His Majesty's Dragon(Temeraire #1)

Chapter 12  



BY  THE  NEXT  morning  Praecursoris  had already  gone,  sent  away  to  a  dragon  transport
launching from Portsmouth for the small covert in Nova Scotia, whence  he would be led to
Newfoundland , and at last immured in the breeding grounds which had lately been started
there.  Laurence  had  avoided  any further  sight  of the  stricken dragon,  and  deliberately  had
kept  Temeraire  awake  late  the  night  before,  so  that  he  would  sleep  past  the  moment  of
departure.

Lenton  had  chosen  his time  as wisely  as  he  could;  the  general  rejoicing  over  the  victory  at
Trafalgar  continued,  and  served  to  counter  the  private  unhappiness  to  some  extent.  That
very day a display of fireworks was announced by pamphlets, to be held over the mouth of
the  Thames;  and  Lily,  Temeraire,  and  Maximus,  being  the  youngest  of  the  dragons at  the
covert and the worst affected, were sent to observe by Lenton's orders.

Laurence was deeply grateful for the word as the brilliant displays lit the sky and the music
from  the  barges  drifted  to  them  across  the  water:  Temeraire's  eyes  were  wide  with
excitement,  the  bright  bursts  of  color  reflecting  in his  pupils  and  his scales,  and  he  cocked
his head first one way then another, in an  effort to hear more clearly. He talked of nothing
but  the  music  and  the  explosions  and  the  lights,  all  the  way  back  to the  covert.  "Is  that  a
concert,  then,  the  sort  they  have  in  Dover?"  he  asked.  "Laurence,  cannot  we  go  again,  and
perhaps a little closer next time? I could sit very quietly, and I would not disturb anyone."

"I  am  afraid  fireworks  such  as  those  are  a  special  occasion,  my  dear;  concerts  are  only
music," Laurence said,  avoiding an answer; he could well imagine the reaction of the  city's
inhabitants to a dragon's coming to take in a concert.

"Oh," Temeraire said, but he was not greatly dampened. "I would still like that extremely; I
could not hear very well tonight."

"I do not know that there is any suitable accommodation which could be made in the city,"
Laurence said slowly and reluctantly, but happily a sudden inspiration came to him, and he
added,  "but  perhaps  I  can  hire  some  musicians  to  come  to  the  covert  and  play  for  you,
instead; that would be a great deal more comfortable, in any case."

"Yes, indeed, that would be splendid," Temeraire said eagerly. He communicated this idea to
Maximus and Lily as soon as they had all once again landed, and the two of them professed
equal interest.

"Damn  you,  Laurence,  you  had  much  better  learn  to  say  no;  you  will  forever  be  getting  us
into these absurd starts," Berkley said. "Just see if any musicians will come here, for love or
money."

"For  love,  perhaps  not;  but  for  a  week's  wages  and  a  hearty  meal,  I  am  quite  certain  most
musicians could be persuaded to play in the heart of Bedlam," Laurence said.

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"It sounds a fine idea to me," Harcourt said. "I would quite like it myself. I have not been to a
concert except once when I was sixteen; I had to put on skirts for it, and after only  half an
hour a dreadful fellow sat next to me and whispered impolite remarks until I poured a pot
of coffee into his lap. It quite spoiled my pleasure, even though he went away straight after."

"Christ  above,  Harcourt,  if  I  ever  have  reason  to  offend  you,  I  will  make  damned  sure  you
have  nothing  hot  at  hand,"  Berkley  said;  while  Laurence  struggled  between  nearly  equal
portions  of  dismay:  at  her  having  been  subjected  to  such  insult  and  at  her  means  of
repulsion.

"Well,  I  would  have  struck  him,  but  I  would  have  had  to  get  up.  You  have  no  notion  how
difficult it is to arrange skirts when sitting down; it took me five minutes together the first
time," she said reasonably. "So I did not want to have it all to do again. Then the waiter came
by and I thought that would be easier, and anyway more like something a girl ought to do."

Still a little pale with the notion, Laurence bade them goodnight, and took Temeraire off to
his rest. He slept once again in the small tent by his side, even though he thought Temeraire
was  well  over  his  distress,  and  was  rewarded  in  the  morning  by  being  woken  early,
Temeraire peering into the tent with one great eye and inquiring if perhaps Laurence would
like to go to Dover and arrange for the concert today.

"I would like to sleep until a civilized hour, but as that is evidently not to be, perhaps I will
ask leave of Lenton to go," Laurence said, yawning as he crawled from the tent. "May I have
my breakfast first?"

"Oh, certainly," Temeraire said, with an air of generosity.

Muttering  a  little,  Laurence  pulled  his  coat  back  on  and  began  to  walk  back  to  the
headquarters. Halfway to the building, he nearly collided with Morgan, running to find him.
"Sir, Admiral Lenton wants you," the boy said, panting with excitement, when Laurence had
steadied him. "And he says, Temeraire is to go into combat rig."

"Very  good,"  Laurence  said,  concealing  his  surprise.  "Go  tell  Lieutenant  Granby  and  Mr.
Hollin at once, and then do as Lieutenant Granby tells you; mind you speak of this to no one
else."

"Yes, sir," the boy said, and dashed off again to the barracks; Laurence quickened his pace.

"Come in, Laurence," Lenton said in reply to his knock; it seemed that every other captain in
the covert was already crowded into the office as well. To Laurence's surprise, Rankin was
at the front of the room, sitting by Lenton's desk. By wordless agreement, they had managed
to  avoid  speaking  to  one  another  since  Rankin's  transfer  from  Loch  Laggan,  and  Laurence
had known nothing of his and Levitas's activities. These had evidently been more dangerous
than  Laurence  might  have  imagined:  a  bandage  around  Rankin's  thigh  was  visibly  stained
with blood, and his clothes also; his thin face was pale and set with pain.

Lenton waited only until the door had closed behind the last few stragglers to begin; he said
grimly,  "I  dare  say  you  already  realize,  gentlemen:  we  have  been  celebrating  too  soon.
Captain Rankin has just returned from a flight over the coast; he was able to slip past their
borders, and caught a look at what that damned Corsican has been working on. You may see
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for yourselves."

He pushed across his desk a sheet of paper, smudged with dirt and bloodstains that did not
obscure an elegantly drafted diagram in Rankin's precise hand. Laurence frowned, trying to
puzzle  the  thing  out:  it  looked  rather  like  a  ship-of-the-line,  but  with  no  railings  at  all
around  her  upper  deck,  and  no  masts  shipped,  with  strange  thick  beams  protruding  from
both sides fore and aft, and no gunports.

"What is it for?" Chenery said, turning it around. "I thought he already had boats?"

"Perhaps  it  will  become  clearer  if  I  explain  that  he  had  dragons  carrying  them  about  over
the  ground,"  Rankin  said.  Laurence  understood  at  once:  the  beams  were  intended  to  give
the dragons a place to hold; Napoleon meant to fly his troops over the Navy's guns entirely,
while so many of Britain's aerial forces were occupied at the Mediterranean.

Lenton said, "We are not certain how many men he will have in each-"

"Sir,  I  beg  your  pardon;  may  I  ask,  how  long  are  these  vessels?"  Laurence  asked,
interrupting. "And is this to scale?"

"To  my  eye,  yes,"  Rankin  said.  "The  one  which  I  saw  in  mid-air had  two  Reapers to  a  side,
and room to spare; perhaps two hundred feet from front to back."

"They will be three-deckers inside, then," Laurence said grimly. "If they sling hammocks, he
can  fit  as  many  as  two  thousand  men  apiece,  for  a  short  journey,  if  he  means  to  carry  no
provisions."

A murmur of alarm went around the room. Lenton said, "Less than two hours to cross each
way, even if they launch from Cherbourg, and he has sixty dragons or more."

"He  could  land  fifty  thousand  men  by  midmorning,  good  God,"  said  one  of  the  captains
Laurence  did  not  know,  a  man  who  had  arrived  only  recently;  the  same  calculation  was
running in all their heads. It was impossible not to look about the room and tally their own
side:  less  than  twenty  men,  a  good  quarter  of  whom were  the  scout  and  courier  captains
whose beasts could do very little in combat.

"But surely the things must be hopeless to manage in the air, and can the dragons carry such
a weight?" Sutton asked, studying the design further.

"Likely  he  has  built  them from  light  wood;  he  only  needs  them  to  last  a  day,  after  all,  and
they  need  not  be  watertight,"  Laurence  said.  "He  needs  only  an  easterly  wind  to  carry  him
over;  with  that  narrow  framing  they  will  offer  very  little  resistance.  But  they  will  be
vulnerable in the air, and surely Excidium and Mortiferus are already on their way back?"

"Four days away, at best, and Bonaparte must know that as well as do we," Lenton said. "He
has spent nearly his entire fleet and the Spanish as well to buy  himself freedom from their
presence; he is not going to waste the chance." The obvious truth of this was felt at once; a
grim and expectant silence fell upon the room. Lenton looked down at his desk, then stood
up, uncharacteristically slow; Laurence for the first time noticed that his hair was grey and
thin.
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"Gentlemen," Lenton said formally, "the wind is in the north today, so we may have a  little
grace if he chooses to wait for a better wind. All of our scouts will be flying in shifts just off
Cherbourg;  we  will  have  an  hour's  warning  at  least.  I  do  not  need  to  tell  you  we  will  be
hopelessly outnumbered; we can only do our best, and delay if we cannot prevent."

No  one  spoke,  and  after  a  moment  he  said,  "We  will  need  every  heavy- and  middleweight
beast on independent duty; your task will be to destroy these transports. Chenery, Warren,
the  two  of  you  will  take  midwing  positions  in  Lily's  formation,  and  two  of  our  scouts  will
take  the  wing-tip  positions.  Captain  Harcourt,  undoubtedly  Bonaparte  will  reserve  some
dragons for defense; your task is to keep those defenders occupied as best you can."

