His Majesty's Dragon(Temeraire #1)

Chapter 4  



"NO,  THROW  YOUR chest  out  deeper,  like  so."  Laetificat  stood  up  on  her  haunches  and
demonstrated, the enormous barrel of her red-and-gold belly expanding as she breathed in.

Temeraire mimicked the motion; his expansion was less visually dramatic, as he lacked the
vivid markings of the female Regal Copper and was of course less than a fifth of her size as
yet,  but  this  time  he  managed  a  much  louder  roar.  "Oh,  there,"  he  said,  pleased,  dropping
back down to four legs. The cows were all running around their pen in manic terror.

"Much  better,"  Laetificat  said,  and  nudged  Temeraire's  back  approvingly.  "Practice  every
time you eat; it will help along your lung capacity."

"I  suppose  it  is  hardly  news  to  you  how  badly  we  need  him,  given  how  our  affairs  stand,"
Portland  said,  turning to  Laurence;  the  two  of  them  were  standing  by the  side  of  the  field,
out of range of the mess the dragons were about to make. "Most of Bonaparte's dragons are
stationed  along  the  Rhine,  and  of  course  he  has  been  busy  in  Italy;  that  and  our  naval
blockades  are  all  that  is  keeping  him  from  invasion.  But  if  he  gets  matters  arranged  to  his
satisfaction  on  the  Continent  and  frees  up  a  few  aerial  divisions,  we  can  say  hail  and
farewell to the blockade at Toulon; we simply do not have enough dragons of our own here
in  the Med to  protect  Nelson's  fleet.  He  will  have  to  withdraw,  and then  Villeneuve  will  go
straight for the Channel."

Laurence  nodded  grimly;  he  had  been  reading  the  news  of  Bonaparte's  movements  with
great alarm since the Reliant had put into port. "I know Nelson has been trying to lure the
French  fleet  out  to  battle,  but  Villeneuve  is  not  a  fool,  even  if  he  is  no  seaman.  An  aerial
bombardment is the only hope of getting him out of his safe harbor."

"Which means there is no hope, not with the forces we can bring to it at present," Portland
said.  "The  Home  Division  has  a  couple  of  Longwings,  and  they  might  be  able  to  do  it;  but
they cannot be spared. Bonaparte would jump on the Channel Fleet at once."

"Ordinary bombing would not do?"

"Not  precise enough  at  long  range,  and  they  have  poisoned  shrapnel  guns  at  Toulon.  No
aviator worth a shilling would take his beast close to the fortifications." Portland shook his
head. "No, but there is a  young Longwing in training, and if Temeraire will be kind enough
to hurry up and grow, then perhaps together they might shortly be able to take the place of
Excidium  or  Mortiferus  at  the  Channel,  and  even  one  of  those  two  might  be  sufficient  at
Toulon."

"I  am  sure  he  will  do  everything  in  his  power to  oblige  you," Laurence  said,  glancing  over;
the  dragon  in  question  was  on  his  second  cow.  "And  I  may  say  that  I  will  do  the  same.  I
know  I  am  not  the  man  you  wished  in  this  place,  nor  can  I  argue  with  the  reasoning  that
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would  prefer  an  experienced  aviator  in  so  critical a  role.  But  I  hope  that  naval  experience
will not prove wholly useless in this arena."

Portland sighed and looked down at the ground. "Oh, hell," he said. It was an odd response
to  make,  but  Portland  looked  anxious,  not  angry,  and  after  a  moment  he  added,  "There  is
just  no  getting  around  it;  you  are  not  an  aviator.  If  it  were  simply  a  question  of  skill  or
knowledge, that would mean difficulties enough, but-" He stopped.

Laurence did not think, from the tone, that Portland meant to question his courage. The man
had been more amiable this morning; so far, it seemed to Laurence that aviators simply took
clannishness  to  an  extreme,  and  once  having  admitted  a  fellow  into  their  circle,  their  cold
manners fell away. So he took no offense, and said, "Sir, I can hardly imagine where else you
believe the difficulty might lie."

"No,  you  cannot,"  Portland  said,  uncommunicatively.  "Well,  and  I  am  not  going  to  borrow
trouble; they may decide to send you somewhere else entirely, not to Loch Laggan. But I am
running  ahead  of  myself:  the  real  point  is  that  you  and  Temeraire  must  get  to  England  for
your training soonest; once you are there, Aerial Command can best decide how to deal with
you."

"But can he reach England from here, with no place to stop along the way?" Laurence asked,
diverted  by  concern  for  Temeraire.  "It  must  be  more  than  a  thousand  miles;  he  has  never
flown further than from one end of the island to the other."

"Closer  to  two  thousand,  and  no;  we  would  never  risk  him  so,"  Portland  said.  "There  is  a
transport  coming  over  from  Nova  Scotia;  a  couple  of  dragons  joined  our  division  from  it
three days ago, so we have its position pretty well fixed, and I think it is less than a hundred
miles away. We will escort you to it; if Temeraire gets tired, Laetificat can support him for
long enough to give him a breather."

Laurence  was  relieved  to  hear  the  proposed  plan,  but  the  conversation  made  him  aware
how  very  unpleasant  his  circumstances  would  be  until  his  ignorance  was  mended.  If
Portland had waved off his fears, Laurence would have had no way of judging the matter for
himself. Even a hundred miles was a good distance; it would take them three hours or more
in the air. But that at least he felt confident they could manage; they had flown the length of
the island three times just the other day, while visiting Sir Edward, and Temeraire had not
seemed tired in the least.

"When do you propose leaving?" he asked.

"The sooner, the better; the transport is headed away from us, after all," Portland said. "Can
you be ready in half an hour?"

Laurence  stared.  "I  suppose  I  can,  if  I  have  most  of  my  things  sent  back  to  the  Reliant  for
transport," he said dubiously.

"Why  would  you?"  Portland  said.  "Laet  can  carry  anything  you  have;  we  shan't  weigh
Temeraire down."

"No, I only mean that my things are not packed," Laurence said. "I am used to waiting for the
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tide; I see I will have to be a little more beforehand with the world from now on."

Portland still looked puzzled, and when he came into Laurence's room twenty minutes later
he stared openly at the sea-chest that Laurence had turned to this new purpose. There had
hardly  been  time  to  fill  half  of  it;  Laurence  paused  in  the  act  of  putting  in  a  couple  of
blankets  to  take  up  the  empty  space  at  the  top.  "Is  something  wrong?"  he  asked,  looking
down; the chest was not so large that he thought it would give Laetificat any difficulty.

"No  wonder  you  needed  the  time;  do  you  always  pack  so  carefully?"  Portland  said.  "Could
you  not  just  throw  the  rest  of  your  things  into  a  few  bags?  We  can  strap  them  on  easily
enough."

Laurence  swallowed  his  first  response;  he  no  longer  needed  to  wonder  why  the  aviators
looked,  to  a  man,  rumpled  in  their  dress;  he  had  imagined  it  due  to  some  advanced
technique of flying. "No, thank you; Fernao will take my other things to the Reliant, and I can
manage perfectly well with what I have here," he said, putting the blankets in; he strapped
them down and made all fast, then locked the chest. "There; I am at your service now."

