His Majesty's Dragon(Temeraire #1)

Chapter 11  



LAURENCE COULD NOT help wincing at the haphazard way in which Jane threw her things
out of the wardrobe and into heaps upon the bed. "May I help you?" he asked finally, out of
desperation, and took possession of her baggage. "No, I beg you, permit me the liberty; you
may consider your flight path as I do this," he said.

"Thank you, Laurence, that is very kind of you." She sat down with her maps instead. "It will
be  a  straightforward  flight,  I  hope,"  she  went  on,  scribbling  calculations  and  moving  the
small  bits  of  wood  which  she  was  using  to  represent  the  scattered  dragon transport  ships
that  would  provide  Excidium  and  his  formation  with  resting  places on  their  way  to  Cadiz.
"So  long  as  the  weather  holds,  less  than  two  weeks  should  see  us  there."  With  so  much
urgent  need,  the  dragons  would  not  be  going  by  a  single  transport,  but  rather  would  fly
from  one  transport  to  another,  attempting  to  predict  their locations  based  on  the  current
and the wind.

Laurence nodded, though a little grimly; they were only a day shy of October, and there was
every  likelihood  at  this  time  of  year  that  the  weather  would  not  hold.  Then  she  would  be
faced  with  the  dangerous  choice  of  trying  to  find  a  transport  that  might  easily  have  been
blown  off-course,  or  seeking  shelter  inland  in  the  face  of  Spanish  artillery.  Presuming,  of
course, that the formation was not itself brought down by a storm: dragons were from time
to  time  cast down  by  lightning  or  heavy  winds,  and  if  flung into  a  heavy  ocean,  they  could
easily drown with all their crew.

But  there  was  no  choice.  Lily  had  recovered  with  great  speed  over  the  intervening  weeks;
she had led the formation through a full patrol only yesterday, and landed without pain or
stiffness.  Lenton  had  looked  her  over,  spoken  a  few  words  with  her  and Captain  Harcourt,
and  gone  straightaway  to  give  Jane  her  orders  for  Cadiz.  Laurence  had  been  expecting  as
much,  of  course,  but  he  could  not  help  feeling  concern,  both  for  the  dragons  going  and  for
those remaining behind.

"There, that will do," she said, finishing her chart and throwing down her pen; he looked up
from  the  baggage  in  surprise:  he  had  fallen  into  a  brown  study  and  packed  mechanically,
without  marking  what  he  did;  now  he  realized  that  he  had  been  silent  for  nearly  twenty
minutes together, and that he had one of her stays in his hands. He hastily dropped it atop
the neatly packed things in her small case, and closed the lid.

The  sunlight was  beginning  to  come  in  at  the  window;  their  time  was  gone.  "There,
Laurence, do not look so glum; I  have  made the flight to Gibraltar a dozen times," she said,
coming  to  kiss  him  soundly.  "You  will  have  a  worse  time  of  it  here,  I  am  afraid;  they  will
undoubtedly try some mischief once they know we are gone."

"I  have  every  confidence  in  you,"  Laurence  said,  ringing  the  bell  for  the  servants.  "I  only
hope we have not misjudged." It was as much as he would say critical of Lenton, particularly
on  a  subject  where  he  could  not  be  unbiased.  Yet  he  felt  that  even  if  he  had  not  had  a
personal objection to make to placing Excidium and his formation in danger, he would still
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have been concerned by the lack of further intelligence.

Volly had arrived three days before with a report full of fresh negatives. A handful of French
dragons had arrived in Cadiz: enough to keep Mortiferus from forcing out the fleet, but not a
tenth  of  the  dragons  which  had  been  stationed  along  the  Rhine.  And  in  cause  for  more
concern,  even  though  nearly  every  light  and  quick  dragon  not  wholly  involved  in  dispatch
service  had  been  pressed  into  scouting  and  spying,  they  still  knew  nothing  more  of
Bonaparte's work across the Channel.

He walked with her to Excidium's clearing and saw her aboard; it was strange, for he felt as
though he ought to feel more. He would have put a bullet in his brains sooner than let Edith
go  to  face  danger  while  he  remained  behind  himself,  yet  he  could  say  his  adieus  to Roland
without much more of a pang than in bidding farewell to any other comrade. She blew him a
friendly kiss from atop Excidium's back, once her crew were all aboard. "I will see you in a
few months, I am sure, or sooner if we can chase the Frogs out of harbor," she called down.
"Fair winds, and mind you don't let Emily run wild."

He raised a hand to her. "Godspeed," he called, and stood watching as the enormous wings
carried Excidium up, the other dragons of his formation rising to join him, until they had all
dwindled out of sight to the south.

Although  they  kept  a  wary  eye  on  the  Channel  skies,  the  first  weeks  after  Excidium's
departure  were  quiet.  No  raids  came,  and  Lenton  was  of  the  opinion  that  the  French  still
thought  Excidium  was  in  residence,  and  were  correspondingly  reluctant  to  make  any
venture.  "The  longer  we  can  keep  them  thinking  it,  the  better,"  he  said  to  the  assembled
captains  after  another  uneventful  patrol.  "Aside  from  the  benefit  to  us,  just  as  well  if  they
don't realize another formation is nearing their precious fleet at Cadiz."

They  all  took  a  great  measure  of  comfort  from  the  news  of  Excidium's  safe  arrival,  which
Volly brought almost two weeks to the day from his departure. "They'd already begun when
I left," Captain James told the other captains the next day, taking a hurried breakfast before
setting  out  on  his  return  journey.  "You  could  hear  the  Spaniards  howling  for  miles:  their
merchantmen  are  as  quick  to  fall  apart  under  dragon-spray  as  any  ship-of-the-line,  and
their  shops  and  houses  as  well.  I  expect  they'll  fire  on  the  Frenchmen  themselves  if
Villeneuve doesn't come out soon, alliance or not."