"Yes, sir," she said; the others nodded.

Lenton took a deep breath and rubbed his face. "There is nothing else to be said, gentlemen;
go to your preparations."

There was no sense in keeping it from the men; the French had nearly caught Rankin on his
way  back  and  already  knew  that  their  secret  at  last  was  out.  Laurence  quietly  told  his
lieutenants, then sent them about their work; he could see the passage of the news through
the  ranks: men  leaning in to  hear  from  one  another,  their  faces  hardening  as  they  grasped
the situation, and the ordinary idle conversation of a morning vanishing quite away. He was
proud  to  see  even  the  youngest  officers  take  it  with  great  courage  and  go  straight  back  to
their work.

This  was  the  first  time  Temeraire  would  ever  use  the  complete  accoutrements  of  heavy
combat  outside  of  practice;  for  patrol  a  much  lighter  set  of  gear  was  used,  and  their
previous engagement had been under traveling harness. Temeraire stood very straight and
still, only his head turned about so he could watch with great excitement as the men rigged
him  out  with  the  heaviest  leather  harness,  triple-riveted,  and  began  hooking  in  the
enormous panels of chain-mesh that would serve as armor.

Laurence began his own inspection of the equipment and belatedly realized that Hollin was
nowhere  to  be  seen;  he  looked  three  times  through  the  whole  clearing  before  he  quite
believed  the  man's  absence,  and  then  called  the  armorer  Pratt  away  from  his  work on  the
great  protective  plates  which  would  shield  Temeraire's  breast  and  shoulders  during  the
fighting. "Where is Mr. Hollin?" he asked.

"Why,  I  don't  believe  I've  seen  him  this  morning,  sir,"  Pratt  said,  scratching  his  head.  "He
was in last night, though."

"Very good," Laurence said, and dismissed him. "Roland, Dyer, Morgan," he called, and when
the  three  runners  came,  he  said,  "Go  and  see  if  you  can  find  Mr. Hollin,  and  then tell  him  I
expect him here at once, if you please."

"Yes,  sir,"  they  said  almost  in  unison,  and dashed  off  in different  directions  after  a  hurried
consultation.

He  returned  to  watching  the  men  work,  a  deep  frown  on  his  face;  he  was  astonished  and
dismayed  to  find  the  man  failing  in  his  duty  at  all,  and  under  these  circumstances  most
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particularly; he wondered if Hollin could have fallen ill and gone to the surgeons: it seemed
the only excuse, but the man would surely have told one of his crewmates.

More than an hour went by, and Temeraire was in full rig with the crew practicing boarding
maneuvers under Lieutenant Granby's severe eye, before young Roland came hurrying back
to  the  clearing.  "Sir,"  she  said, panting  and  unhappy.  "Sir,  Mr.  Hollin  is with Levitas,  please
do not be angry," she said, all in one rushing breath.

"Ah," Laurence said, a little embarrassed; he could hardly admit to Roland that he had been
turning a blind eye to Hollin's visits, so she naturally was reluctant to be a tale-bearer on a
fellow aviator. "He will have to answer for it, but that can wait; go and tell him he is needed
at once."

"Sir,  I  told  him  so,  but  he  said  he  cannot  leave  Levitas,  and  he  told  me  to  go  away  at  once,
and to tell you that he begs you to come, if only you can," she said, very quickly, and eyeing
him nervously to see how he would take this insubordination.

Laurence stared; he  could not account for the  extraordinary response, but after a moment,
his  estimate  of  Hollin's  character  decided  him.  "Mr.  Granby,"  he  called,  "I  must  go  for  a
moment;  I  leave  things  in  your  hands.  Roland,  stay  here  and  come  fetch  me  at  once  if
anything occurs," he told her.

He walked quickly, torn between temper and concern, and reluctance to once again expose
himself  to  a  complaint  from  Rankin,  particularly  under  the  circumstances.  No  one  could
deny  the  man  had  done  his  duty  bravely,  just  now,  and  to  offer  him  insult  directly  after
would be an extraordinary piece of rudeness. And at the same time, Laurence could not help
but grow angry at the man as he followed Roland's directions: Levitas's clearing was one of
the  small  ones  nearest  the  headquarters,  undoubtedly  chosen  for  Rankin's  convenience
rather than his dragon's; the grounds were poorly tended, and when Levitas came into view,
Laurence saw he was lying in a circle of bare sandy dirt, with his head in Hollin's lap.

"Well,  Mr.  Hollin,  what's  all  this?"  Laurence  said,  irritation  making  his  tone  sharp;  then  he
came around and saw the great expanse of bandages that covered Levitas's flank and belly,
hidden  from  the  other  side,  and  already  soaked  through  with  the  near-black  blood.  "My
God," he said involuntarily.

Levitas's eyes opened a little at the sound and turned up to look at him hopefully; they were
glazed  and  bright with pain,  but  after  a  moment  recognition  came  into them,  and  the  little
dragon sighed and closed them again, without a word.

"Sir,"  Hollin  said,  "I'm  sorry,  I  know  I've  my  duty,  but  I  couldn't  leave  him.  The  surgeon's
gone;  says  there's  nothing  more  to  be  done for  him,  and  it  won't  be  long.  There  is  no  one
here  at  all,  not  even  to  send  for  some  water."  He  stopped,  and said  again,  "I  couldn't  leave
him."

Laurence  knelt  beside  him  and  put  his  hand  on  Levitas's  head,  very  lightly  for  fear  of
causing him more pain. "No," he said. "Of course not."

He  was  glad  now  to  find  himself  so  close  to  the  headquarters.  There  were  some  crewmen
idling  by  the  door  talking  of  the  news,  so  he  could  send  them  to  Hollin's  assistance,  and
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Rankin  was  in  the  officers'  club,  easily  found.  He  was  drinking  wine,  his  color  already
greatly  improved  and  having  shifted  his  bloodstained  clothing  for  fresh;  Lenton  and  a
couple of the scout captains were sitting with him and discussing positions to hold along the
coastline.

Coming  up  to  him,  Laurence  told  him  very  quietly,  "If  you  can  walk,  get  on  your  feet;
otherwise I will carry you."

Rankin put down his glass and stared at him coldly. "I beg your pardon?" he said. "I gather
this is some more of your officious-"

Laurence paid no attention, but seized the back of his chair and heaved. Rankin fell forward,
scrabbling  to  catch  himself  on  the  floor;  Laurence  took  him  by  the  scruff  of  his  coat  and
dragged him up to his feet, ignoring his gasp of pain.

"Laurence, what in God's name-" Lenton said in astonishment, rising to his feet.

"Levitas  is  dying;  Captain  Rankin  wishes  to  make  his  farewells,"  Laurence  said,  looking
Lenton squarely in the eye and holding Rankin up by the collar and the arm. "He begs to be
excused."

The  other  captains  stared,  half  out  of  their  chairs.  Lenton  looked  at  Rankin,  then  very
deliberately sat back down again. "Very good," he said, and reached for the bottle; the other
captains slowly sank back down as well.

Rankin  stumbled  along  in  his  grip,  not  even  trying  to  free  himself,  shrinking  a  little  from
Laurence as they went; outside the clearing, Laurence stopped and faced him. "You will  be
generous to him, do you  understand me?" he said. "You will give  him every word of praise
he has earned from you and never received; you will tell him he  has been brave,  and loyal,
and a better partner than you have deserved."

Rankin  said  nothing,  only  stared  as  if  Laurence  were  a  dangerous  lunatic;  Laurence  shook
him again. "By God, you will do all this and more, and hope that it is enough to satisfy me,"
he said savagely, and dragged him on.

Hollin  was  still  sitting  with  Levitas's  head  in  his  lap,  a  bucket  now  beside  him;  he  was
squeezing  water  from  a  clean  cloth  into  the  dragon's  open  mouth.  He  looked  at  Rankin
without  bothering  to  hide  his  contempt,  but  then  he  bent  over  and  said,  "Levitas,  come
along now; look who's come."

Levitas's eyes opened, but they were milky and blind. "My captain?" he said uncertainly.

Laurence thrust Rankin forward and down onto his knees, none too gently; Rankin gasped
and  clutched  at  his  thigh,  but  he  said,  "Yes,  I  am  here."  He  looked  up  at  Laurence  and
swallowed, then added awkwardly, "You have been very brave."

There was nothing natural or sincere in the tone; it was as ungraceful as could be imagined.
But Levitas only said, very softly, "You came." He licked at a few drops of water at the corner
of his mouth. The blood was still welling sluggishly from beneath the dressing, thick enough
to  slightly  part  the  bandages  one  from  the  other,  glistening  and  black.  Rankin  shifted
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uneasily;  his  breeches  and  stockings  were  being  soaked  through,  but  he  looked  up  at
Laurence and did not try to move away.

Levitas  gave  a  low  sigh,  and  then  the  shallow  movement  of  his  sides  ceased.  Hollin  closed
his eyes with one rough hand.

Laurence's  hand  was  still  heavy  on  the  back  of  Rankin's  neck;  now  he  lifted  it  away,  rage
gone,  and  only  tight-lipped  disgust  left.  "Go,"  he  said.  "We  who  valued  him  will  make  the
arrangements,  not  you."  He  did  not  even  look  at  the  man  as  Rankin  left the  clearing.  "I
cannot stay," he said quietly to Hollin. "Can you manage?"

"Yes," Hollin said, stroking the little head. "There can't be anything, with the battle coming
and  all,  but  I'll  see  he's  taken  and  buried  proper.  Thank  you,  sir;  it  meant  a  great  deal  to
him."

