His Majesty's Dragon(Temeraire #1)

Chapter 8  



EVEN  BEFORE  THE  pad  of  bandages  had  come  off,  Temeraire  began  to  make  plaintive
noises  about  wanting  to  be  bathed  again;  by  the  end  of  the  week,  the  cuts  were  scabbed
over  and  healing,  and  the  surgeons  gave  grudging  approval.  Having  rounded  up  what  he
already  thought  of  as  his  cadets,  Laurence  came  out  to  the  courtyard  to  take  the  waiting
Temeraire  down,  and  found  him  talking  with  the  female  Longwing  whose  formation  they
would be joining.

"Does it hurt when you spray?" Temeraire was asking inquisitively. Laurence could see that
Temeraire  was  inspecting the  pitted  bone  spurs  on  either  side  of  her  jaw,  evidently where
the acid was ejected.

"No,  I  do  not  feel  it  in  the  least,"  Lily  answered.  "The  spray  will  only  come  out  if  I  am
pointing my head down, so I do not splash myself, either; although of course you all must be
careful to avoid it when we are in formation."

The enormous wings were folded against her back, looking brown with the translucent folds
of  blue  and  orange  overlapping  each  other;  only  the  black-and-white  edges  stood  out
against  her  sides.  Her  eyes  were  slit-pupiled,  like  Temeraire's,  but  orange-yellow,  and  the
exposed  bone  spurs showing  on  either  side  of  her  jaw  gave  her  a  very  savage  appearance.
But  she  stood  with  perfect  patience  while  her ground  crew  scrambled  over  her,  polishing
and  cleaning  every  scrap  of  harness  with  great  attention;  Captain  Harcourt  was  walking
back and forth around her and inspecting the work.

Lily  looked  down  at  Laurence  as  he  came  to  Temeraire's  side;  her  alarming  eyes  gave  her
stare  a  baleful  quality,  although  she  was  only  curious.  "Are  you  Temeraire's  captain?
Catherine, shall we not go to the lake with them? I am not sure I want to go in the water, but
I would like to see."

"Go  to  the  lake?"  Captain  Harcourt  was drawn  from  her  inspection  of  the  harness  by  the
suggestion, and she stared at Laurence in open astonishment.

"Yes; I am taking Temeraire to bathe," Laurence said firmly. "Mr. Hollin, let us have the light
harness,  if  you  please,  and  see  if  we  cannot  rig  it  to  keep  the  straps  well  away  from  these
cuts."

Hollin was working on cleaning Levitas's harness; the little dragon had just come back from
eating. "You'll be going along?" he asked Levitas. "If so, sir, maybe there's no need to put any
gear on Temeraire?" he added to Laurence.

"Oh, I would like to," Levitas said, looking at Laurence hopefully, as if for permission.

"Thank  you,  Levitas,"  Laurence  said,  by  way  of  answer.  "That  will  be  an  excellent  solution;
gentlemen, Levitas will take you down again this time," he told the cadets; he had long since
given  up  trying  to  alter  his  address  on  Roland's  behalf;  as  she  seemed  perfectly  able  to
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count  herself  included  regardless,  it  was  easier  to  treat  her  just  as  the  others.  "Temeraire,
shall I ride with them, or will you carry me?"

"I will carry you, of course," Temeraire said.

Laurence  nodded.  "Mr.  Hollin,  are  you  otherwise  occupied?  Your  assistance  would  be
helpful, and Levitas can certainly manage you if Temeraire carries me."

"Why,  I  would  be  happy,  sir,  but  I  haven't  a  harness,"  Hollin  said,  eyeing  Levitas  with
interest. "I have never been up before; I mean, not outside the ground-crew rigging, that is. I
suppose I can cobble something together out of a spare, though, if you give me a moment."