The  atmosphere  grew  lighter  after  this  encouraging  news,  and  Lenton  cut  their  patrol  a
little short and granted them all liberty for celebration, a welcome respite to men who had
been  working  at  a  frenetic  pace.  The  more  energetic  went  into  town;  most  seized  a  little
sleep, as did the weary dragons.

Laurence  took  the  opportunity  to  enjoy  a  quiet  evening's  reading  with  Temeraire;  they
stayed together late into the night, reading by the light of the lanterns. Laurence woke out of
a  light  doze  some  time  after  the  moon  had  risen:  Temeraire's  head  was  dark  against  the
illuminated sky, and he was looking searchingly to the north of their clearing. "Is something
the matter?" Laurence asked him. Sitting up, he could hear a faint noise, strange and high.

Even as they listened, the sound stopped. "Laurence, that was Lily, I think," Temeraire said,
his ruff standing up stiffly.

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Laurence  slid  down  at  once.  "Stay  here;  I  will  return  as  quickly  as  I  may,"  he  said,  and
Temeraire nodded without ever looking away.

The  paths  through  the  covert  were  largely  deserted  and  unlit:  Excidium's  formation  gone,
all the light dragons out on scouting duty, and the night cold enough to send even the most
dedicated  crews  into  the  barracks  buildings.  The  ground  had  frozen  three  days  before;  it
was packed and hard enough for his heels to drum hollowly upon it as he walked.

Lily's clearing was empty; a faint murmur of noise from the barracks, whose lit windows he
could  see  distantly,  through  the  trees,  and  no  one  about  the  buildings.  Lily  herself  was
crouched  motionless,  her  yellow  eyes  red-rimmed  and  staring,  and  she  was  clawing  the
ground  silently.  Low  voices,  and  the  sound  of  crying;  Laurence  wondered  if  he  was
intruding  untimely,  but  Lily's  evident  distress  decided  him:  he  walked  into  the  clearing,
calling in a strong voice, "Harcourt? Are you there?"

"No  further"  came  Choiseul's  voice,  low  and  sharp:  Laurence  came  around  Lily's  head  and
halted  in  dreadful  surprise:  Choiseul  was  holding  Harcourt  by  the  arm,  and  there  was  an
expression of complete despair on his face. "Make no sound, Laurence," he said; there was a
sword in his hand, and behind him on the ground Laurence could see a young midwingman
stretched out, dark bloodstains spreading over the back of his coat. "No sound at all."

"For God's sake, what do you think you are about?" Laurence said. "Harcourt, is it well with
you?"

"He  has  killed  Wilpoys,"  she  said  thickly;  she  was  wavering  where  she  stood,  and  as  the
torchlight  came  on  her  face  he  could  see  a  bruise  already  darkening  across  half  her
forehead. "Laurence, never mind about me, you must go and fetch help; he means to do Lily
a mischief."

"No, never, never," Choiseul said. "I mean no harm to her or you, Catherine, I swear it. But I
will  not  be  answerable  if  you  interfere,  Laurence;  do  nothing."  He  raised  the  sword;  blood
gleamed on its edge, not far from Harcourt's neck, and Lily made the thin eerie noise again,
a  high-pitched  whining  that  grated  against  the  ear.  Choiseul  was  pale,  his  face  taking  on  a
greenish cast in the light, and he looked desperate enough to do anything; Laurence kept his
position, hoping for a better moment.

Choiseul stood staring at him a moment longer, until satisfied Laurence did not mean to go,
and  then  said,  "We  will  go  all  of  us  together  to  Praecursoris;  Lily,  you  will  stay  here,  and
follow  when  you  see  us  go  aloft:  I  promise  you  no  harm  will  come  to  Catherine  so  long  as
you obey."

"Oh, you miserable, cowhearted traitor dog," Harcourt said, "do you think I am going to go
to France with you, and lick Bonaparte's boots? How long have you been planning this?" She
struggled to pull away from him, even staggering as she was, but Choiseul shook her and she
nearly fell.

Lily snarled, half-rising, her wings mantling: Laurence could see the black acid glistening at
the  edges  of  her  bone  spurs.  "Catherine!"  she  hissed,  the  sound  distorted  through  her
clenched teeth.

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"Silence,  enough,"  Choiseul  said,  pulling  Harcourt  up  and  close  to his  body,  pinning  her
arms: the sword still held steady in his other hand, Laurence's eyes always upon it, waiting
for a chance. "You will follow, Lily; you will do as I  have said. We are going now; march, at
once,  monsieur,  there."  He  gestured  with  the  sword.  Laurence  did  not  turn  around,  but
stepped backwards, and once beneath the shadow of the trees he moved more slowly still,
so that Choiseul came unknowingly closer than he meant to do.

A  moment  of  wild  grappling:  then  they  all  three  went  to  the  ground in  a  heap,  the  sword
flying and Harcourt caught between them. They struck the ground heavily, but Choiseul was
beneath, and for a moment Laurence had the advantage; he was forced to sacrifice it to roll
Harcourt free and out of harm's way, and Choiseul struck him across the face as soon as she
was clear, throwing him off.

They  rolled  about  on  the  ground,  battering  at  each  other  awkwardly,  both  trying  to  reach
for  the  sword  even  as they  struggled.  Choiseul  was  powerfully  built  and taller,  and  though
Laurence had a far greater experience of close combat, the Frenchman's weight began to tell
as they wrestled. Lily was roaring out loud now, voices calling in the distance, and despair
gave Choiseul a burst of strength: he drove a fist into Laurence's stomach and lunged for the
sword while Laurence curled gasping about the pain.