"More than it ought," Laurence said. He stood looking down at Levitas a short while longer;
then he went back to the headquarters and found Admiral Lenton.

"Well?" Lenton asked, scowling, as Laurence was shown into his office.

"Sir, I apologize for my behavior," Laurence said. "I am happy to bear any consequences you
should think appropriate."

"No, no, what are you talking about? I mean Levitas," Lenton said impatiently.

Laurence paused, then said, "Dead, with a great deal of pain, but he went easily at the end."

Lenton shook his head. "Damned pity," he said, pouring a glass of brandy for Laurence and
himself.  He  finished  his  own  glass  in  two  great  swallows  and  sighed  heavily.  "And  a
wretched  time  for  Rankin  to  become  unharnessed,"  he  said.  "We  have  a  Winchester
hatching unexpectedly at Chatham: any day now, by the hardening of the shell. I have been
scrambling  to  find  a  fellow  in  range  worthy  of  the  position  and  willing  to  be  put  to  a
Winchester;  now  here  he  is  on  the  loose  and  having  made  himself  a  hero  bringing  us  this
news. If I don't send him and the beast ends up unharnessed, we will have a yowl from his
entire damned family, and a question taken up in Parliament, like as not."

"I would rather see a dragon dead than in his hands," Laurence said, setting down his glass
hard.  "Sir,  if  you  want  a  man  who  will  be  a  credit  to  the  service,  send  Mr.  Hollin;  I  would
vouch with my life for him."

"What,  your  ground-crew  master?"  Lenton  frowned  at  him,  but  thoughtfully.  "That  is  a
thought, if you think him suited for the task; he could not feel he was hurting his career by
such a step. Not a gentleman, I suppose."

"No,  sir,  unless  by  gentleman  you  mean  a  man  of  honor  rather  than  breeding,"  Laurence
said.

Lenton snorted at this. "Well, we are not so stiff-necked a lot we must pay that a great deal
of mind," he said. "I dare say it will answer nicely; if we are not all dead or captured by the
time the egg cracks, at any rate."
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Hollin stared when Laurence relieved him of his duties, and said a little helplessly, "My own
dragon?" He had to turn away and hide his face; Laurence pretended not to see. "Sir, I don't
know how to thank you," he said, whispering to keep his voice from breaking.

"I have promised you will be a credit to the service; see to it you do not make me a liar, and I
will  be  content,"  Laurence  said,  and  shook  his  hand.  "You  must  go  at  once;  the  hatching  is
expected at almost any day, and there is a carriage waiting to take you to Chatham."

Looking  dazed,  Hollin  accepted  Laurence's  hand,  and  the  bag  with  his  few  possessions
which his fellows on the ground crew had hastily packed for him, then allowed himself to be
led  off  towards  the  waiting  carriage  by  young  Dyer.  The  crew  were  beaming  upon  him  as
they  went;  he  was  obliged  to  shake  a  great  many  hands,  until  Laurence,  fearing  he  would
never get under way, said, "Gentlemen, the wind is still in the north; let us get some of this
armor off Temeraire for the night," and put them to work.

Temeraire watched him go a little sadly. "I am very glad that the new dragon will have him
instead  of  Rankin,  but  I  wish  they  had  given  him  to  Levitas  sooner,  and  perhaps  Hollin
would have kept him from dying," he said to Laurence, as the crew worked on him.

"We cannot know what would have happened," Laurence said. "But I am not certain Levitas
could  ever  have  been  happy  with  such  an  exchange;  even  at  the  end  he  only  wanted
Rankin's affection, as strange as that seems to us."

Laurence  slept  with  Temeraire  again  that  evening,  close  and  sheltered  in  his  arms  and
wrapped in several woolen blankets against the early frost. He woke just before first light to
see  the  barren  tree-tops  bending  away  from  the  sunrise:  an  easterly  wind,  blowing  from
France.

"Temeraire," he called quietly, and the great head rose up above him to sniff the air.

"The wind has changed," Temeraire said, and bent down to nuzzle him.

Laurence  allowed  himself  the  indulgence  of  five  minutes,  lying  warm  and  embraced,  with
his  hands  resting  on  the  narrow,  tender  scales  of  Temeraire's nose.  "I  hope  I  have  never
given you cause for unhappiness, my dear," he said softly.

"Never, Laurence," Temeraire said, very low. 

The  ground  crew  came  hurrying  from  the  barracks  the  moment  he  touched  the  bell.  The
chain-mesh  had  been  left  in  the  clearing,  under  a  cloth,  and  Temeraire  had  slept  in  the
heavy harness for this once. He was quickly fitted out, while at the other side of the clearing
Granby reviewed every man's harness and carabiners. Laurence submitted to his inspection
as well, then took a moment to clean and reload his pistols fresh, and belt on his sword.

The sky was cold and white, a few darker grey clouds scudding like shadows. No orders had
come yet. At Laurence's request, Temeraire lifted him up to his shoulder and reared onto his
hind legs; he could see the dark line of the ocean past the trees, and the ships bobbing in the
harbor. The wind came strongly into his face, cold and salt. "Thank you, Temeraire," he said,
and  Temeraire  set  him  down  again.  "Mr.  Granby,  we  will  get  the  crew  aboard,"  Laurence
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said.

The ground crew put up a great noise, more a roar than a cheer, as Temeraire rose into the
air;  Laurence  could  hear  it  echoed  throughout  the covert  as  the  other  great  beasts  beat  up
into the sky. Maximus was a great blazing presence in his red-gold brilliance, dwarfing the
others; Victoriatus and Lily also stood out against the crowd of smaller Yellow Reapers.

Lenton's  flag  was  streaming  from  his  dragon  Obversaria,  the  golden  Anglewing;  she  was
only a little larger than the Reapers, but she cut through the crowd of dragons and took the
lead  with  effortless  grace,  her  wings  rotating  almost  as  did  Temeraire's.  As  the  larger
dragons  had  been  set  on  independent  duty,  Temeraire  did  not  need  to  keep  to  the
formation's speed; he quickly negotiated a position near the leading edge of the force.

The  wind  was  in  their  faces,  cold  and  damp,  and  the  low  whistling  shriek  of  their  passage
carried away all noise, leaving only the leathery snap of Temeraire's wings, each beat like a
sail  going  taut, and  the  creaking  of  the  harness.  Nothing  else  broke  the  unnatural,  heavy
silence  of  the  crew.  They  were  already  drawn  in  sight:  at this distance  the French  dragons
seemed a cloud of gulls or sparrows, so many were they, and wheeling so in unison.

The  French  were  keeping  at  a  considerable  height,  some  nine  hundred  feet  above  the
surface of the water, well out of range of even the longest pepper guns. Below them, a lovely
and  futile  spread  of  white  sail:  the  Channel  Fleet,  many  of  the  ships  wreathed  in  smoke
where  they  had  tried  a  hopeless  shot.  More  of the  ships  had  taken  up  positions nearer  the
land,  despite  the  terrible  danger  of  placing  themselves  so  close  to  a  leeward  shore;  if  the
French  could  be  forced  to  land  very  near  the  edge  of  the  cliffs,  they  might  yet  come  into
range of the long guns, if briefly.

Excidium  and  Mortiferus  were  racing  back  from  Trafalgar  at  frantic  speed  with  their
formations,  but  they  could  not  hope  to  arrive  before  the  end  of  the  week.  There  was  not  a
man  among  them  but  had  known  to  a  nicety  the  numbers  which  the  French  could  muster
against them. Rationally, there had never been any cause for hope.

Even so, it was a different thing to see those numbers made flesh and wing: fully twelve of
the light wooden transports which Rankin had spied out, each carried by four dragons, and
defended  by  as  many  more  besides.  Laurence  had  never  heard  of  such  a  force  in  modern
warfare;  it  was  the  stuff  of  the  Crusades,  when  dragons  had  been  smaller  and  the  country
more wild, the more easily to feed them.

This  occurring  to  him,  Laurence  turned  to  Granby  and  said  calmly,  loud  enough  to  carry
back to the men, "The logistics of feeding so many dragons together must be impractical for
any extended period; he will not be able to try this again soon."

Granby only stared at him a moment, then with a start he said hurriedly, "Just so; right you
are.  Should  we  give  the  men  a  little  exercise?  I  think  we  have  at  least  half  an  hour's  grace
before we meet them."

"Very good," Laurence said, pushing himself up to his feet; the force of the wind was great,
but braced against his straps he was able to turn around. The men did not quite like to meet
his eyes, but there was an effect: backs straightened, whispers stopped; none of them cared
to show fear or reluctance to his face.
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"Mr.  Johns,  exchange  of  positions,  if  you  please,"  Granby  called  through  his  speaking-trumpet;  shortly  the  topmen  and  bellmen  had  run  through  their  exchange  under  the
direction  of  their  lieutenants,  and  the  men  were  warmed  up  against  the  biting wind;  their
faces  looked  a  little  less  pinched.  They  could  not  engage  in true  gunnery-practice  with  the
other  crews  so  close,  but  with  a  commendable  show  of  energy,  Lieutenant  Riggs  had  his
riflemen  fire  blanks  to  loosen  their  fingers.  Dunne  had  long,  thin  hands,  at present  bled
white  with  cold;  as  he  struggled  to  reload,  his  powder-horn  slipped  out  of  his  fingers  and
nearly  went  over  the  side.  Collins  only  saved  it  by  leaning  nearly  straight  out  from
Temeraire's back, just barely catching the cord.