Portland  called  in  a  couple of  his  midwingmen to  carry  the  chest;  Laurence  followed  them
outside, and was witness, for the first time, to the operation of a full aerial crew. Temeraire
and  he  both  watched  with  interest  from  the  side  as  Laetificat  stood  patiently  under  the
swarming ensigns, who ran up and down her sides as easily as they hung below her belly or
climbed upon her back. The boys were raising up two canvas enclosures, one above and one
below;  these  were  like  small,  lopsided  tents,  framed  with  many  thin  and  flexible  strips of
metal. The front panels which formed the bulk of the tent were long and sloped, evidently to
present  as  little  resistance  to  the  wind  as  possible,  and  the  sides  and  back  were  made  of
netting.

The ensigns all looked to be below the age of twelve; the midwingmen ranged more widely,
just as aboard a ship, and now four older ones came staggering with the weight of a heavy
leather-wrapped  chain  they  dragged  in  front  of  Laetificat.  The  dragon  lifted  it  herself  and
laid it over her withers, just in front of the tent, and the ensigns hurried to secure it to the
rest of the harness with many straps and smaller chains.

Using this strap, they then slung a sort of hammock made of chain links beneath Laetificat's
belly.  Laurence  saw  his  own  chest  tossed  inside  along  with  a  collection  of  other  bags  and
parcels; he winced at the haphazard way in which the baggage was stowed, and was doubly
grateful that he had been careful in his packing: he was confident they might turn his chest
completely about a dozen times without casting his things into disarray.

A large pad of leather and wool, perhaps the thickness of a man's arm, was laid on top of all,
then the hammock's edges were drawn up and hooked to the harness as widely as possible,
spreading  the  weight  of  the  contents  and  pressing  them  close  to  the  dragon's  belly.
Laurence felt a sense of dissatisfaction with the proceedings; he privately thought he would
have to find a better arrangement for Temeraire, when the time came.

However,  the  process  had  one  significant advantage  over  naval  preparations:  from
beginning to end it took fifteen minutes, and then they were looking at a dragon in full light-duty  rig.  Laetificat  reared  up  on  her  legs,  shook  out  her  wings,  and  beat  them  half  a  dozen
times; the wind was strong enough to nearly stagger Laurence, but the assembled baggage
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did not shift noticeably.

"All  lies  well,"  Laetificat  said,  dropping  back  down  to  all  fours;  the  ground  shook  with  the
impact.

"Lookouts  aboard,"  Portland  said;  four  ensigns  climbed  on  and  took  up  positions  at  the
shoulders and hips, above and below, hooking themselves on to the harness. "Topmen and
bellmen." Now two groups of eight midwingmen climbed up, one going into the tent above,
the  other  below:  Laurence  was  startled  to  perceive  how  large  the  enclosures  really  were;
they seemed small only by virtue of comparison with Laetificat's immense size.

The crews were followed in turn by the twelve riflemen, who had been checking and arming
their guns while the others rigged out the gear. Laurence noticed Lieutenant Dayes leading
them,  and  frowned;  he  had  forgotten  about  the  fellow  in  the  rush.  Dayes  had  offered  no
apology; now most likely they would not see one another for a long time. Perhaps it was for
the  best;  Laurence  was  not  sure  that  he  could have  accepted  the  apology,  after  hearing
Temeraire's story, and as it was impossible to call  the fellow out, the situation would have
been uncomfortable to say the least.

The  riflemen  having  boarded,  Portland  walked  a  complete  circuit  around  and  beneath  the
dragon.  "Very  good; ground  crew  aboard."  The  handful  of  men  remaining  climbed  into  the
belly-rigging  and  strapped  themselves  in;  only  then  did  Portland  himself  ascend,  Laetificat
lifting  him  up  directly.  He  repeated  his  inspection  on  the  top,  maneuvering  around  on  the
harness with as much ease as any of the little ensigns, and finally came to his position at the
base of the dragon's neck. "I believe we are ready; Captain Laurence?"

Laurence belatedly realized he was still standing on the ground; he had been too interested
in  the  process  to  mount  up  himself.  He  turned,  but  before  he  could  clamber  onto  the
harness, Temeraire reached out carefully and put him aboard, mimicking Laetificat's action.
Laurence grinned privately and patted the dragon's neck. "Thank you, Temeraire," he said,
strapping  himself  in;  Portland  had  pronounced  his  improvised  harness  adequate  for  the
journey, although with a disapproving air. "Sir, we are ready," he called to Portland.

"Proceed,  then;  smallest  goes  aloft  first,"  Portland said.  "We  will  take  the  lead  once  in  the
air."

Laurence  nodded;  Temeraire  gathered  himself  and  leapt,  and  the  world  fell  away  beneath
them.

Aerial  Command  was  situated  in  the  countryside  just  south-east  of  Chatham,  close  enough
to  London  to permit daily consultation with  the  Admiralty  and  the  War  Office;  it  had  been
an  easy  hour's  flight  from  Dover,  with  the  rolling  green  fields  he  knew  so  well  spread  out
below  like  a  checkerboard,  and  London  a  suggestion  of  towers  in  the  distance,  purple  and
indistinct.

Although  the  dispatches  had  long  preceded  him  to  England  and  he  must  have  been
expected,  Laurence  was  not  called  to  the  office  until  the  next  morning.  Even  then  he  was
kept waiting outside Admiral Powys's office for nearly two hours. At last the door opened;
stepping  inside,  he  could  not  help  glancing  curiously  from  Admiral  Powys  to  Admiral
Bowden,  who  was  sitting  to  the  right  of  the  desk.  The  precise  words  had  not  been
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intelligible  out  in  the  hall,  but  he  could  not  have  avoided  overhearing  the  loud  voices,  and
Bowden was still red-faced and frowning.

"Yes,  Captain  Laurence,  do  come  in,"  Powys  said,  waving  him  in  with  a  fat-fingered  hand.
"How splendid Temeraire looks; I saw him eating this morning: already close on nine tons, I
should say. You are to be most highly commended. And you fed him solely on fish the first
two  weeks,  and  also  while  on  the  transport?  Remarkable,  remarkable  indeed;  we  must
consider amending the general diet."

"Yes, yes; this is beside the point," Bowden said impatiently.

Powys frowned at Bowden, then continued, perhaps a little too heartily, "In any case, he is
certainly ready to begin training, and of course we must do our best to bring you up to the
mark  as  well.  Of  course  we  have  confirmed  you  in  your  rank;  as  a  handler,  you  would  be
made  captain  anyway.  But  you  will  have  a  great  deal  to  do;  ten  years'  training  is  not  to  be
made up in a day."

Laurence bowed. "Sir, Temeraire and I are  both at  your service," he said, but with reserve;
he  perceived  in  both  men  the  same  odd  constraint  about  his  training  that  Portland  had
displayed. Many possible explanations for that constraint had occurred to Laurence during
the  two  weeks  aboard  the  transport,  most  of  them  unpleasant.  A  boy  of  seven,  taken  from
his  home  before  his  character  had  been  truly  formed,  might  easily  be  forced  to  accept
treatment  which  a  grown  man  would  never  endure,  and  yet  of  course  the  aviators
themselves would consider it necessary, having gone through it themselves; Laurence could
think of no other cause that would make them all so evasive about the subject.