While Hollin  was  working  on  rigging  himself  out,  Maximus  descended  into  the  courtyard,
shaking  the  ground  as  he  landed.  "Are  you  ready?"  he  asked  Temeraire,  looking  pleased;
Berkley was on his back, along with a couple of midwingmen.

"He  has  been  moaning  about it  so  long  I  have  given  in,"  Berkley  said,  in  answer  to
Laurence's  amused  and  questioning  look.  "Damned  foolish  idea  if  you  ask  me,  dragons
swimming;  great  nonsense."  He  thumped  Maximus's  shoulder  affectionately,  belying  his
words.

"We are coming also," Lily said; she and Captain Harcourt had held a quiet discussion while
the  rest  of  the  party  assembled,  and  now  she  lifted  Captain  Harcourt  aboard  onto  her
harness. Temeraire picked Laurence up carefully; despite the great talons Laurence had not
the  least  concern.  He  was  perfectly  comfortable  in  the  enclosure  of  the  curving  fingers;  he
could sit in the palm and be as protected as in a metal cage.

Once  down  by  the  shore,  only  Temeraire  went  directly  into  the  deep  water  and  began  to
swim. Maximus came tentatively into the shallows, but went no further than he could stand,
and Lily stood on the shore watching, nosing at the water but not going in. Levitas, as was
his habit, first wavered on the shore, and then dashed out all at once, splashing and flapping
wildly  with  his  eyes  tightly  shut  until  he  got  out  to  the  deeper  water  and  began  to  paddle
around enthusiastically.

"Do we need to go in with them?" one of Berkley's midwingmen asked, with a certain tone
of alarm.

"No,  do  not  even  contemplate  it,"  Laurence  said.  "This  lake  is  runoff  from  the  mountain
snows, and we would turn blue in a moment. But the swim will take away the worst of the
dirt and blood from their feeding, and the rest will be much easier to clean once they have
soaked a little."

"Hm," Lily said, listening to this, and very slowly crept out into the water.

"Are  you  quite  sure  it  is  not  too  cold  for  you,  dearest?"  Harcourt  called  after  her.  "I  have
never  heard  of  a  dragon  catching  an  ague;  I  suppose  it  is  out  of  the  question?"  she  said  to
Laurence and Berkley.

"No, cold just wakes 'em up, unless it is freezing weather; that they don't care for," Berkley
said, then raised his voice to bellow, "Maximus, you great coward, go in if you mean to; I am
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not going to stand here all day."

"I am not afraid," Maximus said indignantly, and lunged forward, sending out a great wave
that briefly swamped Levitas and washed over Temeraire. Levitas came up with a splutter,
and  Temeraire  snorted  and  ducked  his  head  into  the  water  to  splash  at  Maximus;  in  a
moment the two were engaged in a royal battle that bid fair to make the  lake look like the
Atlantic in a full gale.

Levitas came fluttering out of the lake, dripping cold water onto all of the waiting aviators.
Hollin  and  the  cadets  set  to  wiping  him  down,  and  the  little  dragon  said,  "Oh,  I  do  like
swimming so; thank you for letting me come again."

"I do not see why you cannot come as often as you like," Laurence said, glancing at Berkley
and  Harcourt  to  see  how  they  would  take  this;  neither  of  them  seemed  to  give  it  the
slightest thought, or to think his interference officious.

Lily  had  at  last  gone  in  deep  enough  to  be  mostly  submerged,  or  at  least  as  much  as  her
natural  buoyancy  would  allow.  She  stayed  well  away  from  the  splashing  pair  of  younger
dragons, and scrubbed at her own hide with the side of her head. She came out next, more
interested in being washed than in the swimming, and rumbled in pleasure as she pointed
out spots and had them carefully cleaned by Harcourt and the cadets.

Maximus  and  Temeraire  finally  had  enough,  and  came  out  to  be  wiped  down  as  well.
Maximus required all the exertions of Berkley and his two grown midwingmen. Working on
the delicate skin of Temeraire's face while the cadets scrambled all over his back, Laurence
could not hide a smile at Berkley's grumbling over his dragon's size.