Temeraire glanced back  once as the shots went off, but straightened himself again without
any  reminder.  He  was  flying  easily,  at  a  pace  which  he  could  have  sustained  for  the  better
part of a day; his breathing was not labored or even much quickened. His only difficulty was
an excess of high spirits: as the French dragons came more closely into view, he succumbed
to excitement and put on a burst of speed; but at the touch of Laurence's hand, he drew back
again into the line.

The  French  defenders  had  formed  into  a  loosely  woven  line-of-battle,  the  larger  dragons
above,  with  the  smaller  ones  beneath  in  a  darting  unpredictable  mass,  forming  a  wall
shielding  the  transport  vessels  and  their  carriers.  Laurence  felt  if  only  they  could  break
through the line, there might be some hope. The carriers, most of them of the middle-weight
Pêcheur-Rayé  breed, were  laboring greatly: the unaccustomed weight was telling on them,
and he was sure they would be vulnerable to an attack.

But  they  had  twenty-three  dragons  to  the  French  forty-and-more  defenders,  and  almost  a
quarter of the British force was made up of Greylings and Winchesters, no proper match for
the combat-weight dragons. Getting through the line would be nearly impossible; and once
through, any attacker would immediately be isolated and vulnerable in turn.

On  Obversaria,  Lenton  sent  up  the  flags  for  attack:  Engage  the  enemy  more  closely.
Laurence felt his own heart begin beating faster, with the tremble of excitement that would
fade  only  after  the  first  moments  of  battle.  He  raised  the  speaking-trumpet  and  called
forward,  "Choose  your  target,  Temeraire;  if  ever  you  can  get  us  alongside  a  transport,  you
cannot  do  wrong."  In  the  confusion  of  the  enormous  crowd  of  dragons,  he  trusted
Temeraire's  instincts  better  than  his  own;  if  there was  a  gap  in  the  French  line,  Laurence
was sure that Temeraire would see it.

By way of answer, Temeraire struck out immediately for one of the outlying transports, as if
he meant to go straight at it; abruptly he folded his wings and dived, and the three French
dragons  who  had  closed  ranks  in  front  of  him  dashed  in  pursuit.  Swiveling  his  wings,
Temeraire  halted  himself  in  mid-air  while  the  three  went  flashing  past;  with  a  few  mighty
wing-strokes he was now flying directly up towards the unprotected belly of the first carrier
on  the  larboard  side,  and  now  Laurence  could  see  that  this  dragon,  a  smaller  female
Pêcheur-Rayé, was visibly tired: her wings laboring, even though her pace was still regular.

"Ready bombs," Laurence shouted. As Temeraire came hurtling past the Pêcheur-Rayé  and
slashed  at  the  French  dragon's  side,  the  crew  hurled  the  bombs  onto  the  deck  of  the
transport.  The  crack  of  gunfire  came  from  the  Pêcheur's  back,  and  Laurence  heard  a  cry
behind him: Collins threw up his arms and went limp in his harness, his rifle tumbling away
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into the water below. A moment later the body followed: he was dead, and one of the others
had cut him loose.

There were no guns on the transport itself, but the deck was built slanting like a roof: three
of  the  bombs  rolled  off  before  they  could  burst,  drifting  smoke  as  they  fell  uselessly.
However, two exploded in time: the whole transport sagged in mid-air as the shock briefly
threw the Pêcheur off her pace, gaping holes torn in the wooden planking. Laurence caught
a  single glimpse  of  a  pale,  staring  face  inside,  smudged with  dirt  and  inhuman with  terror;
then Temeraire was angling away.

Blood was dripping from somewhere below, a thin black stream; Laurence leaned to check,
but saw no injury; Temeraire was flying well. "Granby," he shouted, pointing.

"From  his  claws-the  other  beast,"  Granby  shouted  back,  after  a  moment,  and  Laurence
nodded.

But there was no opportunity for a second pass: two more French dragons were coming at
them directly. Temeraire beat up quickly into the sky, the enemy beasts following; they had
seen his trick of maneuvering and were coming at a more cautious pace so as not to overrun
him.

"Double back, straight down and at them," Laurence called to Temeraire.

"Guns  ready,"  Riggs  shouted  behind  him,  as  Temeraire  drew  a  deep,  swelling  breath  and
neatly  turned  back  on  himself  in  mid-air.  No  longer  at  war  with  gravity,  he  plummeted
towards  the  French dragons,  roaring  furiously.  The  tremendous  volume  rattled  Laurence's
bones even in the face of the wind; the dragon in the lead recoiled, shrieking, and entangled
the head of the second in its wings.

Temeraire  flew  straight  down  between  them,  through  the  bitter  smoke  of  the  enemy
gunfire,  the  British  rifles  speaking  in  answer;  several  of  the  enemy  dead  were  already  cut
loose and falling. Temeraire lashed out and carved a gash along the second dragon's flank as
they went past; the spurting blood splashed Laurence's trousers, fever-hot against his skin.

They  were  away,  and  the  two  attackers  were  still struggling  to  right  themselves:  the  first
was  flying  very  badly  and  making  shrill  noises  of  pain.  Even  as  Laurence  glanced  behind
them  he  saw  the  dragon  being  turned  back  for  France:  with  their  advantage  in  numbers,
Bonaparte's aviators had no need to push their dragons past injury.

"Bravely done," Laurence called, unable to keep jubilation, pride out of his voice, as absurd
as it was to indulge in such sentiments at the height of so desperate a battle. Behind him, the
crew  cheered  wildly  as  the  second  of the  French  dragons  pulled  away  to  find  another
opponent,  not  daring  to  attempt  Temeraire  alone.  At  once  Temeraire  was  winging  back
towards their original target, head raised proudly: he was still unmarked.

Their formation-partner Messoria was at the transport: thirty years of experience made her
and Sutton wily, and they too had won past the line-of-battle, to continue the attack on the
already-weakened Pêcheur whom Temeraire had injured. A pair of the smaller Poux-de-Ciel
were defending the Pêcheur; together they were more than Messoria's weight, but she was
making  use  of  every  trick  she  had,  skillfully  baiting  them  forward,  trying  to  make  an
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opening  for  a  dash  at  the  Pêcheur.  More  smoke  was  pouring  from  the  transport's  deck:
Sutton's crew had evidently managed to land a few more bombs upon it.

Flank  to  larboard  ,  Sutton  signaled  from  Messoria's  back  as  they  approached.  Messoria
made  a  dash  at  the  two  defenders  to  keep  their  attention  on  her,  while  Temeraire  swept
forward  and  lashed  at the  Pêcheur's  side, his  claws  tearing  through  the  chain-mesh  with  a
hideous noise; dark blood spurted. Bellowing, instinctively trying to lash out at Temeraire in
defense, the Pêcheur  let go the beam with one foreleg; it was secured to the dragon's body
by  many  heavy  chains, but  even  so  the  transport  listed  visibly  down,  and  Laurence  could
hear the men inside yelling.

Temeraire  made  an  ungraceful  but  effective  fluttering  hop  and  avoided  the  strike,  still
closely  engaged;  he  tore  away  more  of  the  chain-mesh  and  clawed  the  Pêcheur  again.
"Prepare  volley,"  Riggs  bellowed,  and  the  riflemen  strafed  the  Pêcheur's  back  cruelly.
Laurence  saw  one  of  the  French  officers  taking  aim  at  Temeraire's  head;  he  fired  his  own
pistols, and with the second shot, the man went down clutching his leg.

"Sir, permission to board," Granby called forward.  The Pêcheur's topmen and riflemen had
suffered  heavy  losses;  its  back  was  largely  cleared,  and  the  opportunity was  ideal;  Granby
was  standing  at  the  ready  with  a  dozen  of  the  men,  all  of  them  with  swords  drawn  and
hands ready to unlock their carabiners.

Laurence  had  been  dreading  this  possibility  of  all  things;  it  was  only  with  deep  reluctance
that  he  gave  Temeraire  the  word  and  laid  them  alongside  the  French  dragon.  "Boarders
away,"  he  shouted,  waving Granby  his  permission  with  a  low,  sinking  feeling  in  his  belly;
nothing  could  have  been  more  unpleasant  than  to  watch  his  men  make  that  terrifying
unharnessed  leap  into  the  waiting  enemy's  hands,  while  he  himself  had  to  remain  at  his
station.

A terrible ululating cry in the near distance: Lily had just struck a French dragon full in the
face, and it was scrabbling and clawing at its own face, jerking in one direction and then the
next,  frenzied  with  the  pain.  Temeraire's  shoulders  hunched  with  sympathy  just  as  the
Pêcheur's  did;  Laurence  flinched  himself  from  the  intolerable  sound.  Then  the  screaming
stopped,  abruptly;  a  sickening  relief:  the  captain  had  crept  out  along  the  neck  and  put  a
bullet  into  his  own  dragon's  head  rather  than  see  the  creature  die  slowly  as  the  acid  ate
through the skull and into the brain. Many of his crew had leapt to other dragons for safety,
some  even  to  Lily's  back,  but  he  had  sacrificed  the  opportunity;  Laurence  saw  him  falling
alongside the tumbling dragon, and they plunged into the ocean together.

He wrenched himself from the horrible fascination of the sight; the bloody struggle aboard
the  Pêcheur's  back  was  going  well  for  them,  and  he  could  already  see  a  couple  of  the
midwingmen  working  on  the  chains  that  secured  the  transport  to  the  dragon.  But  the
Pêcheur's  distress  had  not  gone  unnoticed:  another  French  dragon  was  coming  towards
them  at  speed,  and  some  exceptionally  daring  men  were  climbing  out  of  the  holes  in  the
damaged transport, trying to make their way up the chains to the Pêcheur's back to provide
assistance. Even as Laurence  caught sight of them,  a couple  of them slipped on the sloping
deck  and  fell;  but  there  were  more  than  a  dozen  making  the  attempt,  and  if  they  were  to
reach  the  Pêcheur,  they  would  certainly  turn  the  tide  of  battle  against  Granby  and  the
boarders.

