  one.  The  only
thing he could imagine was that Emily was natural-born, and as soon as the idea occurred to
him  he  scolded  himself  to  be  entertaining  such  thoughts  about  a  perfectly  respectable
woman he had just met.

But  his  involuntary  guess  proved  entirely  correct,  in  the  event.  "I  am  afraid  I  have  not  the
slightest idea; I have not seen him in ten years," she said, later that evening; she had invited
him  to  join  her  for  a  late  supper  at  the  officers'  club  after  bringing  Emily  back,  and  after  a
few glasses of wine he had not been able to resist making a tentative inquiry after the health
of Emily's father. "It is not as though we were married, you know; I do not believe he even
knows Emily's name."

She seemed wholly unconscious of any shame, and after all Laurence had privately felt any
more  legitimate  situation  would  have  been  impossible.  But  he  was  uncomfortable
nevertheless;  thankfully,  though  she  noticed,  she  did  not  take  any  offense  at  it  for  herself,
but  rather  said  kindly,  "I  dare  say  our  ways  are  still  odd  to  you.  But  you  can  marry,  if  you
like, it is not held against you at all in the Corps. It is only that it is rather hard on the other
person, always taking second place to a dragon. For my own part, I have never felt anything
wanting;  I  should  never  have  desired  children  if  it  were  not  for  Excidium's  sake,  although
Emily is a dear, and I am very happy to have her. But it was sadly inconvenient, for all that."

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"So  Emily  is  to  follow  you  as  his  captain?"  Laurence  said.  "May  I  ask  you,  are  the  dragons,
the long-lived ones, I mean, always inherited this way?"

"When we can manage it; they take it very hard, you see, losing a handler, and they are more
likely  to  accept  a  new  one  if  it  is  someone  they  have  some  connection  to,  and  whom  they
feel shares their grief," she said. "So we breed ourselves as much as them; I expect they will
be asking you to manage one or two for the Corps yourself."

"Good Lord," he said, startled by the idea; he had discarded the thought of children with his
plans of marriage, from the very moment of Edith's refusal,  and still further gone now that
he  was  aware  of  Temeraire's  objections;  he  could  not  immediately  imagine  how  he  might
arrange the matter.

"I  suppose  it  must  be  rather  shocking  to  you,  poor  fellow.  I  am  sorry,"  she  said.  "I  would
offer,  but  you  ought  to  wait  until  he  is  at  least  ten  years  old;  and  in  any  case  I  cannot  be
spared just now."

Laurence  required  a  moment  to  understand  what  she  meant,  then  he  snatched  up  his
wineglass with an unsteady hand and endeavored to conceal his face behind it; he could feel
color rising in his cheeks despite all the will in the world to prevent it. "Very kind," he said
into the cup, strangled half between mortification and laughter; it was not the sort of offer
he had ever envisioned receiving, even if it had only half been made.

"Catherine  might  do  for  you  by  then,  however,"  Roland  went  on,  still  in  that  appallingly
practical  tone.  "That  might  do  nicely,  indeed;  you  could  have  one  each  for  Lily  and
Temeraire."

"Thank you!"  he said, very firmly, in desperation trying to change the subject. "May I bring
you a glass of something to drink?"

"Oh,  yes; port  would  be  splendid,  thank  you,"  she  said.  By  this  time  he  was  beyond  being
shocked; and when he returned with two glasses and she offered him an already-lit cigar, he
shared it with her willingly.

He stayed talking with her for several hours more,  until they were the only ones left in the
club  and  the  servants  were  beginning  to  pointedly  stop  concealing  their  yawns.  They
climbed  the  stairs  together.  "It  is  not  so  very  late  as  all  that,"  she  said,  looking  at  the
handsome great clock at the end of the upper landing. "Are you very tired? We might have a
hand or two of piquet in my rooms."

By this time he had begun to be so easy with her that he thought nothing of the suggestion.
When he left her at last, very late, to return to his own rooms, a servant was walking down
the  hall  and  glanced  at  him;  only  then  did  he  consider  the  propriety  of  his  behavior  and
suffer a qualm. But the damage, if any, had already been done; he put it from his mind, and
sought his bed at last.


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