Then  there  was  a  tremendous  roaring  above  them:  the  ground  shuddered,  branches
tumbling  down  in  a  rain  of  dry  leaves  and  pine  needles,  and  an  immense  old  tree  was
wrenched whole out of the ground beside them: Temeraire was above them, beating wildly
as he tore away the cover. More bellowing, now from Praecursoris: the French dragon's pale
marbled wings were visible in the dark, approaching, and Temeraire writhed around to face
him,  claws stretching  out.  Laurence  dragged  himself  up  and  threw  himself  onto  Choiseul,
bearing him down to the ground with all his weight: he was retching even as they struggled,
but Temeraire's danger spurred him on.

Choiseul  managed  to  turn  them  over  and  force  an arm  against  Laurence's  throat,  pressing
hard;  choking,  Laurence  caught  only  a  glimpse  of  motion,  and  then  Choiseul  went  limp:
Harcourt had fetched an iron bar from Lily's gear and struck him upon the back of the head.

She was nearly fainting with the effort, Lily trying to crowd between the trees to reach her;
the  crew  were  rushing  into  the  clearing  now  at  last,  however,  and  many  hands  helped
Laurence up to his feet. "Stand over that man there, bring torches," Laurence said, gasping.
"And  get  a  full-voiced  man  here,  with  a  speaking-trumpet;  hurry,  damn  you,"  for  above,
Temeraire and Praecursoris were still circling each other, claws flashing.

Harcourt's  first  lieutenant  was  a  big-chested  man with  a  voice  that  needed  no  trumpet:  as
soon  as  he  understood  the  circumstances  he  cupped  his  hands  around  his  mouth  and
bellowed  up  at  Praecursoris.  The  big  French  dragon  broke  off  and  flew  in  wild  desperate
circles  for  a  moment  as  he  peered  down  to  where  Choiseul  was  being  secured,  and  then
with drooping head he returned to the ground, Temeraire hovering watchfully until he had
landed.

Maximus was housed not far off, and Berkley had come to the clearing on hearing the noise:
he  took  charge  now,  setting  men  to  chain  Praecursoris,  and  others  to  bear  Harcourt  and
Choiseul  to  the  surgeons;  still  others  to  take  away  poor  Wilpoys  to  be  buried.  "No,  thank
you,  I  can  manage,"  Laurence  said,  shaking  off  the  willing  hands  that  would  have  carried
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him  as  well;  his  breath  was  returning,  and  he  walked  slowly  over  to  the  clearing  where
Temeraire had landed beside Lily, to comfort both the dragons and try to calm them.

Choiseul  did  not  rouse  for  the  better  part  of  a  day,  and  when  he  first  woke  he  was  thick-tongued  and  confused  in  his  speech.  Yet  by  the  next  morning,  he  was  once  again  in
command of himself, and at first refused to answer any questions whatsoever.

Praecursoris had been ringed round by all the other dragons, and ordered to remain on the
ground  under  pain  of  Choiseul's  death:  a  threat  to  the  handler  was  the  one  thing  which
could hold an unwilling dragon, and the means by which Choiseul had intended to force Lily
to  defect  to  France  were  now  used  against  him.  Praecursoris  made  no  attempt  to  defy  the
command,  but  huddled  into  a  miserable  heap  beneath  his  chains,  eating  nothing,  and
occasionally keening softly.

"Harcourt," Lenton said at last, coming into the dining room and finding them all assembled
and  waiting,  "I  am  damned  sorry,  but  I  must  ask  you  to  try:  he  has  not  spoken  to  anyone
else,  but  if  he  has  the  honor  of  a  yellow  rat  he  must  feel  some  explanation  owed  you.  Will
you ask him?"

She nodded, and then she drained her glass, but her face stayed so very pale that Laurence
asked quietly, "Should you like me to accompany you?"

"Yes,  if  you  please,"  she  said  at  once, gratefully,  and  he  followed  her  to  the  small,  dark  cell
where Choiseul was incarcerated.

Choiseul could not meet her gaze, nor speak to  her; he shook his head and shuddered, and
even  wept  as  she  asked  him  questions  in  an  unsteady  voice.  "Oh  damn  you,"  she cried  at
last,  crackling  with  anger.  "How  could-how  could  you  have  a  heart  to  do  this?  Every  word
you have said to me was  a lie; tell me, did you  even arrange that first ambush,  on our way
here? Tell me!"

Her  voice  was  breaking,  and  he  had  dropped  his  face  into  his  hands;  now  he  raised  it  and
cried to Laurence, "For God's sake, make her go; I will tell you anything you like, only send
her out," and dropped it back down again.

Laurence  did  not  in  the  least  want  to  be  his  interrogator,  but  he  could  not  prolong
Harcourt's suffering unnecessarily; he touched her  on the shoulder, and she fled at once. It
was deeply unpleasant to have to ask Choiseul questions, still more unpleasant to hear that
he had been a traitor since coming from Austria.

"I see what you think of me," Choiseul added, noting the look of disgust on Laurence's face.
"And you have a right; but for me, there was no choice."

Laurence  had  been  keeping  himself  strictly  to  questions,  but  this  paltry  attempt  at  excuse
inflamed him beyond his resistance. With contempt, he said, "You might have chosen to be
honest, and done your duty in the place you begged of us."

Choiseul  laughed,  with  no  mirth  in  the  sound.  "Indeed;  and  when  Bonaparte  is  in  London
this Christmastime, what then? You may look at me that way if you like; I have no doubt of
it,  and  I  assure  you  if  I  thought  any  deed  of  mine  could  alter  that  outcome,  I  would  have
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acted."