He  stepped  back  from  his  work  a  moment  to  simply  enjoy  the  scene:  Temeraire  was
speaking  with  the  other dragons  freely,  his  eyes  bright  and  his  head  held  proudly,  with no
more  signs  of  self-doubt;  and even  if  this  strange,  mixed  company  was  not  anything
Laurence  would  once  have  sought  out  for  himself,  the  easy  camaraderie  warmed  him
through. He was conscious of having proven himself and having helped Temeraire to do the
same,  and of the deep satisfaction of having found a true  and worthy place, for the both of
them.

The  pleasure  lasted  until  their  return to  the  courtyard.  Rankin was  standing  by the  side  of
the courtyard, wearing evening dress and tapping the straps of his personal harness against
the  side  of  his  leg  in  very  obvious  irritation,  and  Levitas  gave  a  little  alarmed  hop  as  he
landed. "What do you mean by flying off like this?" Rankin said, not even waiting for Hollin
and the cadets to climb down. "When you are not feeding, you are to be here and waiting, do
you understand me? And you there, who told you that you could ride him?"

"Levitas  was  kind  enough  to  bear  them  to  oblige  me,  Captain  Rankin,"  Laurence  said,
stepping  out  of  Temeraire's  hand  and  speaking  sharply  to  draw  the  man's  attention  away.
"We have only been down at the lake, and a signal would have fetched us in a moment."

"I do not care to be running after signal-men to have my dragon available, Captain Laurence,
and I will thank you to mind your own beast and leave mine to me," Rankin said, very coldly.
"I suppose you are wet now?" he added to Levitas.

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"No, no; I am sure I am mostly dry, I was not in for very long at all, I promise," Levitas said,
hunching himself very small.

"Let us hope so," Rankin said. "Bend down, hurry up about it. And you lot are to stay away
from  him  from  now  on,"  he  told  the  cadets  as  he  climbed  up  in  their  place,  nearly
shouldering Hollin aside.

Laurence  stood  watching  Levitas  fly  away  with  Rankin  on  his  back;  Berkley  and  Captain
Harcourt were silent, as were the other dragons. Lily abruptly turned her head and made an
angry  spitting noise;  only  a  few  droplets  fell,  but  they  sizzled  and  smoked  upon  the  stone,
leaving deep black pockmarks.

"Lily!" Captain Harcourt said, but there was a quality of relief in her voice at the break in the
silence.  "Pray  bring  some  harness  oil,  Peck,"  she  said  to  one  of  her  ground  crewmen,
climbing  down;  she  poured  it  liberally  over  the  acid  droplets,  until  smoke  ceased  rising.
"There, cover it with some sand, and tomorrow it should be safe to wash."

Laurence  was  also  glad  for  the  small  distraction;  he  did  not  immediately  trust  himself  to
speak.  Temeraire  nuzzled  him  gently,  and  the  cadets  looked  at  him  in  worry.  "I  oughtn't
ever have suggested it, sir," Hollin said. "I'm sure I beg your pardon, and Captain Rankin's."

"Not  in  the  least,  Mr.  Hollin,"  Laurence  said;  he  could  hear  his  own  voice,  cold  and  very
stern,  and  he  tried  to  mitigate  the  effect  by  adding,  "You  have  done  nothing  wrong
whatsoever."

"I don't see any reason why we ought to stay away from Levitas," Roland said, low.

Laurence  did  not  hesitate  for  a  moment  in  his  response;  it  was  as  strong  and  automatic  as
his own helpless anger against Rankin. "Your superior officer has given you orders to do so,
Miss Roland; if that is not reason enough you are in the wrong service," he snapped. "Let me
never hear you make another such remark. Take these linens back to the laundry at once, if
you  please.  You  will  pardon  me,  gentlemen,"  he  added  to  the  others,  "I  will  go  for  a  walk
before supper."