His heart sank further as Powys said, "Now then; we must send you to Loch Laggan," for it
was the place Portland had mentioned, and been so anxious about. "There is no denying that
it  is  the  best  place  for  you," Powys  went  on.  "We  cannot  waste  a  moment  in  making  you
both  ready  for  duty,  and  I  would  not  be  surprised  if  Temeraire  were  up  to  heavy-combat
weight by the end of the summer."

"Sir, I beg your pardon, but I have never heard of the place, and I gather it is in Scotland?"
Laurence asked; he hoped to draw Powys out.

"Yes, in Inverness-shire; it is one of our largest coverts, and certainly the best for intensive
training," Powys said. "Lieutenant Greene outside will show you the way, and mark a covert
along the route for you to spend the night; I am sure you will have no difficulty in reaching
the place."

It was clearly a dismissal, and Laurence knew he could not make any further inquiry. In any
event, he had a more pressing request. "I will speak to him, sir," he said. "But if you have no
objection, I would be glad to stop the night at my family home in Nottinghamshire; there is
room enough for Temeraire, and deer for him to eat." His parents would be in town at this
time of year, but the Galmans often stayed in the country, and there might be some chance
of seeing Edith, if only briefly.

"Oh,  certainly,  by  all  means,"  Powys  said.  "I  am  sorry  I  cannot  give  you  a  longer  furlough;
you have certainly deserved it, but I do not think we can spare the time: a week might make
all the difference in the world."
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"Thank you, sir, I perfectly understand," Laurence said, and so bowed and departed.

Armed by Lieutenant Greene with an excellent map showing the route, Laurence began his
preparations  at  once.  He  had  taken  some  time  in  Dover  to  acquire  a  collection  of  light
bandboxes;  he  thought  that  their  cylindrical  shape  might  better  lie  against  Temeraire's
body, and now he transferred his belongings into them. He knew he made an unusual sight,
carrying  a  dozen  boxes  more  suitable  for  ladies'  hats  out  to  Temeraire,  but  when  he  had
strapped them down against Temeraire's belly and seen how little they added to his profile,
he could not help feeling somewhat smug.

"They are quite comfortable; I do not notice them at all," Temeraire assured him, rearing up
on  his  back  legs  and  flapping  to  make  certain  they  were  well  seated,  just  as  Laetificat  had
done  back  in  Madeira.  "Can  we  not  get  one  of  those  tents?  It  would  be  much  more
comfortable for you to ride out of the wind."

"I  have no  idea  how  to  put  it  up,  though,  my  dear,"  Laurence  said,  smiling  at  the  concern.
"But I will do well enough; with this leather coat they have given me, I will be quite warm."

"It  must  wait  until  you  have  your  proper  harness,  in  any  case;  the  tents  require  locking
carabiners.  Nearly  ready  to  go,  then,  Laurence?"  Bowden  had  come  upon  them  and
interjected  himself  into  the  conversation  without  any  notice.  He  joined  Laurence  standing
before Temeraire's chest and stooped a little to examine the bandboxes. "Hm, I see you are
bent on turning all our customs upside down to suit yourself."

"No,  sir,  I  hope  not,"  Laurence  said,  keeping  his  temper;  it  could  not  serve  to  alienate  the
man,  for  he  was  one  of  the  senior  commanders  of  the  Corps,  and  might  well  have  a  say in
what  postings  Temeraire  received.  "But  my  sea-chest  was  awkward  for  him  to  bear,  and
these seemed the best replacement I could manage on short notice."

"They may do," Bowden said, straightening up. "I hope you have as easy a time putting aside
the rest of your naval thinking as your sea-chest, Laurence; you must be an aviator now."

"I am an aviator, sir, and willingly so," Laurence said. "But I cannot pretend that I intend to
put  aside  the  habits  and  mode  of thinking  formed over  a  lifetime;  whether  I intended  it  or
no, I doubt it would even be possible."

Bowden fortunately took this without anger, but he shook his head. "No, it would not. And
so  I told-well.  I  have  come  to  make  something  clear:  you  will  oblige  me  by  refraining from
discussing, with those not in the Corps, any aspects of your training. His Majesty sees fit to
give us our heads to achieve the best performance of our duty; we do not care to entertain
the opinions of outsiders. Do I make myself clear?"

"Perfectly,"  Laurence  said  grimly; the  peculiar  command  bore  out  all  his  worst  suspicions.
But  if  none  of  them  would  come  out  and  make  themselves  plain,  he  could  hardly  make  an
objection; it was infuriating. "Sir," he said, making up his mind to try again to draw out the
truth,  "if  you  would  be  so  good  as  to  tell  me  what  makes  the  covert  in  Scotland  more
suitable than this for my training, I would be grateful to know what to expect."

"You  have  been  ordered  to  go  there;  that  makes  it  the  only  suitable  place,"  Bowden  said
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sharply. Yet then he seemed to relent, for he added, in a less harsh tone, "Laggan's training
master is especially adept at bringing inexperienced handlers along quickly."

"Inexperienced?" Laurence said, blankly. "I thought an aviator had to come into the service
at the age of seven; surely you do not mean that there are boys already handling dragons at
that age."

"No,  of  course  not,"  Bowden  said.  "But  you  are  not  the  first  handler  to  come  from  outside
the  ranks,  or  without  as  much  training  as  we  might  care  for.  Occasionally a  hatchling  will
have a fit of distemper, and we must take anyone we can get it to accept." He gave a sudden
snorting  laugh.  "Dragons  are  strange  creatures,  and  there  is  no  understanding them;  some
of them even take a liking to sea-officers." He slapped Temeraire's side, and left as abruptly
as  he  had  come;  without  a  word  of  parting,  but  in  apparently  better  humor,  and  leaving
Laurence hardly less perplexed than before.

The  flight  to  Nottinghamshire  took  several  hours,  and  afforded  him  more  leisure  than  he
liked to consider what awaited him in Scotland. He did not like to imagine what Bowden and
Powys and Portland all expected him to disapprove so heartily, and he still less liked to try
to imagine what he should do if he found the situation unbearable.

He  had  only  once  had  a  truly  unhappy  experience  in  his  naval  service:  as  a  freshly  made
lieutenant of seventeen he had been assigned to the Shorewise, under Captain Barstowe, an
older  man  and  a  relic  of  an  older  Navy,  where  officers  had  not  been  required  to  be
gentlemen as well. Barstowe was the illegitimate son of a merchant of only moderate wealth
and a woman of only moderate  character; he  had gone to sea as  a boy in his father's ships
and been pressed into the Navy as a foremast hand. He had displayed great courage in battle
and  a  keen  head  for  mathematics,  which  had  won  him  promotion  first  to  master's-mate,
then to lieutenant, and even by a stroke of luck to post-rank, but he had never lost any of the
coarseness of his background.