"Instead  you  have  become  a  traitor  twice  over  and  helped  him,  when  your  first  betrayal
could  only  be  excused  if  you had  been  sincere  in  your  principles,"  Laurence  said;  he  was
disturbed  by  Choiseul's  certainty,  though  he  would  never  conceive  of  giving  any  sign  as
much.

"Ah,  principles,"  Choiseul  said;  all  his  bravado  had  deserted  him,  and  he  seemed  now  only
weary  and  resigned.  "France  is  not  so  under-strength  as  are  you,  and  Bonaparte  has
executed  dragons  for  treason  before.  What  do  principles  matter  to  me  when  I  see  the
shadow  of  the  guillotine  hanging  upon  Praecursoris,  and  where  was  I  to  take  him?  To
Russia?  He  will outlive  me  by  two  centuries,  and  you  must  know  how  they  treat  dragons
there.  I  could  hardly  fly  him  to  America  without  a  transport.  My  only  hope  was  a  pardon,
and Bonaparte offered it only at a price."

"By which you mean Lily," Laurence said coldly.

Surprisingly, Choiseul shook his head. "No, his price was not Catherine's dragon, but yours."
At  the  blank  look  upon  Laurence's  face,  he  added,  "The  Chinese  egg  was  sent  as  a  gift  for
him from the Imperial Throne; he meant me to retrieve it. He did not know Temeraire was
already  hatched."  Choiseul  shrugged  and  spread  his  hands.  "I  thought  perhaps  if  I  killed
him-"

Laurence  struck  him  full  across  the  face,  with  such  force  as  to  knock  him  onto  the  stone
floor  of the  cell; his chair rocked and fell over with a clatter. Choiseul  coughed and blotted
blood  from  his  lip,  and the  guard  opened  the  door and  looked  inside.  "Everything  all  right,
sir?"  he  asked,  looking  straight  at  Laurence;  he  paid  not  the  slightest  mind  to  Choiseul's
injury.

"Yes, you may go," Laurence said flatly, wiping blood from his hand onto his handkerchief as
the door closed once again. He would ordinarily have been ashamed to strike a prisoner, but
in this moment he felt not the slightest qualm; his heart was still beating very quickly.

Choiseul slowly set his chair back upright and sat down once more. More quietly, he said, "I
am  sorry.  I  could  not  bring  myself  to  it,  in  the  end,  and  I  thought  instead-"  He  stopped,
seeing the color rise again in Laurence's face.

The  very  notion  that  for  all  these  months  such  malice  had  been  lurking  so  close  to
Temeraire,  averted  only  by  some  momentary  quirk  of  conscience  on  Choiseul's  part,  was
enough  to  make  his  blood  run  cold.  With  loathing,  he  said,  "And  so  instead  you  tried  to
seduce a girl barely past her schoolroom years and abduct her."

Choiseul  said  nothing;  indeed,  Laurence  could  hardly  imagine  what  defense  he  could  have
offered.  After  a  moment's pause,  Laurence  added,  "You  can  have  no  further  pretensions  to
honor: tell me what Bonaparte plans, and perhaps Lenton will have Praecursoris sent to the
breeding grounds  in  Newfoundland,  if indeed  your motive  is  for  his  life,  and  not  your  own
miserable hide."

Choiseul  paled,  but  said,  "I  know  very  little,  but  what  I  know  I  will  tell  you,  if  he  gives  his
word to do as much."
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"No," Laurence said. "You may speak and hope for a mercy you do not deserve if you choose;
I will not bargain with you."

Choiseul bowed his head, and when he spoke he was broken, so faint Laurence had to strain
to  hear  him.  "I  do  not  know what  he  intends,  precisely,  but  he  desired  me  to  urge  the
weakening  of  the  covert  here  most  particularly,  to  have  as  many  sent  south  to  the
Mediterranean as could be arranged."

Laurence felt sick with dismay; this goal at least had been brilliantly accomplished. "Does he
have  some  means  for  his  fleet  to  escape  Cadiz?"  he  demanded.  "Does  he  suppose  he  can
bring them here without facing Nelson?"

"Do you imagine Bonaparte confided in me?" Choiseul said, not lifting his head. "To him also
I was a traitor; I was told the tasks I was to accomplish, nothing more."

Laurence satisfied himself with a few more questions that Choiseul truly knew nothing else;
he left the room feeling both soiled and alarmed, and went at once to Lenton.

The  news  cast  a  heavy  pall  upon  the  whole  covert.  The  captains  had  not  broadcast  the
details,  but  even  the  lowliest  cadet  or  crewman  could  tell  that  a  shadow  lay  upon  them.
Choiseul had timed his attempt well: the dispatch-rider would not reach them again for six
days, and from there two weeks or more would be required to see any portion of the forces
from  the  Mediterranean  restored  to  the  Channel.  Militia  forces  and  several  Army
detachments  had  already  been  sent  for;  they  would  arrive  within  a  few  days,  to  begin
emplacing additional artillery along the coastline.

Laurence, with additional cause for anxiety, had spoken to Granby and Hollin to raise their
caution  on  Temeraire's  behalf.  If  Bonaparte  were  jealous  enough  of  having  so  personal  a
prize taken away, he might well send another agent, this one more willing to slay the dragon
he  could  no  longer  claim.  "You  must  promise  me  to  be  careful,"  he  told  Temeraire  as  well.
"Eat  nothing  unless  one  of  us  is  by,  and  has  approved  it;  and  if  anyone  whom  I  have  not
presented to you seeks to approach  you, do not under any circumstances permit it, even if
you must fly to another clearing."