Temeraire  was  too  large  to  successfully  creep  after  him,  so  the  dragon  resorted  instead  to
flying  past  and  waiting  for  him  in  the  first  small  clearing  along  his  path.  Laurence  had
thought  he  wanted  to  be  alone,  but  he  found  he  was  very  glad  to  come  into  the  dragon's
encircling  forearms  and  lean  upon  his  warm  bulk,  listening  to  the  almost  musical
thrumming  of  his  heart  and  the  steady  reverberation  of  his  breathing.  The  anger  slipped
away, but it left misery in its place. He would have desperately liked to call Rankin out.

"I  do  not  know  why  Levitas  endures  it;  even  if  he  is  small,  he  is  still  much  bigger  than
Rankin," Temeraire said eventually.

"Why  do  you  endure  it  when  I  ask  you  to  put  on  a  harness,  or  perform  some  dangerous
maneuver?" Laurence  said.  "It  is  his  duty,  and  it  is  his  habit.  From  the  shell  he  has  been
raised  to  obey,  and  has  suffered  such  treatment.  He  likely  does  not  contemplate  any
alternative."

"But  he  sees  you,  and  the  other  captains;  no  one  else  is  treated  so,"  Temeraire  said.  He
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flexed his claws; they dug furrows in the ground. "I do not obey you because it is a habit and
I cannot think for myself; I do it because I know you are worthy of being obeyed. You would
never  treat  me  unkindly,  and  you  would  not  ask  me  to  do  something  dangerous  or
unpleasant without cause."

"No, not without cause," Laurence said. "But we are in a hard service, my dear, and we must
sometimes  be  willing  to  bear  a  great  deal."  He  hesitated,  then  added  gently,  "I  have  been
meaning to speak to you about it, Temeraire: you must promise me in future not to place my
life above that of so many others. You must surely see that Victoriatus is far more necessary
to  the  Corps  than  I  could  ever  be,  even  if  there  were  not  his  crew  to  consider  also;  you
should never have contemplated risking their lives to save mine."

Temeraire  curled  more  closely  around  him.  "No,  Laurence,  I  cannot  promise  such  a  thing,"
he said. "I am sorry, but I will not lie to you: I could not have let you fall. You may value their
lives above  your  own;  I  cannot  do  so,  for  to  me  you  are  worth  far  more  than  all  of  them.  I
will not obey you in such a case, and as for duty, I do not care for the notion a great deal, the
more I see of it."

Laurence  was  not  sure  how  to  answer  this;  he  could  not  deny  that  he  was  touched  by  the
degree to which Temeraire valued him, yet it was also alarming to have the dragon express
so  plainly  that  he  would  follow  orders  or  not  as  his  own  judgment  decreed.  Laurence
trusted that judgment a great deal, but he felt again that he had made an inadequate effort
to teach Temeraire the value of discipline and duty. "I wish I knew how to explain it to you
properly," he said,  a little despairingly. "Perhaps I  will try and find you some books on the
subject."

"I  suppose,"  Temeraire  said,  for  once  dubious  about  reading  something.  "I  do  not  think
anything  would  persuade  me  to  behave  differently.  In  any  case,  I  would  much  rather  just
avoid it ever happening again. It was very dreadful, and I was afraid I might not be able to
catch you."

Laurence could smile at this. "On that point at least we are agreed, and I will gladly promise
you to do my best to avoid any repetition."

Roland came running to fetch him the next morning; he had slept by Temeraire's side again
in the little tent. "Celeritas wants you, sir," she said, and went back to the castle by his side,
once  he  had  put  his  neckcloth  back  on  and  restored  his  coat.  Temeraire  gave  him  a  sleepy
murmur of farewell, barely opening one eye before going back to sleep. As they walked, she
ventured, "Captain, are you still angry at me?"

"What?"  he  said,  blankly;  then  he  remembered,  and  said,  "No,  Roland;  I  am  not  angry with
you. You do understand why you were wrong to speak so, I hope."