What  was  worse,  Barstowe  had  been  conscious  of  his  own  lack  of  social  graces,  and
resentful  of  those  who,  in  his  mind,  made  him  feel  that  lack.  It  was  not  an  unmerited
resentment:  there  were  many  officers  who  looked  askance  and  murmured  at  him;  but  he
had  seen  in  Laurence's  easy and  pleasing  manners  a  deliberate  insult,  and  he  had  been
merciless  in  punishing  Laurence  for  them.  Barstowe's  death  of  pneumonia  three  months
into the voyage had possibly saved Laurence's own life, and at the least had freed him from
an endless daze of standing double or triple watches, a diet of ship's biscuit and water, and
the perils of leading a gun-crew composed of the worst and most unhandy men aboard.

Laurence  still  had  an  instinctive  horror  when  he  thought  of  the  experience;  he  was  not  in
the least prepared to be ruled over by  another such man, and in Bowden's ominous words
about  the  Corps  taking  anyone  a  hatchling  would  accept,  he  read  a  hint  that  his  trainer  or
perhaps his fellow trainees would be of such a stamp. And while Laurence was not a boy of
seventeen anymore, nor in so powerless a position, he now had Temeraire to consider, and
their shared duty.

His hands tightened on the reins involuntarily, and Temeraire looked around. "Are you well,
Laurence?" he asked. "You have been so quiet."

"Forgive me, I have only been woolgathering," Laurence said, patting Temeraire's neck. "It is
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nothing. Are you tiring at all? Should you like to stop and rest awhile?"

"No, I am not tired, but you are not telling the truth: I can hear you are unhappy," Temeraire
said anxiously. "Is it not good that we are going to begin training? Or are you missing your
ship?"

"I  find  I  am  become  transparent  before  you,"  Laurence  said  ruefully.  "I  am  not  missing  my
ship at all, no, but I will admit I am a little concerned about our training. Powys and Bowden
were very odd about the whole thing, and I am not sure what sort of reception we will meet
in Scotland, or how we shall like it."

"If we do not care for it, surely we can just go away again?" Temeraire said.

"It is not so easy; we are not at liberty, you know," Laurence said. "I am a King's officer, and
you are a King's dragon; we cannot do as we please."

"I have never met the King; I am not his property, like a sheep," Temeraire said. "If I belong
to  anyone,  it  is you,  and  you  to  me.  I  am  not  going  to  stay  in  Scotland  if  you  are  unhappy
there."

"Oh  dear,"  Laurence  said;  this  was  not  the  first  time  Temeraire  had  showed  a  distressing
tendency to independent thought, and it seemed to only be increasing as he grew older and
started  to  spend  more  of  his time  awake.  Laurence  was not  himself  particularly  interested
in political philosophy, and he found it sadly puzzling to have to work out explanations for
what to him seemed natural and obvious. "It is not ownership, exactly; but we owe him our
loyalty.  Besides,"  he  added,  "we  would  have  a  hard  time  of  it  keeping  you  fed,  were  the
Crown not paying for your board."

"Cows are very nice, but I do not mind eating fish," Temeraire said. "Perhaps we could get a
large ship, like the transport, and go back to sea."

Laurence  laughed  at  the  image.  "Shall  I  turn  pirate  king  and go  raiding  in the  West  Indies,
and  fill  a  covert  with  gold  from  Spanish  merchant  ships  for  you?"  He  stroked  Temeraire's
neck.

"That sounds exciting," Temeraire said, his imagination clearly caught. "Can we not?"

"No, we are born too late; there are no real pirates anymore," Laurence said. "The Spanish
burned  the  last  pirate  band  out  of  Tortuga  last  century;  now  there  are  only  a  few
independent  ships  or  dragon-crews,  at  most,  and  those  always  in  danger  of  being  brought
down.  And  you  would  not  truly  like  it,  fighting  only  for  greed;  it  is  not  the  same  as  doing
one's duty for King and country, knowing that you are protecting England."

"Does it need protecting?" Temeraire asked, looking down. "It seems all quiet, as far as I can
see."

"Yes, because it is our business and the Navy's to keep it so," Laurence said. "If we did not do
our work, the French could come across the Channel; they are there, not very far to the east,
and Bonaparte has an army of a hundred thousand men waiting to come across the moment
we let him. That is why we must do our duty; it is like the sailors on the Reliant, who cannot
52
always be doing just as they like, or the ship will not sail."

In response to this, Temeraire hummed in thought, deep in his belly; Laurence could feel the
sound reverberating through his own body. Temeraire's pace slowed a little; he glided for a
while and then beat back up into the air in a spiral before leveling out again, very much like
a fellow pacing back and forth. He looked around again. "Laurence, I have been thinking: if
we must go to Loch Laggan, then there is no decision to be made at present; and because we
do  not  know  what  may  be  wrong  there,  we  cannot  think  of  something  to  do  now.  So  you
should not worry until we have arrived and seen how matters stand."

"My dear, this is excellent advice, and I will try to follow it," Laurence said, adding, "but I am
not certain that I can; it is difficult not to think of."

"You  could  tell  me  again  about  the  Armada,  and  how  Sir  Francis  Drake  and  Conflagratia
destroyed the Spanish fleet," Temeraire suggested.

"Again?" Laurence said. "Very well; although I will begin to doubt your memory at this rate."

"I remember it perfectly," Temeraire said with dignity. "But I like to hear you tell it."

What  with  Temeraire  making  him  repeat  favorite  sections  and  asking  questions  about  the
dragons and ships which Laurence thought even a scholar could not have answered, the rest
of  the  flight  passed  without  giving  him  leisure  to  worry  any  further.  Evening  was  far
advanced by the time they finally closed in upon his family's home at Wollaton Hall, and in
the twilight all the many windows glowed.

Temeraire  circled  over  the  house  a  few times  out  of  curiosity,  his  pupils  open  very  wide;
Laurence,  peering  down  himself,  made  a  count  of  lit  windows  and  realized  that  the  house
could not be empty; he had assumed it would be, the London Season being still in full train,
but it was now too late to seek another berth for Temeraire. "Temeraire, there ought to be
an empty paddock behind the barns, to the south-east there; can you see it?"

"Yes, there is a fence around it," Temeraire said, looking. "Shall I land there?"

"Yes, thank you; I am afraid I must ask you to stay there, for the horses would certainly have
fits if you came anywhere near the stables."

When  Temeraire  had  landed,  Laurence  climbed  down  and  stroked  his  warm  nose.  "I  will
arrange for you to have something to eat as soon as I have spoken with my parents, if they
are indeed home, but that may take some time," he said apologetically.

"You  need  not  bring  me  food  tonight;  I  ate  well  before  we  left,  and  I  am  sleepy.  I  will  eat
some  of  those  deer  over  there  in  the  morning,"  Temeraire  said,  settling  himself  down  and
curling his tail around his legs. "You should stay inside; it is colder here than Madeira was,
and I do not want you to fall sick."