"I will have a care, Laurence, I promise," said Temeraire. "I do not understand, though, why
the  French  Emperor  should  want  to  have  me  killed;  how  could  that  improve  his
circumstances? He would do better to ask them for another egg."

"My dear, the Chinese would hardly  condescend to give him a second where the first went
so  badly  astray  while  in  the  keeping  of  his  own  men,"  he  said.  "I  am  still  puzzled  at  their
having given him even one, indeed; he must have some prodigiously gifted diplomat at their
court. And I suppose his pride may be hurt, to think that a lowly British captain stands in the
place which he had meant to occupy himself."

Temeraire snorted with disdain. "I am sure I would never have liked him in the least, even if
I had hatched in France," he said. "He sounds a very unpleasant person."

"Oh, I cannot truly say. One hears a great deal of his pride, but there is no denying that he is
a  very  great man,  even  if  he  is  a  tyrant,"  Laurence  said  reluctantly;  he  would  have  been  a
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great deal happier to be able to convince himself that Bonaparte was a fool.

Lenton gave orders that patrols now were to be flown only by half the formation at a time,
the rest kept back at the covert for intensive combat training. Under cover of night, several
additional dragons were secretly flown down from the coverts at Edinburgh and Inverness,
including Victoriatus, the Parnassian whom they had rescued what now seemed a long time
ago.  His  captain,  Richard  Clark,  made  a  nice  point  of  coming  to  greet  Laurence  and
Temeraire.  "I  hope  you  can  forgive  me  for  not  paying  you  my  respects  and  my  gratitude
sooner," he said. "I confess at Laggan I had very little thought for anything but his recovery,
and we were shipped out again without warning, as I believe were you."

Laurence  shook  his  hand  heartily.  "Pray  do  not  give  it  a  thought,"  he  said.  "I  hope  he  is
wholly recovered?"

"Entirely,  thank  Heaven,  and  none  too  soon,  either,"  Clark said  grimly.  "I  understand  the
assault is expected at any moment."

And yet the days stretched out, painfully long with anticipation, and no attack came. Three
more Winchesters were brought down for additional scouting, but one and all they returned
from their dangerous forays to the French shores to report heavy patrols at all hours along
the  enemy's  coastline;  there  was  no  chance  of  penetrating  far  enough  inland  to  acquire
more information.

Levitas was among them, but the company was large enough that Laurence was not obliged
to see much of Rankin, for which he was grateful. He tried not to see the signs of that neglect
which  he  could  do  no  more  to  cure;  he  felt  he  could  not  visit  the  little  dragon  further
without provoking  a  quarrel  which  might  be  disastrous  to  the  temper  of the  whole  covert.
However, he compromised with his conscience so far as to say nothing when he saw Hollin
coming  to  Temeraire's  clearing  very  early  the  next  morning  with  a  bucket  full  of  dirty
cleaning rags and a guilty expression.

A great  coldness  settled  over  the  camp  as  night  came  on  Sunday,  the  first  week  of  waiting
gone: Volatilus had not arrived as expected. The weather had been clear, certainly no cause
for delay; it stayed so for two further days, and then a third; still he did not come. Laurence
tried not to look to the skies, and ignored his men doing the same, until that night he found
Emily  crying  quietly  outside  the  clearing,  having  crept  away  from  the  barracks  for  a  little
privacy.

She  was  very  ashamed  to  be  caught  at  it,  and  pretended  there  was  only  some  dust  in  her
eyes. Laurence took  her to  his rooms and had some cocoa brought; he told her, "I was two
years older than you are now when I first went to sea, and I blubbered at night for a week."
She looked so very skeptical at this account that a laugh was drawn from him. "No, I am not
inventing this for your benefit," he said. "When you are a captain, and find one of your own
cadets in similar circumstances, I imagine you will tell them what I have just told you."

"I am not really afraid," she said, weariness and cocoa having combined to make her drowsy
and  unguarded.  "I  know  Excidium  will  never  let  anything  happen to  Mother,  and  he  is  the
finest  dragon  in  all  Europe."  She  woke  up  at  having  made  this  slip,  and  added  anxiously,
"Temeraire is very nearly as good, of course."

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Laurence  nodded  gravely.  "Temeraire  is  a  great  deal  younger.  Perhaps  he  will  equal
Excidium some day, when he has more experience."

"Yes, just so," she said, very relieved, and he concealed his smile. Five minutes later she was
asleep; he laid her on the bed and went to sleep with Temeraire.

"Laurence, Laurence." He stirred and blinked upwards; Temeraire was nudging him awake
urgently, though the sky was still dark. Laurence was dimly aware of a low roaring noise, a
crowd of voices, and then the crack of gunfire. He started up at once: none of his crew were
in  the  clearing,  nor  his  officers.  "What  is  it?"  Temeraire  asked,  rising  to  his  feet  and
unfurling  his  wings  as  Laurence  climbed  down.  "Are  we  being attacked?  I  do  not  see  any
dragons aloft."

"Sir, sir!" Morgan came running into the clearing, nearly falling over himself in his haste and
eagerness. "Volly is here, sir, and there has been a great battle, and Napoleon is killed!"

"Oh,  does  that  mean  the  war  is  over  already?"  Temeraire  asked,  disappointed.  "I  have  not
even been in any real battles yet."

"Perhaps  the  news  may  have  grown  in  the  telling;  I  should  be  surprised  to  learn  that
Bonaparte  is  truly  dead,"  Laurence  said,  but  he  had  identified  the noise  as  cheering,  and
certainly  some  good  news  had  arrived,  if  not  of  quite  such  an  absurd  caliber.  "Morgan,  go
and rouse Mr. Hollin and the ground crew with my apologies for the hour, and ask them to
bring Temeraire his breakfast. My dear," he said, turning to Temeraire, "I will go and learn
what I can, and return with the news soonest."