"Yes," she said, and he was able to ignore that it came out a little doubtfully. "I did not speak
to Levitas; but I could not help seeing he does not look very well this morning."

Laurence  glanced  at  the  Winchester  as  they  walked  through  the  courtyard;  Levitas  was
curled in the back corner, far from the other dragons, and despite the early hour, he was not
sleeping  but  staring  dully  at  the  ground.  Laurence  looked  away;  there  was  nothing  to  be
done.
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"Run  along,  Roland,"  Celeritas  said,  when  she  had brought  Laurence  to  him.  "Captain,  I  am
sorry to have called you so early; first, is Temeraire well enough to resume his training, do
you think?"

"I believe so, sir; he is healing very quickly, and yesterday he flew down to the lake and back
with no difficulty," Laurence said.

"Good, good." Celeritas fell silent, and then he sighed. "Captain, I am obliged to order you not
to interfere with Levitas any further," he said.

Laurence felt hot color come to his face. So Rankin had complained of him. And yet it was no
more  than  he  deserved;  he  would  never  have brooked  such  officious  involvement  in  the
running of his ship, or his management of Temeraire. The thing had been wrong, whatever
justifications  he  had  given  himself,  and  anger  was  quickly  subsumed  in  shame.  "Sir,  I
apologize that you should have been put to the necessity of telling me so; I assure you it will
not arise again."

Celeritas  snorted;  having delivered  his  rebuke,  he  seemed  at  no  great pains  to  reinforce  it.
"Give me no assurances; you would lower yourself in my eyes if you could mean them with
real honesty," he said. "It is a great pity, and I am at fault as much as anyone. When I could
not tolerate him myself, Aerial Command thought he might do as a courier, and set him to a
Winchester; for his grandfather's sake I could not bring myself to speak against it, though I
knew better."

Comforting as it was to have the reprimand softened, Laurence was curious to understand
what Celeritas meant by not being able to tolerate him; surely Aerial Command would never
have proposed a fellow like Rankin as a handler to a dragon as extraordinary as the training
master.  "Did  you  know  his  grandfather  well?"  he  asked,  unable  to  resist  making  the
tentative inquiry.

"My first handler; his son also served with me," Celeritas said briefly, turning his head aside;
his head drooped. He recovered after a moment and added, "Well, I  had hopes for the boy,
but  at  his  mother's  insistence  he  was  not  raised  here,  and  his  family  gave  him  strange
notions; he ought never have been an aviator, much less a captain. But now he is, and while
Levitas  obeys  him,  so  he  remains.  I  cannot  allow  you  to  interfere.  You  can  imagine  what  it
would  mean  if  we  allowed  officers  to  meddle  with  one  another's  beasts:  lieutenants
desperate to be captains could hardly resist the temptation to seduce away any dragon who
was not blissfully happy, and we would have chaos."

Laurence bowed his head. "I understand perfectly, sir."

"In any case, I will be giving you more pressing matters to attend to, for today we will begin
your  integration  into  Lily's  formation,"  Celeritas  said.  "Pray  go  and  fetch  Temeraire;  the
others will be here shortly."

Walking back out, Laurence was thoughtful. He had known, of course, that the larger breeds
would  outlive  their  handlers,  when  they  were  not  killed  in  battle  together; he  had  not
considered  that this  would  leave  the  dragons  alone  and  without  a  partner  afterwards,  nor
how they or Aerial Command would manage the situation. Of course it was in Britain's best
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interests to have the dragon continue in service, with a new handler, but he  also could not
help but think the dragon himself would be happier so, with duties to occupy his thoughts
and keep him from the kind of sorrow that Celeritas obviously still felt.