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Messoria cried out then, a long shrill wail. "Fall back," Laurence heard Sutton shouting. She
was  streaming  dark  blood  from  a  deep  cut  across  her  breastbone,  another  wound  on  her
flank already being packed with white bandage; she dropped and wheeled away, leaving the
two  Poux-de-Ciel  who  had  been  attacking  her  at  liberty.  Though  they  were  much  smaller
than  Temeraire,  he  could  not  engage  the  Pêcheur  while  under  attack  from  two  directions:
Laurence had either to call back the boarding party, or abandon them and hope they could
take the Pêcheur, securing its surrender by seizing its captain alive.

"Granby!"  Laurence  shouted;  the  lieutenant  looked around,  wiping  blood  from  a  cut  on  his
face,  and  nodded  as  soon  as  he  saw  their  position,  waving  them  off.  Laurence  touched
Temeraire's side and called to him; with a last parting slash across the Pêcheur's flank that
laid  white  bone  bare,  Temeraire  spun  away,  gaining  some  distance,  and  hovered  to  permit
them  to  survey.  The  two  smaller  French  dragons  did  not  pursue,  but  remained  hovering
close  to  the  Pêcheur;  they  did  not  dare  try  to  get  close  enough  to  send  men  over,  for
Temeraire could easily overwhelm them if they put themselves in so exposed a position.

Yet Temeraire himself was also in some danger. The riflemen and half the bellmen had gone
for the boarding party; well worth the risk, for if they took the Pêcheur, the transport could
not  very  well  continue  on;  if  it  did  not  fall  entirely,  at  least  the  three  remaining  dragons
would  likely  be  forced  to  turn  back  for  France.  But  that  meant  Temeraire  was  now
undermanned,  and  they  were  vulnerable  to  boarding  themselves:  they  could  not  risk
another close engagement.

The boarding party was making steady progress now against the last men resisting aboard
the Pêcheur's back; they would certainly outdistance the men from the transport. One of the
Poux-de-Ciel  dashed  in  and  tried  to  lie  alongside  the  Pêcheur;  "At  them,"  Laurence  called,
and  Temeraire  dived  instantly,  his  raking  claws  and  teeth  sending the  smaller  beast  into  a
hurried  retreat.  Laurence  had  to  send  Temeraire  winging  away  again,  but  it  had  been
enough. The French had lost their chance, and the Pêcheur was crying out in alarm, twisting
her head around: Granby was standing at the French dragon's neck with a pistol aimed at a
man's head-they had taken the captain.

At  Granby's  order,  the  chains  were  flung  off  the  Pêcheur,  and  they  turned  the  captured
French  dragon's  head  towards  Dover.  She  flew  unwillingly  and  slowly,  head  turning  back
every  few  moments  in  anxiety  for  her  captain;  but  she  went,  and  the  transport  was  left
hanging wildly askew, the three remaining dragons struggling desperately under its weight.

Laurence  had  little  opportunity  to  enjoy  the  triumph: two  fresh  dragons  came  diving  at
them:  a  Petit  Chevalier  considerably  larger  than  Temeraire  despite  the  name,  and  a
middleweight  Pêcheur-Couronné  who  dashed  to  seize  the  sagging  support  beam.  The  men
still  clinging  to  the  roof  threw  the  dangling  chains  to the  fresh  dragon's  crew,  and  in
moments the transport was righted and under way again.

The  Poux-de-Ciel  were  coming  at  them  again  from  opposite  sides,  and  the  Petit  Chevalier
was angling round from behind: their position was exposed, and growing rapidly hopeless.
"Withdraw,  Temeraire,"  Laurence  called,  bitter  though  the  order  was  to  give.  Temeraire
turned away at once, but the pursuing dragons drew nearer; he had been fighting hard now
for nearly half an hour, and he was tiring.

The  two  Poux-de-Ciel  were working  in  concert,  trying  to  herd  Temeraire  towards  the  big
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dragon, darting across his path of flight to slow him. The Petit Chevalier suddenly put on a
burst  of  speed,  and  as  he  drew  alongside  them  a  handful  of  men  leapt  over.  "  'Ware
boarders," Lieutenant Johns shouted in his hoarse baritone, and Temeraire looked round in
alarm. Fear gave him fresh energy to draw away from the pursuit; the Chevalier fell behind,
and after Temeraire lashed out and caught one of the Poux-de-Ciel, they too abandoned the
chase.

However,  there  were  eight  men  already  crossed  over  and  latched  on;  Laurence  grimly
reloaded  his  pistols,  thrusting  them  into  his  belt,  then  lengthened  his  carabiner  straps  and
stood.  The  five  topmen  under  Lieutenant  Johns  were  trying  to  hold  the  boarders  at  the
middle  of  Temeraire's  back.  Laurence  made  his  way  back  as  quickly  as  he  dared.  His  first
shot  went  wide,  his  second  took  a  Frenchman  directly  in  the  chest;  the  man  fell  coughing
blood and dangled limply from the harness.

Then it was hot, frantic sword-work, with the sky whipping past too quickly to see anything
but the men before him. A French lieutenant was standing in front of him; the man saw his
gold  bars  and  aimed  a  pistol  at  him;  Laurence  barely  heard  the  speech  the  man  tried  to
make  him, and  paid  no  attention,  but  knocked  the  gun  away  with  his  sword-arm  and
clubbed  the  Frenchman  on  the  temple  with  his  pistol-butt.  The  lieutenant  fell;  the  man
behind  him  lunged,  but  the  wind  of  their  passage  was  against  him,  and  the  sword-thrust
scarcely penetrated the leather coat Laurence wore.

Laurence  cut  the  man's  harness-straps  and  kicked  him  off  with  a  boot  to  the  middle,  then
looked  around  for  more  boarders;  but  by  good  fortune  the  others  were  all  dead  or
disarmed,  and  for  their  part  only  Challoner and  Wright  had  fallen,  except  for  Lieutenant
Johns,  who  was  hanging  from  his  carabiners,  blood  welling  up  furiously  from  a  pistol-wound in his chest; before they could try to tend him, he gave a final rattling gasp and also
was still.

Laurence bent down and closed Johns's dead, staring eyes, and hung his own sword back on
his  belt.  "Mr.  Martin,  take  command  of  the  top,  acting  lieutenant.  Get  these  bodies  cleared
away."

"Yes, sir," Martin said, panting; there was a bloody  gash across his cheek, and red splashes
of blood in his yellow hair. "Is your arm all right, Captain?"

Laurence looked; blood was seeping a little through the rent in the coat, but he could move
the arm easily, and he felt no weakness. "Only a scratch; I will tie it up directly."

He  clambered  over  a  body  and  back  to  his  station at  the  neck  and  latched  himself  in  tight,
then  pulled  loose  his  neckcloth  to  wrap  around  the  wound.  "Boarders  repelled,"  he  called,
and  the  nervous  tension  left  Temeraire's  shoulders.  Temeraire  had  drawn  away  from the
battlefield,  as  proper  when  boarded;  now  he  turned  back  around,  and  when  Laurence
looked up he could see the whole extent of the field of battle, where it was not obscured by
smoke and dragon wings.

All but three of the transports were under no sort of attack at all: the British dragons were
being heavily engaged by the French defenders. Lily was flying virtually alone; only Nitidus
remained with her, the others of their formation nowhere in Laurence's sight. He looked for
Maximus  and  saw  him  engaged  closely  with  their  old  enemy,  the  Grand  Chevalier;  the
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intervening  two  months  of  growth  had  brought  Maximus  closer  to  his  size,  and  the  two  of
them were tearing at each other in a terrible savagery.

At this distance the sound of the battle was muffled; instead he could hear a more fatal one
entirely:  the  crash  of  the  waves,  breaking  upon  the  foot  of  the  white  cliffs.  They  had  been
driven nearly to shore, and he could see the red-and-white coats of the soldiers formed up
on the ground. It was not yet midday.

Abruptly  a  phalanx  of  six  heavy-weight  dragons  broke  off  from  the  French  line  and  dived
towards  the  ground,  all  of  them  roaring  at  the  top  of  their  lungs  while  their  crews  threw
bombs down. The thin ranks of redcoats wavered as in a breeze, and the mass of militia in
the  center  almost  broke,  men  falling  to  their  knees  and  covering  their  heads,  though
scarcely  any  real  damage  was  done.  A  dozen  guns  were  fired  off,  wildly:  shots  wasted,
Laurence  thought  in  despair,  and  the  leading  transport  could  make  its  descent  almost
unmolested.

The  four  carriers  drew  closer  together,  flying  in  a  tight  knot  directly  above  the  transport,
and  let  the  keel  of  the  vessel  carve  a  resting place  in  the  ground with  its  own  momentum.
The British soldiers in the front ranks threw up their arms as an immense cloud of dirt burst
into  their  faces,  and  then  almost  at  once  half  of  them  fell  dead:  the  whole  front  of  the
transport  had  unhinged  like  a  barn  door,  and  a  volley  of  rifle-fire  erupted  from  inside  to
mow down the front lines.

A  shout  of  "Vive  l'Empereur!"  went  up  as  the  French  soldiers  poured  out  through  the
smoke:  more  than  a  thousand  men,  dragging  a  pair  of  eighteen-pounders  with  them;  the
men formed into lines to protect the guns as the artillery-men hurried to bring their charges
to  bear.  The  redcoats  fired  off  an  answering  volley,  and  a  few  moments  later  the  militia
managed  a  ragged  one  of  their  own,  but  the  Frenchmen  were  hardened  veterans;  though
dozens fell dead, the ranks shut tight to fill in their places, and the men held their ground.