"Yes,  please,  and  do  hurry,"  Temeraire  said  urgently,  rearing  up  on  his  back  legs  to  see
above the trees what might be in progress.

The headquarters was blazing with light; Volly was sitting on the parade grounds before the
building tearing ravenously into a sheep, a couple of groundsmen with the dispatch service
keeping  off  the  growing  crowd  of  men  streaming  from  the  barracks.  Several  of  the  young
Army  and  militia  officers  were  firing  off  their  guns  in  their  excitement,  and  Laurence  was
forced to nearly push his way through to reach the doors.

The doors to Lenton's office were closed, but Captain James was sitting in the officers' club,
eating  with  scarcely  less  ferocity  than  his  dragon,  and  already  all  the  other  captains  were
with him, having the news.

"Nelson  told  me  to  wait;  said  they'd  come  out  of  port  before  I  had  time  to  make  another
circuit,"  James  was  saying,  out  of  the  corner  of  his  mouth  and  somewhat  muffled  by  toast,
while Sutton attempted to sketch the scene on a piece of paper. "I hardly believed him, but
sure enough,  by Sunday morning out they came, and we met them off Cape Trafalgar early
on Monday."

He  swallowed  down  a  cup  of  coffee,  all  the  company  waiting  impatiently  for  him  to  finish,
and  pushed  his  plate  aside  for  a  moment  to  take  the  paper  from  Sutton.  "Here,  let  me,"  he
said,  drawing  little  circles  to  mark  the  positions  of  the  ships.  "Twenty-seven  and  twelve
dragons of ours, against thirty-three and ten."

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"Two  columns,  breaking  their  line  twice?"  Laurence  asked,  studying  the  diagram  with
satisfaction: just the sort of strategy to throw the French into disarray, from which their ill-trained crews could hardly have recovered.

"What? Oh, the ships, yes, with Excidium and Laetificat over the weather column, Mortiferus
over  the  lee,"  James  said.  "It  was  hot  work  at  the  head  of  the  divisions,  I  can  tell  you;  I
couldn't see so much as a spar from above for the clouds of smoke. At one time I thought for
sure  Victory  had  blown  up;  the  Spanish  had  one  of  those  blasted  little  Flecha-del-Fuegos
over  there,  dashing  about  quicker  than  our  guns  could  answer.  He  had  all  her  sails  on  fire
before Laetificat sent him running with his tail between his legs."

"What  were our  losses?"  Warren  asked,  his  quiet  voice  cutting  through  the  high  spirits  of
their excitement.

James  shook  his  head.  "It  was  a  proper  bloodbath  and  no  mistake,"  he  said  somberly.  "I
suppose  we  have  near  a  thousand  men  killed;  and  poor  Nelson  himself  came  in  a
hairsbreadth of it: the fire-breather set alight one of Victory's sails, and it came down upon
him where he stood on the quarterdeck. A couple of quick-thinking fellows doused him with
the  scuttlebutt,  but  they  say  his  medals  were  melted  to  his  skin,  and  he  will  wear  them  all
the time, now."

"A thousand men; God rest their souls," Warren said; conversation ceased, and when finally
resumed it was at first subdued.

But excitement, joy gradually overcame what perhaps were the more proper sentiments of
the moment. "I hope you will excuse me, gentlemen," Laurence said, nearly shouting as the
noise climbed to a fresh pitch; it precluded any chance of acquiring further intelligence for
the  moment.  "I  promised  Temeraire  to  return  at  once.  James,  I  suppose that  the  report  of
Bonaparte's demise is a false one?"

"Yes, more's the pity: unless he falls down in an apoplexy over the news," James called back,
which  roused  a  general  shout  of  laughter  that  continued  by  natural  progression  into  a
round of "Hearts of Oak," and the singing followed Laurence out the door and even through
the covert, as the song was taken up by the men outside.

By the time the sun rose, the covert was half empty. Scarcely a man had slept; the prevailing
mood could not help but be joyful almost to the point of hysteria, as nerves which had been
drawn to their limits abruptly relaxed. Lenton did not even attempt to call the men to order
and looked the other way as they poured out of the covert into the city, to carry the news to
those who had not yet heard and mingle their voices into the general rejoicing.

"Whatever scheme of invasion Bonaparte has been working towards, this must surely have
put  paid  to  it,"  Chenery  said  exultantly,  later  that  evening,  as  they  stood  together  on  the
balcony and  watched  the  returning  crowd  still  milling  more  slowly  about  in  the  parade
grounds below, all the men thoroughly drunk but too happy for quarreling, snatches of song
bursting out occasionally to float up towards them. "How I should like to see his face."

"I  think  we  have  been  giving  him  too  much  credit,"  Lenton  said;  his  cheeks  were  red  with
port  and  satisfaction,  as  well  they  might  be:  his  judgment  to  send  Excidium  had  proven
sound and contributed materially to the victory. "I think it clear he does not understand the
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navy so well as the army and the aerial corps. An uninformed man might well imagine that
thirty-three ships-of-the-line had no excuse to lose so thoroughly to twenty-seven."

"But how can it have taken his aerial divisions so long to reach them?" Harcourt said. "Only
ten dragons, and from what James said, more than half of those Spanish-that is not a tenth of
the strength he had in Austria. Perhaps he has not moved them from the Rhine after all?"

"I have heard the passes over the Pyrenees are damned difficult, though I have never tried
them  myself,"  Chenery  said.  "But  I  dare  say  he  never  sent  them,  thinking  Villeneuve  had
what  forces  he  needed,  and  they  have  all  been  lolling  about  in  covert  and  getting  fat.  No
doubt he has been thinking all this time that Villeneuve would sail straight through Nelson,
perhaps losing one or two ships in the process: expecting them daily, and wondering where
they were, and we here biting our nails meanwhile for no good reason."