Arriving  once  again  at  the  clearing,  Laurence  looked  at  the  sleeping  Temeraire  with
concern. Of course there were many years before them, and the fortunes of war might easily
make  all  such  questions  moot,  but  Temeraire's  future  happiness  was  his  responsibility,
heavier by far to him than any estate could have been, and some time soon he would have to
consider  what  provisions  he  could  make  to  ensure  it.  A  well-chosen  first  lieutenant,
perhaps, might step into his place, with Temeraire brought to the notion over the course of
several years.

"Temeraire,"  he  called,  stroking the  dragon's nose; Temeraire  opened  his  eyes  and  made  a
small rumble.

"I  am  awake;  are  we  flying  again  today?"  he  said,  yawning  enormously  up  at  the  sky  and
twitching his wings a little.

"Yes, my dear," Laurence said. "Come, we must get you back into your harness; I am sure Mr.
Hollin will have it ready for us."

The formation ordinarily flew in a wedge-shaped block that resembled nothing more than a
flock of migrating geese, with Lily at the head. The Yellow Reapers Messoria and Immortalis
filled  the  key  flanking  positions,  providing  the  protective  bulk  to  keep  Lily  from  close-quarters  attack,  while  the  ends  were  held  by  the  smaller  but  more  agile  Dulcia,  a  Grey
Copper, and a Pascal's Blue called Nitidus. All were full-grown, and all but Lily had previous
combat  experience;  they  had  been  especially  chosen  for  this  critical  formation  to  support
the young and inexperienced Longwing, and their captains and crews were rightly proud of
their skill.

Laurence had cause to be thankful for the endless labor and repetition of the last month and
a  half;  if  the  maneuvers  they  had  practiced  for  so  long  had  not  become  by  now  second
nature  for  Temeraire  and  Maximus,  they  could  never  have  kept  up  with  the  practiced,
effortless acrobatics of the others. The two larger dragons had been added into position so
as to form a back row behind Lily, closing the formation into a triangle shape. In battle, their
place  would  be  to  fend  off  any  attempts  to  break  up  the  formation,  to  defend  it  against
attack  from  other  heavy-combat-class  dragons,  and  to  carry  the  great  loads  of  bombs  that
their crews would drop below upon those targets that had already been weakened by Lily's
acid.

Laurence  was  very  glad  to  see  Temeraire  admitted  fully  to  the  company  of  the  other
dragons of the formation, although none of the older dragons had the energy for much play
outside their work. For the most part they lazed about during the scant idle hours, and only
observed  in  tolerant  amusement  while  Temeraire  and  Lily  and  Maximus  talked  and
occasionally went aloft for a game of aerial tag. For his own part, Laurence also felt a great
deal  more  welcome  among  the  other  aviators  now,  and  discovered  that  he  had  without
noticing  it  adjusted  to  the  informality  of  their  relations:  the  first  time  he  found  himself
addressing Captain Harcourt as simply "Harcourt," in a post-training discussion, he did not
even realize he had done so until after the words were out of his mouth.

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The captains and first lieutenants generally held such discussions of strategy and tactics at
dinnertime,  or  during  the  late  evenings  after  the  dragons  had  all  fallen  asleep.  Laurence's
opinion was rarely solicited in these conversations, but he did not take that greatly to heart:
though  he  was  quickly  coming  to grasp the  principles  of  aerial  warfare,  he  still  considered
himself  a  newcomer  to  the  art,  and  he  could  hardly  take  offense  at  the  aviators  doing  the
same.  Save  when  he  could  contribute  some  information  about  Temeraire's  particular
capabilities,  he  remained  quiet  and  made  no  attempt  to  insinuate  himself  into  the
conversations, rather listening for the purpose of educating himself.