"There  is  something  very  curious  about  a  six-week-old  creature  playing  nursemaid,"
Laurence  said,  amused;  yet  even  as  he  spoke,  he  could  hardly  believe  Temeraire  was  so
young.  Temeraire  had  seemed  in  most  respects  mature  straight  out  of  the  shell,  and  ever
since hatching he had been drinking up knowledge of the world with such enthusiasm that
53
the  gaps  in  his  understanding  were  vanishing  with  astonishing  speed.  Laurence  no  longer
thought of him as a creature for whom he was responsible, but rather as an intimate friend,
already the dearest in his life, and one to be depended upon without question. The training
lost a little of its dread for Laurence as he looked up at the already-drowsing Temeraire, and
Barstowe  he  put  aside  in  his  memory  as  a  bugbear.  Surely  there  could  be  nothing  ahead
which they could not face together.

But  his  family  he  would  have  to  face  alone.  Coming  to  the  house  from  the  stable  side,  he
could  see  that  his  first  impression  from  the  air  had  been  correct:  the  drawing  room  was
brightly  lit,  and  many  of  the  bedrooms  had  candlelight  in  them.  It  was  certainly  a  house
party, despite the time of year.

He sent a footman to let his father know he was home, and went up to his room by the back
stairs to change. He would have liked a bath, but he thought he had to go down at once to be
civil; anything else might smack of avoidance. He settled for washing his face and hands in
the  basin;  he  had  brought  his  evening  rig,  fortunately.  He  looked  strange  to  himself  in  the
mirror,  wearing  the  new  bottle-green  coat  of  the  Corps  with  the  gold  bars  upon  the
shoulders in place of epaulettes; it had been bought in Dover, having been partly made for
another man and adjusted hastily while Laurence waited, but it fit well enough.

More  than  a  dozen  people  were  assembled  in  the  drawing  room,  besides  his  parents;  the
idle conversation died down when he entered, then resumed in hushed voices and followed
him  through  the  room.  His  mother  came  to  meet  him;  her  face  was  composed  but  a  little
fixed in its expression, and he could feel her tension as he bent to kiss her cheek. "I am sorry
to descend on you unannounced in this fashion," he said. "I did not expect to find anyone at
home; I am only here for the night, and bound for Scotland in the morning."

"Oh, I am sorry to hear it, my dear, but we are very happy to have you even briefly," she said.
"Have you met Miss Montagu?"

The company were mostly long-standing friends of his parents whom he did not know very
well, but as he had suspected might be the case, their neighbors were among the party, and
Edith  Galman  was  there  with  her  parents.  He  was  not  sure  whether  to  be  pleased  or
unhappy;  he  felt  he  ought  to  be  glad  to  see  her,  and  for  the  opportunity  which  would
otherwise not have come for so long; yet there was a sense of a whispering undercurrent in
the glances thrown his way by the whole  company, deeply discomfiting, and he felt wholly
unprepared to face her in so public a setting.

Her  expression  as  he  bowed  over  her  hand  gave  him  no  hint  of  her  feelings:  she  was  of  a
disposition  not  easily  ruffled,  and  if  she  had  been  startled  by  the  news  of  his  coming,  she
had already recovered her poise. "I am glad to see you, Will," she said, in her quiet way, and
though he could not discover any particular warmth in her voice, he thought at least she did
not seem angry or upset.

Unfortunately, he  had no immediate opportunity to exchange a private word with her; she
had already been engaged in conversation with Bertram Woolvey,  and with her customary
good  manners,  she  turned  back  once  they  had  completed  their  greetings.  Woolvey  made
him a polite nod, but did not make any move to yield his place. Though their parents moved
in the same circles, Woolvey had not been required to pursue any sort of occupation, being
his father's heir, and lacking any interest in politics, he spent his time hunting in the country
54
or playing for high stakes in town. Laurence found his conversation monotonous, and they
had never become friends.

In  any  event,  he  could  not  avoid  paying  his  respects  to  the  rest  of  the  company;  it  was
difficult  to  meet  open  stares  with  equanimity,  and  the  only  thing  less welcome  than  the
censure in many voices was the note of pity in others. By far the worst moment was coming
to  the  table  where  his  father  was  playing  whist;  Lord  Allendale  looked  at  Laurence's  coat
with heavy disapproval and said nothing to his son at all.

The  uncomfortable  silence  which  fell  upon  their  corner  of  the  room  was  very  awkward;
Laurence was saved by his mother, who asked him to make up a fourth in another table, and
he  gratefully  sat  down  and  immersed  himself  in  the  intricacies  of  the  game.  His table
companions were older gentlemen, Lord Galman and two others, friends and political allies
of his father; they were dedicated players and did not trouble him with much conversation
beyond what was polite.

He could not help glancing towards Edith from time to time, though he  could not catch the
sound of her voice. Woolvey continued to monopolize her company, and Laurence could not
help but dislike seeing him lean so close and speak to her so intimately. Lord Galman had to
gently  call  his  attention  back  to  the  cards  after  his  distraction  delayed  them;  Laurence
apologized to the table in some embarrassment and bent his head over his hand again.

"You are off to Loch Laggan, I suppose?" Admiral McKinnon said, giving him a few moments
in which to recapture the thread of play. "I lived not far from there, as a boy, and a friend of
mine lived near Laggan village; we used to see the flights overhead."

"Yes, sir; we are to train there," Laurence said, making his discard; Viscount Hale, to his left,
continued the play, and Lord Galman took the trick.

"They are a queer lot over there; half the village goes into service, but the locals go up, the
aviators  don't  come  down,  except  now  and  again  to  the  pub  to  see  one  of  the  girls.  Easier
than  at  sea  for that,  at  least,  ha,  ha!"  Having  made this  coarse  remark,  McKinnon  belatedly
recalled his company; he glanced over his shoulder in some embarrassment to see if any of
the ladies had overheard, and dropped the subject.

Woolvey took Edith in to supper; Laurence unbalanced the table by his presence and had to
sit on the far side, where he could have all the pain of seeing their conversation with none of
the  pleasure  of  participating  in  it.  Miss  Montagu,  on  his  left,  was  pretty  but  sulky-looking,
and  she  neglected  him  almost  to  the  point  of  rudeness  to  speak  to  the  gentleman  on  her
other  side,  a  heavy  gamester  whom  Laurence  knew  by  name  and  reputation  rather  than
personally.

To be snubbed in such a manner was a new experience for  him and an unpleasant one; he
knew he was no longer a marriageable man, but he had not expected this to have so great an
impact upon his casual reception, and to find himself valued less than a wastrel with blown
hair and mottled red cheeks was particularly shocking. Viscount Hale, on his right, was only
interested in his food, so Laurence found himself sitting in almost complete silence.