"And now his army cannot come across," Harcourt said.

"Quoth  Lord  St.  Vincent,  'I  don't  say  they  cannot  come,  but  they  cannot  come  by  sea,'  "
Chenery said, grinning. "And if Bonaparte thinks to take Britain with forty dragons and their
crews,  he  is  very  welcome  to  try,  and  we  can  give him  a  taste  of  those  guns  the  militia
fellows have been so busily digging-in. It would be a pity to waste all their hard work."

"I  confess  I  would  not  mind  a  chance  to  give  that  rascal  yet  another  dose  of  medicine,"
Lenton said. "But he will not be so foolish; we must be content with having done our duty,
and  let  the  Austrians  have  the  glory  of  polishing  him  off.  His  hope  of invasion is done."  He
swallowed the rest of his port and said abruptly, "There is no more putting it off, though, I
am afraid; we cannot need anything more from Choiseul now."

In  the  silence  that  fell  among  them,  Harcourt's  drawn  breath  was  almost  a  sob,  but  she
made no protest, and her voice remained admirably steady as she merely asked, "Have you
decided what you will do with Praecursoris?"

"We will send him to Newfoundland if he will go; they need another breeding sire there to
fill out their complement, and it is not as though he were vicious," Lenton said. "The fault is
with Choiseul, not him." He shook his head. "It is a damned pity, of course, and all our beasts
will be creeping about miserable for days, but there is nothing else for it. Best to get it done
with quickly; tomorrow morning."

Choiseul  was  given  a  few  moments  with  Praecursoris,  the  big  dragon  nearly  draped  with
chains  and  watched  closely  by  Maximus  and  Temeraire  on  either  side.  Laurence  felt  the
shudders  go  through  Temeraire's  body  as  they  stood  their  unpleasant  guard,  forced  to
observe while Praecursoris swung his head from side to side in denial, and Choiseul made a
desperate  attempt  to  persuade  him  to  accept  the  shelter  Lenton  had  offered.  At  last  the
great head drooped in the barest hint of a nod, and Choiseul stepped close to lay his cheek
against the smooth nose.

Then  the  guards  stepped  forward;  Praecursoris  tried  to  lash  at  them,  but  the  entangling
chains  pulled  him  back,  and  as  they  led  Choiseul  away  the  dragon  screamed:  a  dreadful
sound.  Temeraire  hunched  himself  away  from  it,  his  wings  flaring,  and  moaned  softly;
Laurence  leaned  forward  and  stretched  himself  fully  against  his  neck,  stroking  over  and
over. "Do not look, my dear," he said, the words struggling to come through the thickening
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of his throat. "It will be over in a moment."

Praecursoris screamed once more, at the end; then he fell to the ground heavily, as if all vital
force  had  gone  from  his  body.  Lenton  signaled  that  they  might  go,  and  Laurence  touched
Temeraire's  side.  "Away,  away,"  he  said,  and  Temeraire  launched  himself  far  from  the
scaffold at once, striking out over the clean, empty sea.

"Laurence,  may  I  bring  Maximus  over  here,  and  Lily?"  Berkley  asked,  in  his  usual  abrupt
way, having come upon him without warning. "Your clearing is big enough, I think."

Laurence  raised  his  head  and  stared  at  him  dully.  Temeraire  was  still  huddled  in  misery,
head hidden beneath his wings, inconsolable: they had flown for hours, just the two of them
and the ocean below, until Laurence had at last begged him to turn back to land, out of fear
that  he  would  become  exhausted.  He  himself  felt  almost  bruised  and  ill,  as  if  feverish.  He
had attended at hangings before, a grim reality of naval life, and Choiseul had been far more
deserving of the fate than many a man Laurence had seen at the end of a rope; he could not
say why he felt such anguish now.

"If you like,"  he said, without enthusiasm, letting his head sink again. He did not look up at
the  rush  of  wings  and  shadows  as  Maximus  came  over  the  clearing,  his  enormous  bulk
blotting out the sun until he landed heavily beside Temeraire; Lily followed after him. They
huddled  at  once  around  each  other  and  Temeraire;  after  a  few  moments,  Temeraire
unwound himself enough to entwine more thoroughly with them both, and Lily spread her
great wings over them all.

Berkley  led  Harcourt  over  to  where  Laurence  sat  leaning  against  Temeraire's  side,  and
pushed  her  unresisting  to  sit  beside  him;  he  lowered  his  stout  frame  awkwardly  to  the
ground opposite them and handed about a dark bottle. Laurence took it and drank without
curiosity: strong, unwatered rum, and he had not eaten anything all day; it went to his head
very quickly, and he was glad for the muffling of all sensation.

Harcourt began to weep after a little while, and Laurence was horrified to find his own face
wet even as he reached to grip her shoulder. "He was a traitor, nothing but a lying traitor,"
Harcourt said, scrubbing tears away with the back of her hand. "I am not sorry in the least; I
am not sorry at all." She spoke with an effort, as though she were trying to convince herself.

Berkley  handed  her  the  bottle  again.  "It  is  not  him;  damned  rotter,  deserved  it,"  he  said.
"You are sorry on account of the dragon, and so are they. They don't think much of King and
country,  you  know;  Praecursoris  never  knew  a  damned  thing  about  it  but  where  Choiseul
told him to go."

"Tell  me,"  Laurence  said  abruptly,  "would  Bonaparte  have  really  executed  the  dragon  for
treason?"