The four dragons who had carried the transport were flinging off their chains. Free of their
burden,  they  rose  again  to  join  the  fight,  leaving  the  British  aerial  forces  even  more
outnumbered than before. In a moment another transport would land under this increased
protection, and its own carriers worsen the situation further.

Maximus roared furiously, clawed free of the Grand Chevalier and made a sudden desperate
stoop towards the next transport as it began to descend; no art or maneuver, he only flung
himself  down.  Two  smaller  dragons  tried  to  bar  his  way,  but  he  had  committed  his  full
weight to the dive; though he took raking blows from their claws and teeth, he bowled them
apart  by  sheer  force.  One  was  only  knocked  aside;  the  other, a  red-and-blue-barred
Honneur-d'Or,  tumbled  against  the  cliffs  with  one  wing  splayed  helplessly.  It  scrabbled  at
the ragged stone face, sending powdery chalk flying as it tried to get purchase and climb up
onto the cliff-top.

A light frigate of some twenty-four guns, with a shallow draft, had been daring to stay near
the coast; now she leapt at the chance: before the dragon could get up over the cliff's edge,
her  full  double-shotted  broadside  roared  out  like  thunder.  The  French  dragon  screamed
once  over  the  noise  and  fell,  broken;  the  unforgiving  surf  pounded  its  corpse  and  the
remnants of its crew upon the rocks.

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Above,  Maximus  had  landed  on  the  second  transport  and  was  clawing  at  the  chains;  his
weight  was  too  much  for  the  carriers  to  support,  but  they  were  struggling  valiantly,  and
with a great heave in unison they managed to get the transport over the edge of the cliff as
he finally broke the supports. The wooden shell fell twenty feet through the air and cracked
open like an egg, spilling men and guns everywhere, but the distance was not great enough.
Survivors  were  staggering  to  their  feet  almost  at  once,  and  they  were  safely  behind  their
own already-established line.

Maximus had landed heavily behind the British lines: his sides were steaming in the cold air,
blood  running  freely  from  a  dozen  wounds  and  more,  and  his  wings  were  drooped  to  the
ground:  he  struggled  to  beat  them  again,  to  get  aloft,  and  could  not,  but  fell  back  onto  his
haunches trembling in every limb.

Three or four thousand men already on the ground, and five guns; the British troops massed
here only twenty thousand, and most of those militia, who were plainly unwilling to charge
in  the  face  of  dragons  above:  many  men  were  already  trying  to  run.  If  the  French
commander had any sense at all, he would scarcely wait for another three or four transports
to launch his own charge, and if his men overran the gun emplacements they could turn the
artillery against the British dragons and clear the approaches completely.

"Laurence,"  Temeraire said, turning his head around, "two more of those vessels are going
in to land."

"Yes," Laurence said, low. "We must try and stop them; if they land, the battle on the ground
is lost."

Temeraire was quiet a moment, even as he turned his path of flight onto an angle that would
bring him ahead of the leading transport. Then he  said, "Laurence, we cannot succeed, can
we?"

The two forward lookouts, young ensigns, were listening also, so that Laurence had to speak
as much to them as to Temeraire. "Not forever, perhaps," Laurence said. "But we may yet do
enough  to  help  protect  England:  if  they  are  forced  to  land  one  at  a  time,  or  in  worse
positions, the militia may be able to hold them for some time."

Temeraire nodded, and Laurence thought he understood the unspoken truth: the battle was
lost, and even this was only a token attempt. "And we must still try, or we would be leaving
our  friends  to  fight  without  us,"  Temeraire  said.  "I  think  this  is  what  you  have  meant  by
duty, all along; I do understand, at least this much of it."

"Yes," Laurence said, his throat aching. They had outstripped the transports and were over
the ground now, with the militia a blurred sea of red below. Temeraire was swinging about
to face the first of the transports head-on; there was only just enough time for Laurence to
put his hand on Temeraire's neck, a silent communion  .

The  sight  of  land  was  putting  heart  into  the  French  dragons:  their  speed  was  increasing.
There  were  two  Pêcheurs  at  the  fore  of  the  transport;  roughly  equal  in  size,  and  neither
injured: Laurence left it to Temeraire to decide which would be his target, and reloaded his
own pistols.

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Temeraire  stopped  and  hovered  in  mid-air  before  the  oncoming  dragons,  spreading  his
wings as if to bar the way; his ruff raised instinctively up, the webbed skin translucent grey
in  the  sunlight.  A  slow,  deep  shudder  passed  along  his  length  as  he  drew  breath  and  his
sides  swelled  out  even  further  against  his  massive rib  cage,  making the  bones  stand  out in
relief:  there  was  a  strange  stretched-tight  quality  to  his  skin, so  that Laurence  began  to  be
alarmed:  he  could  feel  the  air  moving  beneath,  echoing,  resonating,  in  the  chambers  of
Temeraire's lungs.

A low reverberation seemed to build throughout Temeraire's flesh, like a drum-beat rolling.
"Temeraire,"  Laurence  called,  or  tried  to;  he  could  not  hear  himself  speak  at  all.  He  felt  a
single tremendous shudder travel forward along Temeraire's body,  all the gathered breath
caught  up  in  that  motion:  Temeraire  opened  his  jaws,  and  what  emerged  was  a  roar  that
was less sound than force, a terrible wave of noise so vast it seemed to distort the air before
him.

Laurence could not see for a moment through the brief haze; when his vision cleared, he at
first did not understand. Ahead of them, the transport was shattering as if beneath the force
of a full broadside, the light wood cracking like gunfire, men and cannon spilling out into the
broken surf far below at the foot of the cliffs. His jaw and ears were aching as if he had been
struck on the head, and Temeraire's body was still trembling beneath him.

"Laurence,  I  think  I  did  that,"  Temeraire  said;  he  sounded  more  shocked  than  pleased.
Laurence shared his sentiments: he could not immediately bring himself to speak.

The  four  dragons  were  still  attached  to  the  beams  of  the  ruined  transport,  and  the  fore
dragon  to  larboard  was  bleeding  from  its  nostrils,  choking  and crying  in  pain.  Hurrying  to
save the dragon, its crew cast off the chains, letting the fragment fall away, and it managed
the  last  quarter  mile  to  land  behind  the  French  lines.  The  captain  and  crew  leapt  down  at
once; the injured dragon was huddled and pawing at its head, moaning.

Behind them, a wild cheer was going up from the British ranks, and gunfire from the French:
the  soldiers  on  the  ground  were  shooting  at  Temeraire.  "Sir,  we  are  in  range  of  those
cannon, if they get them loaded," Martin said urgently.

Temeraire  heard  and  dashed  out  over  the  water,  for  the  moment  beyond  their  reach,  and
hovered  in  place.  The  French  advance  had  halted  for  a  moment,  several  of  the  defenders
milling  about,  wary  of  coming  closer  and  as  confused  as  Laurence  and  Temeraire  himself
were.  But  in  a  moment  the  French  captains  above  might  understand,  or  at  least  collect
themselves; they would make a concerted attack on Temeraire and bring him down. There
was only a little time left in which to make use of the surprise.

"Temeraire,"  he  called  urgently,  "fly  lower  and  try  if  you  can  striking  at  those  transports
from  below,  at  cliff-height.  Mr.  Turner,"  he  said,  turning  to  the  signal-ensign,  "give  those
ships  below  a  gun  and  show  them  the  signal  for  engage  the  enemy  more  closely; I  believe
they will take my meaning."

"I  will  try,"  Temeraire  said  uncertainly,  and  dived  lower,  gathering  himself  and  once  again
taking  that tremendous  swelling  breath.  Curving  back  upwards,  he  roared  once  again,  this
time at the underside of one of the transports still over the water. The distance was greater,
and the vessel did not wholly shatter, but great cracks opened in the planks of the hull; the
179
four dragons above were at once desperately occupied in keeping it from breaking open all
the rest of the way.

An  arrow-head  formation  of  French  dragons  came  diving  directly  towards  them,  some  six
heavyweight dragons behind the Grand Chevalier in the lead. Temeraire darted away and at
Laurence's  touch  dropped  lower  over  the  water,  where  half  a  dozen  frigates  and  three
ships-of-the-line lay in wait. As they swept past their long guns spoke in a rolling broadside,
one  gun  after  another,  scattering  the  French  dragons  into  shrill  confusion  as  they  tried  to
avoid the flying grapeshot and cannonballs.

"Now,  quickly,  the  next  one,"  Laurence  called  to  Temeraire,  though  the  order  was  scarcely
necessary:  Temeraire  had  already  doubled  back  upon  himself.  He  went  directly  at  the
underside of the next transport in line: the largest, flown by four heavyweight dragons, and
with ensigns of golden eagles flying from the deck.

"Those are his flags, are they not?" Temeraire called back. "Bonaparte is on there?"

"More  likely  one  of  his  Marshals,"  Laurence  shouted  over  the  wind,  but  he  felt  a  wild
excitement  anyway.  The  defenders  were  forming  up  again  at  a  higher  elevation,  ready  to
come  after  them  once  more;  but  Temeraire  beat  forward  with  ferocious  zeal  and
outdistanced  them.  This  larger  transport,  made  of  heavier  wood,  did  not  break  as  easily;
even so, the wood cracked like the sound of pistol-shot, splinters flying everywhere.

Temeraire  dived  down  to  attempt  a  second pass;  suddenly  Lily  was  flying  alongside  them,
and Obversaria on their other side, Lenton bellowing through his speaking-trumpet, "Go at
them,  just  go  at  them; we  will  take  care  of  those  damned  buggers-"  and  the  two  of  them
whirled to intercept the French defenders coming after Temeraire again.