Still  more  unpleasantly,  without  conversation  of  his  own  to  command  his  attention,
Laurence  could  not  help  overhearing  while  Woolvey  spoke  at  length  and  with  very little
55
accuracy  on  the  state  of  the  war  and  England's  readiness  for  invasion.  Woolvey  was
ridiculously  enthusiastic,  speaking  of  how the  militia  would  teach  Bonaparte  a  lesson  if  he
dared to bring across his army. Laurence was forced to fix his gaze upon his plate to conceal
his  expression.  Napoleon,  master  of  the  Continent,  with  a  hundred  thousand  men  at  his
disposal, to be turned back by militia: pure foolishness. Of course, it was the sort of folly that
the  War  Office  encouraged,  to  preserve  morale,  but to  see  Edith  listening  to  this  speech
approvingly was highly unpleasant.

Laurence  thought  she  might  have  kept  her  face  turned  away  deliberately;  certainly  she
made no effort to meet his eye. He kept his attention for the most part fixed upon his plate,
eating mechanically and sunk into uncharacteristic silence. The meal seemed interminable;
thankfully, his father rose  very shortly after the women had left them, and on returning to
the  drawing  room,  Laurence  at  once  took  the  opportunity  to  make  his  apologies  to  his
mother and escape, pleading the excuse of the journey ahead.

But  one  of  the  servants,  out  of  breath,  caught  him  just  outside  the  door  of  his  room:  his
father  wanted  to  see  him  in  the  library.  Laurence  hesitated;  he  could  send  an  excuse  and
postpone  the  interview,  but  there  was  no  sense  in  delaying  the  inevitable.  He  went  back
downstairs slowly  nevertheless,  and  left  his  hand  on  the  door  just  a  moment too  long:  but
then one of the maids came by, and he could not play the coward anymore, so he pushed it
open and went inside.

"I  wonder  at  your  coming  here,"  Lord  Allendale  said  the  moment  the  door  had  shut:  not
even the barest pleasantry. "I wonder at it indeed. What do you mean by it?"

Laurence  stiffened  but  answered  quietly,  "I  meant  only  to  break my  journey;  I  am  on  my
way to my next posting. I had no notion of your  being here, sir,  or having guests, and I am
very sorry to have burst in upon you."

"I  see;  I  suppose  you  imagined we  would  remain  in  London,  with  this  news  making  a  nine
days' wonder and spectacle of us?  Next posting, indeed." He surveyed Laurence's new coat
with  disdain,  and  Laurence  felt  at  once  as  poorly  dressed  and  shabby  as  when  he  had
suffered  such  inspections  as  a  boy  brought  in  fresh  from  playing  in  the  gardens.  "I  am  not
going to bother reproaching you.  You knew perfectly well what I would think of the whole
matter,  and  it  did  not  weigh  with  you:  very  well.  You  will  oblige  me,  sir,  by  avoiding  this
house in future, and our residence in London, if indeed you can be spared from your animal
husbandry long enough to set foot in the city."

Laurence  felt  a  great  coldness  descend  on  him;  he  was  very  tired  suddenly,  and  he  had  no
heart at all to argue. He heard his own voice almost as if from a distance, and there was no
emotion in it at all as he said, "Very good, sir; I shall  leave at once." He would have to take
Temeraire  to  the  commons  to  sleep,  undoubtedly  scaring  the  village  herd,  and  buy  him  a
few  sheep  out  of  his  own  pocket  in the  morning  if possible  or  ask  him  to  fly  hungry  if  not;
but they would manage.

"Do  not  be  absurd,"  Lord  Allendale  said.  "I  am  not  disowning  you;  not  that  you  do  not
deserve  it,  but  I do  not  choose  to  enact  a  melodrama  for  the  benefit  of  the  world.  You  will
stay  the  night  and  leave  tomorrow,  as  you declared;  that will  do  very  well.  I  think  nothing
more needs to be said; you may go."

56
Laurence  went  back  upstairs  as  quickly  as  he  was  able;  closing  the  door  of  his  bedroom
behind  him  felt  like  allowing  a  burden  to  slip  off  his  shoulders.  He  had  meant  to call  for  a
bath, but he did not think he could bear to speak to anyone, even a maid or a footman: to be
alone  and  quiet  was  everything.  He  consoled  himself  with  the  reminder  that  they  could
leave early in the morning, and he would not have to endure another formal meal with the
company, nor exchange another word with his father, who rarely rose before eleven even in
the country.

He looked at his bed a moment longer; then abruptly he took  an old frock coat and a worn
pair  of  trousers  from  his  wardrobe,  exchanged  these  for  his  evening  dress,  and  went
outside.  Temeraire  was  already  asleep,  curled  neatly  about  himself,  but  before  Laurence
could  slip  away  again,  one  of  his  eyes  half-opened,  and  he  lifted  his  wing  in  instinctive
welcome. Laurence had taken a blanket from the stables; he was as warm and comfortable
as he could wish, stretched upon the dragon's broad foreleg.

"Is  all  well?"  Temeraire  asked  him  softly,  putting  his  other  foreleg  protectively  around
Laurence,  sheltering  him  more  closely  against  his  breast;  his  wings  half-rose,  mantling.
"Something has distressed you. Shall we not go at once?"

The  thought  was  tempting,  but  there  was  no  sense  in  it;  he  and  Temeraire  would  both  be
the better for a quiet night and breakfast in the morning, and in any case he was not going to
creep away as if ashamed. "No, no," Laurence said, petting him until his wings settled again.
"There  is  no  need,  I  assure  you;  I  have  only  had  words  with  my  father."  He  fell  silent;  he
could  not  shake  the  memory  of  the  interview,  his  father's  cold  dismissiveness,  and  his
shoulders hunched.

"Is he angry about our coming?" Temeraire asked.

Temeraire's  quick  perception  and  the  concern  in  his  voice  were  like  a  tonic  for  his  weary
unhappiness, and it made Laurence speak more freely than he meant to. "It is an old quarrel
at heart," he said. "He would have had me go into the Church, like my brother; he has never
counted the Navy an honorable occupation."

"And is an aviator worse, then?" Temeraire said, a little too perceptive now. "Is that why you
did not like to leave the Navy?"

"In  his  eyes,  perhaps,  the  Corps  is  worse,  but  not  in  mine;  there  is  too  great  a
compensation."  He  reached  up  to  stroke  Temeraire's  nose;  Temeraire  nuzzled  back
affectionately.  "But  truly,  he  has  never  approved  my choice  of  career;  I  had  to  run  away
from home as a boy for him to let me go to sea. I cannot allow his will to govern me, for I see
my duty differently than he does."

Temeraire  snorted,  his  warm  breath  coming  out  as  small  trails  of  smoke  in  the  cool  night
air. "But he will not let you sleep inside?"

"Oh,  no,"  Laurence  said,  and  felt  a  little  embarrassed  to  confess  the  weakness  that  had
brought him out to seek comfort in Temeraire. "I only felt I would rather be with you, than
sleep alone."

But Temeraire did not see anything unusual in it. "So long as you are quite warm," he said,
57
resettling  himself  carefully  and  sweeping  his  wings  forward  a  little,  to  encircle  them  from
the wind.

"I  am  very  comfortable;  I  beg  you  to  have  no  concern,"  Laurence  said,  stretching  out  upon
the  broad,  firm  limb,  and  drawing  the  blanket  around  himself.  "Good  night,  my  dear."  He
was  suddenly  very  tired,  but  with  a  natural  physical  fatigue:  the  bone-deep,  painful
weariness was gone.