"Likely  enough;  the  Continentals  do,  once  in  a  great  while.  More  to  scare  the  riders  off the
notion than because they blame the beasts," Berkley said.

Laurence was sorry to have asked; sorry to know that Choiseul had been telling the truth so
far  at  least.  "Surely  the  Corps  would  have  granted  him  shelter  in  the  colonies,  if  he  had
asked,"  he  said  angrily.  "There  is  still  no  possible  excuse.  He  desired  his  place  in  France
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restored; he was willing to risk Praecursoris to have it back, for we might just as easily have
chosen to put his dragon to death."

Berkley shook his head. "Knew we are too hard up for breeders to do as much," he said. "Not
to excuse the fellow; I dare say you are right. He thought Bonaparte was going to roll us up,
and he did not like to go and live in the colonies." Berkley shrugged. "Still damned hard on
the dragon, and he has not done anything wrong."

"That  is  not  true;  he  has,"  Temeraire  put  in  unexpectedly,  and  they  looked  up  at  him;
Maximus and Lily raised their heads as well to listen. "Choiseul could not have forced him to
fly away from France, nor to come here bent on hurting us. It does not seem to me that he is
any less guilty at all."

"I  suppose  it  is  likely  he  did  not  understand  what  was  being  asked  of  him,"  Harcourt  said
tentatively to this challenge.

Temeraire  said,  "Then  he  ought  to  have  refused  until  he  did  understand:  he  is  not  simple,
like Volly. He might have saved his rider's life, then, and his honor too. I would be ashamed
to let my rider be executed, and not me too, if I had done as much." He added venomously,
his tail lashing the air, "And I would not let anyone execute Laurence anyway; I should like
to see them try."

Maximus  and  Lily  both  rumbled  in  agreement.  "I  will  never  let  Berkley  commit  treason,
ever," Maximus said, "but if he did, I would step on anyone who tried to hang him."

"I  would  just  take  Catherine  and  go  away,  I  think,"  Lily  said.  "But  perhaps  Praecursoris
would  have  liked  to  do  the  same.  I  suppose  he  could  not  break  all  those  chains,  for  he  is
smaller than either of you, and he cannot spray. Also, there was only one of him, and he was
being guarded. I do not know what I would do, if I could not have escaped."

She  finished  softly,  and  they  all  began  to  slump  down  in  fresh  misery,  huddling  together
again, until Temeraire stopped and said with sudden decision, "I will tell you what we shall
do: if ever you need to rescue Catherine, or you Berkley, Maximus, I will help you,  and you
will do as much for me. Then we do not need to worry; I do not suppose anyone could stop
all three of us, at least not before we could escape."

All  three  of  them  appeared  immeasurably  cheered  by  this  excellent  scheme; Laurence  was
now  regretting  the  amount  of  rum  he  had  consumed,  for  he  could  not  properly  form  the
protest he felt had to be made, and urgently.

"Enough of that, you damned conspirators; you will have us hanged a great deal sooner than
we  will,"  Berkley  said,  thankfully,  on  his  behalf.  "Will  you  have  something  to  eat, now?  We
are not going to eat until you do, and if you are so busy to protect us, you may as well begin
by saving us from starvation."

"I do not think you are in any danger of starving," Maximus said. "The surgeon said only two
weeks ago that you are too fat."

"The  devil!"  Berkley  said  indignantly,  sitting  up,  and  Maximus  snorted  in  amusement  at
having provoked him; but shortly the three dragons did allow themselves to be persuaded
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to take some food, and Maximus and Lily returned to their own clearings to be fed.

"I  am  still  sorry  for  Praecursoris,  even  though  he  acted  badly,"  Temeraire  said  presently,
having finished his meal. "I do not see why they could not let Choiseul go off to the colonies
with him."

"There must be  a price for such things, or else men would do them more often,  and in any
case he deserved to be punished for it," Laurence said; his own head had cleared with some
food  and  strong  coffee.  "Choiseul  meant  to  make  Lily  suffer  as  much  as  Praecursoris  does;
only  imagine  if  the  French  had  me  prisoner,  and  demanded  that  you  fly  for  them  against
your friends and former comrades to save my life."

"Yes, I do see," Temeraire said, but with dissatisfaction in his tone. "Yet it still seems to me
they  might  have  punished  him  differently.  Would  it  not  have  been  better  to  keep  him  a
prisoner and force Praecursoris to fly for us?"

"I see you have a nice sense of the appropriate," Laurence said. "But I do not know that I can
see any lesser punishment for treason; it is too despicable a crime to be punished by mere
imprisonment."

"And  yet  Praecursoris  is not to  be  punished  the  same  way,  only  because  it  is not practical,
and he is needed for breeding?" Temeraire said.

Laurence  considered  the  matter  and  could  not  find  an  answer  for  this.  "I  suppose,  in  all
honesty, being aviators ourselves we cannot like the idea of putting a dragon to death, and
so we have found an excuse for letting him live," he said finally. "And as our laws are meant
for men, perhaps it is not wholly fair to enforce them upon him."

"Oh, that I can well agree with," Temeraire said. "Some of the laws which I have heard make
very  little  sense,  and  I  do  not  know  that  I  would  obey  them  if  it  were  not  to  oblige  you.  It
seems  to  me  that  if  you  wish  to  apply  laws  to  us,  it  were  only  reasonable  to  consult  us  on
them, and from what you have read to me about Parliament, I do not think any dragons are
invited to go there."

"Next  you  will  cry  out  against  taxation  without  representation, and  throw  a  basket  of  tea
into the harbor," Laurence said. "You  are indeed a  very Jacobin at heart, and I think I must
give up trying to cure you of it; I can but wash my hands and deny responsibility."


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