But even as Temeraire began his climb, fresh signals went up from the damaged transport.
The  four  dragons  who  were carrying  it  together  wheeled  around  and  began  to  pull  away;
and across the battlefield all the transports still aloft gave way and turned, for the long and
weary flight back in retreat to France.

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Epilogue  



"LAURENCE, BE A good fellow and bring me a glass of wine," Jane Roland said, all but falling
into the chair beside his, without the slightest care for the ruin she was making of her skirts.
"Two  sets  is  more  than  enough  dancing  for  me;  I  am  not  getting  up  from  this  table  again
until I leave."

"Should you prefer to go at once?" he asked, rising. "I am happy to take you."

"If you mean I am so ungainly in a dress that you think I cannot walk a quarter of a mile over
even  ground  without  falling  down,  you  may  say  so,  and  then  I  will  knock  you  on  the  head
with this charming reticule," she said, with her deep laugh. "I have not got myself up in this
fashion to waste it by running away so soon. Excidium and I will be back at Dover in a week,
and  then  Lord  knows  how  long  it  will  be  before  I  have  another  chance to  see  a  ball,  much
less one supposedly in our honor."

"I  will  fetch  and  carry  with  you,  Laurence.  If  they  are  not  going  to  feed  us  anything  more
than these French tidbits, I am going to get more of them," Chenery said, getting up from his
chair as well.

"Hear, hear," Berkley said. "Bring the platter."

They were parted at the tables by the crush of the crowd, which was growing extreme as the
hour  drew  on;  London  society was  still  nearly  delirious  with  joy  over  the  joint  victories  at
Trafalgar  and Dover, and temporarily  as happy to enthuse over the aviators as it had been
to  disdain  them  before.  His  coat  and  bars  won  him  enough  smiles  and  gestures  of
precedence  that  Laurence  managed  to  acquire  the  glass  of  wine  without  great  difficulty.
Reluctantly he gave up the notion of taking a cigar for himself; it would have been the height
of rudeness to indulge while Jane and Harcourt could not. He took a second glass instead; he
imagined someone at the table would care for it.

Both his hands thus occupied, he was happily not forced to do more than bow slightly when
he  was  addressed  on  his  way  back  to  the  table.  "Captain  Laurence,"  Miss  Montagu  said,
smiling  with  a  great  deal  more  friendliness than  she  had  shown  him  in  his  parents'  house;
she looked disappointed to not be able to give him her hand. "How splendid it is to see you
again; it has been ages since we were all together at Wollaton Hall. How is dear Temeraire?
My heart was in my throat when I heard of the news; I was sure you should be in the thick of
the battle, and so of course it was."

"He is very well, thank you," Laurence said, as politely as he could manage; dear Temeraire
rankled extremely. But he was not going to be openly rude to a woman he had met as one of
his  parents'  guests,  even  if  his  father  had  not  yet  been  softened  by  society's  new
approbation; there was no sense in aggravating the quarrel and perhaps needlessly making
his mother's situation more difficult.

"May I present you to Lord Winsdale?" she said, turning to her companion. "This is Captain
Laurence; Lord Allendale's son, you know," she added, in an undertone that Laurence could
181
barely hear.

"Certainly, certainly," Winsdale said, offering a very slight nod, what he appeared to think a
piece  of  great  condescension.  "Quite  the  man  of  the hour,  Laurence;  you  are  to  be  highly
commended.  We  must  all  count  ourselves  fortunate  that  you  were  able  to  acquire  the
animal for England."

"You  are  too  kind  to  say  so,  Winsdale,"  Laurence  said,  deliberately  forward  to  the  same
degree. "You must excuse me; this wine will grow too warm shortly."

Miss  Montagu  could  hardly  miss  the  shortness  of  his  tone  now;  she  looked  angry  for  a
moment,  then  said,  with  great  sweetness,  "Of  course!  Perhaps  you  are  going  to  see  Miss
Galman, and can bear her my greetings? Oh, but how absurd of me; I must say Mrs. Woolvey,
now, and she is not in town any longer, is she?"

He regarded her with dislike; he wondered at the combination of perception and spite that
had  enabled  her  to  ferret  out  the  former  connection  between himself  and  Edith.  "No,  I
believe  she  and  her  husband  are  presently  touring  the  lake  country,"  he  said,  and  bowed
himself  away,  deeply  grateful  that  she  had  not  had  the  opportunity  of  surprising  him  with
the news.

His  mother  had  given  him  intelligence  of the  match  in  a  letter  sent  only  shortly  after  the
battle,  and  reaching  him  still  at  Dover;  she  had  written,  after  conveying  the  news  of  the
engagement,  "I  hope  what  I  write  does  not  give  you  too  much  pain;  I  know  you  have  long
admired  her,  and  indeed  I  have  always  considered  her  charming,  although  I  cannot  think
highly of her judgment in this matter."

The  true  blow  had  fallen  long  before  the  letter  came;  news  of  Edith's  marriage  to  another
man  could  not  be  unexpected,  and  he  had  been  able  to  reassure  his  mother  with  perfect
sincerity.  Indeed,  he  could  not  fault  Edith's  judgment:  in  retrospect  he  saw  how  very
disastrous the match would have been, on both sides; he could not have spared her so much
as  a  thought  for  the  last  nine  months  or  more.  There  was  no  reason  Woolvey  should  not
make  Edith  a  perfectly  good  husband.  He  himself  certainly  could  not  have,  and  he  thought
that he would truly be able to wish her happy, if he saw her again.

But he was still irritated by Miss Montagu's insinuations, and his face had evidently set into
somewhat forbidding lines; as he came back to the table, Jane took the glasses from him and
said,  "You  were  long  enough  about  it;  was  someone  pestering  you?  Do  not  pay  them  any
mind; take a turn outside, and see how Temeraire is enjoying himself: that will put you in a
better frame of mind."

The notion appealed immensely. "I think I will, if you will pardon me," he said, with a bow to
the company.

"Look in on Maximus for me, see if he wants any more dinner," Berkley called after him.

"And Lily!" Harcourt said, then looked guiltily about to see if any of the guests at the nearby
tables  had  overheard:  naturally  the  company  did  not  realize  that  the  women  with  the
aviators  were  themselves  captains,  and  assumed them  rather  wives,  though  Jane's  scarred
face had earned several startled looks, which she ignored with perfect ease.
182

Laurence left the table to their noisy and spirited discussion, making his way outdoors. The
ancient covert near London had long ago been encroached upon by the city and given up by
the Corps, save for use by couriers, but for the occasion it had been briefly reclaimed, and a
great pavilion established at the northern edge where the headquarters had once stood.

By the aviators' request, the musicians had been set at the very edge of the pavilion, where
the  dragons  could  gather  around  outside  to  listen.  The  musicians  had  been  at  first
somewhat  distressed  by  the  notion  and  inclined  to  edge  their  chairs  away,  but  as  the
evening  wore  on  and  the  dragons  proved  a  more  appreciative  audience  than  the  noisy
crowd  of  society,  their  fear  was  gradually  overcome  by  their  vanity.  Laurence  came  out  to
find  the  first  violinist  having  abandoned  the  orchestra  entirely  and  playing  snatches  of
various  airs  in  a  rather  didactic  manner  for  the  dragons,  demonstrating  the  work  of
different composers.

Maximus and Lily were among the interested group, listening with fascination and asking a
great  many  questions.  Laurence  saw  after  a  moment,  with  some  surprise,  that  Temeraire
was instead curled up in a small clearing beyond the others, off to the side and talking with
a gentleman whose face Laurence could not see.

He  skirted  the  group  and  approached,  calling  Temeraire's  name  softly;  the  man  turned,
hearing  him.  With  a start  of pleasant  surprise,  Laurence  recognized  Sir  Edward  Howe,  and
hurried forward to greet him.

"I am very happy indeed to see you, sir," Laurence  said, shaking his hand. "I had not heard
that you were back in London, although I made a point of inquiring after you when we first
arrived."

"I was in Ireland when the news reached me; I have only just come to London," Sir Edward
said,  and  Laurence  only  then  noticed  that  he  was  still  in  traveling-clothes,  and  his  boots
were  dust-stained.  "I  hope  you  will  forgive  me;  I  presumed  on  our  acquaintance  to  come
despite the lack of a formal invitation, in hopes of speaking with you at once. When I saw the
crowd inside, I thought it best to come  and stay with Temeraire until you  appeared rather
than try to seek you within."

"Indeed, I am in your debt for putting yourself to so much trouble," Laurence said. "I confess
I  have  been  very  anxious  to  speak  with  you  ever  since  discovering  Temeraire's  ability,
which I expect is the news which has brought you. All he can tell us is that the sensation is
the  same  as  that  of  roaring;  we  cannot  account  for  how  mere  sound  might  produce  so
extraordinary an effect, and none of us have ever heard of anything like."

"No,  you  would  not  have,"  Sir  Edward  said.  "Laurence-"  He  stopped  and  glanced  at  the
crowd of dragons between them and the pavilion, all now rumbling in approval at the close
of the first performance. "Might we speak somewhere in more privacy?"

"We  can  always  go  to  my  own  clearing,  if  you  would  like  to  be  somewhere  quieter,"
Temeraire  said.  "I  am happy  to  carry  you  both,  and  it  will  not  take  me  a  moment  to  fly
there."

"Perhaps  that  would  be  best,  if  you  have  no  objection?"  Sir  Edward  asked  Laurence,  and
183
Temeraire brought them over carefully in his foreclaws, setting them down in the deserted
clearing  before  settling  himself  comfortably.  "I  must  beg  your  pardon  for  putting  you  to
such trouble, and interrupting your evening," Sir Edward said.