He  woke  very  early,  just  before  sunrise,  as  Temeraire's  belly  rumbled  strongly  enough  for
the  sound  to  rouse  them  both.  "Oh,  I  am  hungry,"  Temeraire  said,  waking  up  bright-eyed,
and looked eagerly over at the herd of deer milling nervously in the park, clustered against
the far wall.

Laurence  climbed down.  "I  will  leave  you  to  your  breakfast,  and  go  to  have  my  own,"  he
said, giving Temeraire's side one final pat before turning back to the house. He was in no fit
state  to  be  seen;  fortunately,  with the  hour  so  early,  the  guests were  not  yet  about,  and  he
was  able  to  gain  his  bedroom  without  any  encounter  which  might  have  rendered  him  still
more disreputable.

He washed briskly, put on his flying dress while a manservant repacked his solitary piece of
baggage,  and went  down  as  soon  as  he  thought  acceptable.  The  maids  were  still  laying  the
first breakfast dishes out upon the sideboard, and the coffeepot had just been laid upon the
table.  He  had  hoped  to  avoid  all  the  party,  but  to  his  surprise,  Edith  was  at  the  breakfast
table already, though she had never been an early riser.

Her face was outwardly calm, her clothing in perfect order and her hair drawn up smoothly
into  a  golden  knot,  but  her  hands  betrayed  her,  clenched  together  in  her  lap.  She  had  not
taken any food, only a cup of tea, and even that sat untouched before her. "Good morning,"
she said, with a brightness that rang false; she glanced at the servants as she spoke. "May I
pour for you?"

"Thank  you,"  he  said,  the  only  possible  reply,  and  took  the  place  next  to  her;  she  poured
coffee for him and added half a spoonful of sugar and cream each, exactly to his tastes. They
sat stiffly together, neither eating nor speaking, until the servants finished the preparations
and left the room.

"I hoped I might have a chance to speak with you before you  left," she said quietly, looking
at him at last. "I am so very sorry, Will; I suppose there was no other alternative?"

He needed a moment to understand she meant his going into harness; despite his anxieties
on the subject of his training, he had already forgotten to view his new situation as an evil.
"No, my duty was clear," he said, shortly; he might have to tolerate criticism from his father
on the subject, but he would not accept it from any other quarter.

But in the event, Edith only nodded. "I knew as soon as I heard that it would be something of
the sort," she said. She bowed her head again; her hands, which had been twisting restlessly
over each other, stilled.

"My  feelings  have  not  altered  with  my  circumstances,"  Laurence  said  at  last,  when  it  was
clear she would say nothing more. He felt he already had received his answer, by her lack of
58
warmth, but she would not say, later on, that he had not been true to his word; he would let
her be the one to put an end to their understanding. "If yours have,  you need merely say  a
word to silence me." Even as he made the offer, he  could not help but feel resentment, and
he  could  hear  an  unaccustomed  coldness  creeping  into  his  voice:  a  strange  tone  for  a
proposal.

She  drew  a  quick,  startled  breath,  and  said  almost fiercely,  "How  can  you  speak  so?"  For  a
moment he hoped again; but she went on at once to say, "Have I ever been mercenary; have
I ever reproached you for following your chosen course, with all its attendant dangers and
discomforts? If you had gone into the Church, you would certainly have had any number of
good livings settled upon you; by now we could have been comfortable together in our own
home, with children, and I should not have had to spend so many hours in fear for you away
at sea."

She spoke very fast, with more emotion than he was used to seeing in her, and spots of color
standing high on her cheeks. There was a great deal of justice in her remarks; he could not
fail  to  see  it,  and  be  embarrassed  at  his  own  resentment.  He  half-reached  out  his  hand  to
her,  but  she  was  already  continuing:  "I  have  not  complained,  have  I?  I  have  waited;  I  have
been patient; but I have been waiting for something better than a solitary life, far from the
society  of  all  my  friends  and  family,  with  only  a  very  little  share  of  your  attention.  My
feelings are just as they have always been, but I am not so reckless or sentimental as to rely
on feeling alone to ensure happiness in the face of every possible obstacle."

Here at last she stopped. "Forgive me," Laurence said, heavy with mortification: every word
seemed  a  just  reproach,  when  he  had  been  pleased  to  think  himself  ill-used.  "I  should  not
have  spoken,  Edith;  I  had  better  have  asked  your  pardon  for  having  placed  you  in  so
wretched a position." He rose from the table and bowed; of course he could not stay in her
company  now.  "I  must  beg  you  to  excuse  me;  pray  accept  all  my  best  wishes  for  your
happiness."

But she was rising also, and shaking her head. "No, you must stay and finish your breakfast,"
she  said.  "You  have  a long  journey  ahead  of  you;  I  am  not  hungry  in  the  least.  No,  I  assure
you, I am going." She gave him her hand and a smile that trembled very slightly. He thought
she  meant  to  make  a  polite  farewell,  but  if  that  was  her  intention,  it  failed  at  the  last
moment. "Pray do not think ill of me," she said, very low, and left the room as quickly as she
might.

She  need  not  have  worried;  he  could  not.  On  the  contrary,  he  felt  only  guilt  for  having  felt
coldly  towards  her  even  for  a  moment,  and  for  having  failed in  his  obligation to  her.  Their
understanding had been formed between a gentleman's daughter with a respectable dowry
and  a  naval  officer  with  few  expectations  but  handsome  prospects.  He  had  reduced  his
standing  through  his  own  actions,  and  he  could  not  deny  that  nearly  all  the  world  would
have disagreed with his own assessment of his duty in the matter.

And she was not unreasonable in asking more than an aviator could give. Laurence had only
to think of the degree of his attention and affection which Temeraire commanded to realize
he could have very little left to offer a wife, even on those rare occasions when he would be
at liberty. He had been selfish in making the offer, asking her to sacrifice her own happiness
to his comfort.

59
He had very  little heart or appetite left for his breakfast, but he did not want to stop along
his way; he filled his plate and forced himself to eat. He was not left in solitude long; only a
little  while  after  Edith  had  gone,  Miss  Montagu  came  downstairs, dressed  in  a  too-elegant
riding  habit,  something  more  suitable  for  a  sedate  canter  through  London  than  a  country
ride, which nevertheless showed her figure to great advantage. She was smiling as she came
into the room, which expression turned instantly to a frown to see him the  only one there,
and she took a seat at the far end of the table. Woolvey shortly joined her, likewise dressed
for  riding;  Laurence  nodded  to  them  both  with  bare  civility  and  paid  no  attention  to  their
idle conversation.

Just as he was finishing, his mother came down, showing signs of hurried dressing and lines
of  fatigue  around  her  eyes;  she  looked  into  his  face  anxiously.  He  smiled  at  her,  hoping  to
reassure, but he could see he was not very successful: his unhappiness and the reserve with
which  he  had  armored  himself  against  his  father's  disapproval  and  the  curiosity  of  the
general company was visible in his face, with all he could do.