"Sir, I assure you I am very happy to have it interrupted in this cause," Laurence said. "Pray
have no concern on that score." He was impatient to learn what Sir Edward might know; a
concern over Temeraire's safety from some possible agent of Napoleon's lingered with him,
perhaps even increased by the victory.

"I  will  keep  you  in  suspense  no  longer,"  Sir  Edward said.  "Although  I  do  not  in  the  least
pretend to understand the mechanical principles by which Temeraire's ability operates, the
effects  are  described  in  literature,  and  so  I  may  identify  it  for  you:  the  Chinese,  and  the
Japanese,  for  that  matter,  call  it by  the  name divine  wind.  This  tells  you  little  beyond  what
you  already  know  from  example,  I  am  afraid,  but  the  true  importance  lies  in  this:  it  is  an
ability unique to one breed and one breed alone-the Celestial."

The  name  hung  in  silence  for  long  moments;  Laurence  did  not  immediately  know  what  to
think.  Temeraire  looked  between  them  uncertainly.  "Is  that  very  different  from  an
Imperial?" he asked. "Are they not both Chinese breeds?"

"Very different indeed," Sir Edward answered him. "Imperial dragons are rare enough; but
the  Celestials  are  given  only  to  the  Emperors  themselves,  or  their  nearest  kin.  I  should  be
surprised if there were more than a few score in all the world."

"The  Emperors  themselves,"  Laurence  repeated,  in  wonder  and  slowly  growing
comprehension. "You will not have heard this, sir, but we took a French spy at the covert in
Dover  shortly  before  the  battle:  he  revealed  to  us  that  Temeraire's  egg  was  meant  not
merely for France, but for Bonaparte himself."

Sir  Edward nodded.  "I  am  not  surprised to  hear  as  much.  The  Senate  voted  Bonaparte  the
crown  in  May  before  last;  the  time  of  your  encounter  with  the  French  vessel  suggests  the
Chinese  gave  him  the  egg  as  soon  as  they  learned.  I  cannot  imagine  why  they  should  have
made him such a gift; they have given no other signs of allying themselves with France, but
the timing is too exact for any other explanation."

"And  if  they  had  some  notion  of  when  to  expect  the  hatching,  that  might  well  explain  the
mode of transport as well," Laurence finished for him. "Seven months from China to France,
around  Cape  Horn:  the  French  could  hardly  have  hoped  to  manage  it  except  with  a  fast
frigate, regardless of the risk."

"Laurence,"  Sir  Edward  said  with  pronounced  unhappiness,  "I  must  heartily  beg  your
forgiveness  for  having  so  misled  you.  I  cannot  even  plead  the  excuse  of  ignorance:  I  have
read  descriptions  of Celestials,  and  seen  many  drawings  of  them.  It  simply  never  occurred
to  me  that  the  ruff  and  tendrils  might  not  develop  save  with  maturity;  in  body  and  wing-shape they are identical to the Imperials."

"I beg you not to refine upon it, sir; no forgiveness is called for, in the least," Laurence said.
"It  could  scarcely  have  made  much  difference  to  his  training,  and  in  the  event,  we  have
learned  of  his  ability in  very  good  time." He  smiled  up  at  Temeraire,  and  stroked  the sleek
foreleg  beside  him,  while  Temeraire  snorted  in  happy  agreement.  "So,  my  dear,  you  are  a
184
Celestial; I should not be surprised at all. No wonder Bonaparte was in such a taking to lose
you."

"I  imagine  he  will  continue  angry,"  Sir  Edward  said.  "And what  is worse,  we  may  have  the
Chinese  on  our  necks  over  it,  when  they  learn;  they  are  prickly  to  an  extreme,  where  the
Emperor's standing may be said to be concerned, and I do not doubt they will be annoyed to
see a British serving officer in possession of their treasure."

"I  do  not  see  how  it  concerns  either  Napoleon  or  them  in  the  least,"  Temeraire  said,
bristling.  "I  am  no  longer  in  the  shell,  and  I  do  not care  if  Laurence  is  not  an  emperor. We
defeated Napoleon in battle and made him fly away even though he is one; I cannot see that
there is anything particularly nice about the title."

"Never  fret,  my  dear;  they  have  no  grounds  on  which  to  make  objection,"  Laurence  said.
"We did not take you from  a Chinese vessel, arguably a neutral, but from  a French man-of-war; they chose to hand your egg to our enemy, and you were wholly lawful prize."

"I am glad to hear it," Sir Edward said, though he looked doubtful. "They may still choose to
be  quarrelsome  about  it;  their  regard  for  the  laws  of  other  nations  is  very  small,  and
vanishes  entirely  where  it  conflicts  with  their  own  notions  of  proper  behavior.  Pray  have
you any notion of how they stand with respect to us?"

"They  could  make  a  pretty  loud  noise,  I  suppose,"  Laurence  said  uncertainly.  "I  know  they
have no navy to speak of, but one hears a great deal of their dragons. I will bring the news to
Admiral  Lenton,  though,  and  I  am  sure  he  will  know  better  than  I  do  how  to  meet  any
possible difference of opinion with them over the matter."

A rushing sound of wings came overhead, and the ground shook with impact: Maximus had
come  flying  back  to  his  own  clearing,  only  a  short  distance  away;  Laurence  could  see  his
red-gold  hide  visible  through  the  trees. Several  smaller  dragons  flew  past  overhead  also,
going  back  to  their  own  resting  places:  the  ball  was  evidently  breaking  up,  and  Laurence
realized from the low-burning lanterns that the hour had grown late.

"You must be tired from your journey," he said, turning back to Sir Edward. "I am once again
deeply obliged to you, sir, for bringing me this intelligence. May I ask you, as a further favor,
to join me for dinner tomorrow? I do not wish to keep you standing about in this cold, but I
confess I have a great many questions on the subject I should like to put to you, and I would
be happy to learn anything more you know of Celestials."

"It will be my pleasure," Sir Edward said, and bowed to both of them. "No, I thank you; I can
find my own way out," he said, when Laurence would have accompanied him. "I grew up in
London, and would often come wandering about here as a boy, dreaming of dragons; I dare
say  I  know  the  place  better  than  do  you,  if  you  have  only  been  here  a  few  days."  He  bade
them farewell, having arranged the appointment.

Laurence  had  meant  to  stay the  night  at  a  nearby hotel  where  Captain  Roland  had taken  a
room, but he found he was disinclined to leave Temeraire; instead he searched out some old
blankets in the stable being used by the ground crew, and made himself a somewhat dusty
nest  in  Temeraire's  arms,  his  coat  rolled  up  to  serve  as  a  pillow.  He  would  make  his
apologies in the morning; Jane would understand.
185

"Laurence, what is China like?" Temeraire asked idly, after they had settled down together,
his wings sheltering them from the wintry air.

"I have never been, my dear; only to India," he said. "But I understand it is very splendid; it
is  the  oldest  nation  in  the  world,  you  know;  it  even  predates  Rome.  And  certainly  their
dragons are the finest in the world," he added, and saw Temeraire preen with satisfaction.

"Well,  perhaps  we  may  visit,  when  the  war  is  over  and  we  have  won.  I  would  like  to  meet
another Celestial someday," Temeraire said. "But as for their sending me to Napoleon, that
is great nonsense; I am never going to let anyone take you from me."

"Nor I, my dear," Laurence said, smiling, despite all the complications which he knew might
arise  if  China  did  object.  In  his  heart  he  shared  the  simplicity  of  Temeraire's  view  of  the
matter,  and  he  fell  asleep  almost  at  once  in  the  security  of  the  slow,  deep  rushing  of
Temeraire's heartbeat, so very much like the endless sound of the sea.

186
Sketchbook  



From the Sketchbook of Sir Edward Howe

Selected extracts
From Observations on the Order Draconia in Europe,
with Notes on the Oriental Breeds
By Sir Edward Howe, F.R.S. 


LONDON 
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET
1796


Prefatory Note from the Author on the Measure of Dragon Weights
 

INCREDULITY  IS  THE  likely  response  of  most  of  my  readers  to  the  figures  which  appear
hereinafter  to  describe  the  weight  of  various  dragon  breeds,  as  being  wholly
disproportionate to those which have hitherto been reported. The estimate of 10 tonnes for
a  full-grown  Regal  Copper  is  commonly  known,  and  such  prodigious  bulk  must  already
strain  the  imagination;  what  then  must  the  reader  think,  when  I  report  this  a  vast
understatement and claim a figure closer to 30 tonnes, indeed reaching so high as 50 for the
largest of this breed?

For  explanation  I  must  direct the  reader  to  the  recent  work  of  M.  Cuvier.  In  his  latest
anatomical studies of the air-sacs which enable draconic flight, M. Cuvier has drawn in turn
upon the work of Mr. Cavendish and his successful isolation of those peculiar gases, lighter
than  the  general  composition  of  the  air,  which  fill  the  sacs,  and  has  correspondingly
proposed  a  new  system  of  measurement,  which  by  compensating  for the  weight  displaced
by the air-sacs provides a better degree of comparison between the weight of dragons and
that of other large land animals, lacking in these organs.

Those  who  have  never  seen  a  dragon  in  the  flesh,  and  most  particularly  never  one  of  the
very  largest  breeds,  in  whom  this  discrepancy  shall  appear  the  most  pronounced,  may  be
sceptical;  those  who  have  had the  opportunity,  as  I  have,  of  seeing  a  Regal  Copper  side  by
side  with  the  very  largest  of  the  Indian  elephants,  who  have  been  measured  at  some  6
tonnes  themselves,  will  I  hope  join  me  in  greatly  preferring  a  scheme  of  measurement
which  does  not  ridiculously  suggest  that  the  one,  who  could  devour  the  other  nearly  in  a
bite, should weigh less than twice as much.