"I  must  be  going  shortly;  will  you  come  and  meet  Temeraire?"  he  asked  her,  thinking they
might have a private few minutes walking, at least.

"Temeraire?" Lady Allendale said blankly. "William, you do not mean you have your dragon
here, do you? Good Heavens, where is he?"

"Certainly he is here; how else would I be traveling? I left him outside behind the stables, in
the  old  yearling  paddock,"  Laurence  said.  "He  will  have  eaten  by  now;  I  told  him  to  make
free of the deer."

"Oh!"  said  Miss  Montagu,  overhearing;  curiosity  evidently  overcame  her  objections  to  the
company of an aviator. "I have never seen a dragon; pray may we come? How famous!"

It  was  impossible  to  refuse,  although  he  would  have  liked  to,  so  when  he  had  rung  for  his
baggage,  the  four  of  them  went  out  to  the  field  together.  Temeraire  was  sitting  up  on  his
haunches, watching the morning fog gradually burn away over the countryside; against the
cold grey sky he loomed very large, even from a considerable distance.

Laurence stopped for a moment to pick up a bucket and rags from the stables, then led his
suddenly  reluctant party  on  with  a  certain  relish  at  Woolvey  and  Miss  Montagu's  dragging
steps.  His  mother  was  not  unalarmed  herself,  but  she  did  not  show  it,  save  by  holding
Laurence's  arm  a  little  more  tightly,  and  stopping  several  paces  back  as  he  went  to
Temeraire's side.

Temeraire  looked  at  the  strangers  with  interest  as  he  lowered  his  head  to  be  washed;  his
chops were gory with the remains of the deer, and he opened his jaws to let Laurence clean
away the blood from the corners of his mouth. There were three or four sets of antlers upon
the  ground.  "I tried  to  bathe  in that  pond,  but it is too  shallow,  and  the  mud  came  into  my
nose," he told Laurence apologetically.

"Oh,  he  talks!"  Miss  Montagu  exclaimed,  clinging  to  Woolvey's  arm;  the  two  of  them  had
backed  away  at  the  sight  of  the  rows  of  gleaming  white  teeth:  Temeraire's  incisors  were
already larger than a man's fist, and with a serrated edge.

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Temeraire  was  taken  aback  at  first;  but  then  his  pupils  widened  and  he  said,  very  gently,
"Yes,  I  talk,"  and  to  Laurence,  "Would  she  perhaps  like  to  come  up  on  my  back,  and  see
around?"

Laurence  could  not  repress  an  unworthy  flash  of  malice.  "I  am  sure  she  would;  pray  come
forward, Miss Montagu, I can see you are not one  of those poor-spirited creatures who are
afraid of dragons."

"No,  no,"  she  said  palely,  drawing  back.  "I  have  trespassed  on  Mr.  Woolvey's  time  enough,
we  must  be  going  for  our  ride."  Woolvey  stammered  a  few  equally  transparent  excuses  as
well, and they escaped at once together, stumbling in their haste to be away.

Temeraire  blinked  after  them  in  mild  surprise.  "Oh,  they  were  just  afraid,"  he  said.  "I
thought she was like Volly at first. I do not understand; it is not as though they were cows,
and anyway I have just eaten."

Laurence concealed his private sentiment of victory and drew his mother forward. "Do not
be  afraid  at  all,  there  is  not  the  least  cause,"  he  said  to  her  softly.  "Temeraire,  this  is  my
mother, Lady Allendale."

"Oh,  a  mother,  that  is  special,  is  it  not?"  Temeraire  said,  lowering  his  head  to  look  at  her
more closely. "I am honored to meet you."

Laurence guided her hand to Temeraire's snout, and once she made the first tentative touch
to  the  warm  hide,  she  soon  began  petting  the  dragon  with  more  confidence.  "Why,  the
pleasure is mine," she said. "And how soft! I would never have thought it."

Temeraire  made  a  pleased  low  rumble  at  the  compliment  and  the  petting,  and  Laurence
looked at the two of them with a great deal of his happiness restored; he thought how little
the rest of the world should matter to him, when he was secure in the good opinion of those
he  valued  most,  and  in the  knowledge  that  he  was doing  his  duty.  "Temeraire  is  a  Chinese
Imperial," he told his mother, with unconcealed pride. "One of the very rarest of all dragons:
the only one in all Europe."

"Truly?  How  splendid,  my  dear;  I  do  recall  having  heard  before  that  Chinese  dragons  are
quite out of the common way," she said. But she still looked at him anxiously, and there was
a silent question in her eyes.

"Yes," he said, trying to answer it. "I count myself very fortunate, I promise you. Perhaps we
will  take  you  flying  someday,  when  we  have  more  time,"  he  added.  "It  is  quite
extraordinary; there is nothing to compare to it."

"Oh, flying, indeed," she said indignantly, yet she seemed satisfied on a deeper level. "When
you  know  perfectly  well  I  cannot  even  keep  myself  on  a  horse.  What  I  should  do  on  a
dragon's back, I am sure I do not know."

"You would be strapped on quite securely, just as I am," Laurence said. "Temeraire is not a
horse, he would not try to have you off."

Temeraire said earnestly, "Oh yes, and if you did fall off, I dare say I could catch you," which
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was perhaps not the most reassuring remark, but his desire to please was very obvious, and
Lady Allendale smiled up at him anyway.

"How very kind you are; I had no idea dragons were so well-mannered," she said. "You will
take prodigious care of William, will you not? He has always given me twice as much anxiety
as any of my other children, and he is forever getting himself into scrapes."

Laurence was a little indignant to hear  himself described so, and to have  Temeraire say, "I
promise you, I will never let him come to harm."

"I see I have delayed too long; shortly the two of you will have me wrapped in cotton batting
and fed on gruel," he said, bending to kiss her cheek. "Mother, you may write to me care of
the Corps at Loch Laggan covert, in Scotland; we will be training there. Temeraire, will you
sit up? I will sling this bandbox again."

"Perhaps you could take out that book by Duncan?" Temeraire asked, rearing up. "The Naval
Trident?  We  never  finished  reading  about  the  battle  of  the  Glorious  First,  and  you  might
read it to me as we go."

"Does he read to you?" Lady Allendale asked Temeraire, amused.

"Yes;  you  see,  I  cannot hold  them  myself,  for  they  are  too  small,  and  also  I  cannot  turn  the
pages very well," Temeraire said.

"You are misunderstanding; she is only shocked to learn that I am ever to be persuaded to
open  a  book;  she  was  forever  trying  to  make  me  sit  to  them  when  I  was  a  boy,"  Laurence
said,  rummaging  in  one  of  his  other  boxes  to  find  the  volume.  "You  would  be  quite
astonished at how much of a bluestocking I am become, Mother; he is quite insatiable. I am
ready, Temeraire."

She  laughed  and  stepped  back  to  the  edge  of  the  field  as  Temeraire  put  Laurence  up,  and
stood watching them, shading her eyes with one hand, as they drove up into the air; a small
figure, vanishing with every beat of the great wings, and then the gardens and the towers of
the house rolled away behind the curve of a hill.

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