The conversation did turn, from time to time, to the more general subject of the war; out of
the  way  as  they  were,  their  information  was  several  weeks  out  of  date,  and  speculation
irresistible. Laurence joined them one evening to find Sutton saying, "The French fleet could
be  bloody  well  anywhere."  Sutton  was  Messoria's  captain  and  the  senior  among  them,  a
veteran  of  four  wars,  and  somewhat  given  to  both  pessimism  and  colorful  language.  "Now
they  have  slipped  out  of  Toulon,  for  all  we  know  the  bastards  are  already  on  their  way
across  the  Channel;  I  wouldn't  be  surprised  to  find  the  army  of  invasion  on  our  doorstep
tomorrow."

Laurence could hardly let this pass. "You are mistaken, I assure you," he said, taking his seat.
"Villeneuve and his fleet have slipped out of Toulon, yes, but he is not engaged in any grand
operation, only in flight: Nelson has been in steady pursuit all along."

"Why,  have  you  heard  something,  Laurence?"  Chenery,  Dulcia's  captain,  asked,  looking  up
from  the  desultory  game  of  vingt-et-un  that  he  and  Little,  Immortalis's  captain,  were
playing.

"I have had some letters, yes; one from Captain Riley, of the Reliant," Laurence said. "He is
with Nelson's fleet: they have chased Villeneuve across the Atlantic, and he writes that Lord
Nelson has hopes of catching the French in the West Indies."

"Oh,  and  here  we are  without  any  idea  of  what  is  going  on!"  Chenery  said.  "For  Heaven's
sake, fetch it here and read it to us; you are not very good to be keeping this all to yourself
while we are all in the dark."

He  spoke  with  too  much  eagerness  for  Laurence  to  take  offense;  as  the  sentiments  were
repeated by the other captains, he sent a servant to his room to bring him the scant handful
of  letters  he  had  received  from  former  colleagues  who  knew  his  new  direction.  He  was
obliged to omit several passages commiserating with him on his change in situation, but he
managed to elide them gracefully  enough, and the  others listened with great hunger to his
bits and pieces of news.

"So Villeneuve has seventeen ships, to Nelson's twelve?" Sutton said. "I don't think much of
the blighter  for  running,  then.  What  if  he  turns  about?  Racing  across  the  Atlantic  like  this,
Nelson  cannot  have  any  aerial  force;  no  transport  could  keep  up  the  pace,  and  we  do  not
have any dragons stationed in the West Indies."

"I  dare  say  the  fleet  could  take  him  with  fewer  ships  still,"  Laurence  said,  with  spirit.  "You
are to remember the Nile, sir, and before that the battle of Cape St. Vincent: we have often
been at some numerical disadvantage and still carried the day; and Lord Nelson himself has
never lost  a  fleet  action."  With  some  difficulty,  he  restrained  himself  and  stopped  here;  he
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did not wish to seem an enthusiast.

The others smiled, but not in any patronizing manner, and Little said in his quiet way, "We
must hope he can bring them to account, then. The sad fact of the matter is, while the French
fleet  remains  in  any  way  intact,  we  are  in  deadly  danger.  The  Navy  cannot  always  be
catching  them,  and  Napoleon  only  need  hold  the  Channel  for  two  days,  perhaps  three,  to
ferry his army across."

This was a lowering thought, and they all felt its weight. Berkley at last broke the resulting
silence with a grunt and took up  his glass to drain it. "You  can all sit about glooming; I am
for bed," he said. "We have enough to do without borrowing trouble."

"And I must be up early," Harcourt said, sitting up. "Celeritas wants Lily to practice spraying
upon targets in the morning, before maneuvers."

"Yes,  we  all  ought  to  get  to  sleep,"  Sutton  said.  "We  can  hardly  do  better  than  to  get  this
formation  into  order, in  any  case;  if  any  chance  of  flattening  Bonaparte's  fleet  offers,  you
may be sure that one of the Longwing formations will be wanted, either ours or one of the
two at Dover."

The  party  broke  up,  and  Laurence  climbed  to  his  tower  room  thoughtfully.  A  Longwing
could  spit  with  tremendous  accuracy;  in  their  first  day  of  training  Laurence  had  seen  Lily
destroy  targets  with  a  single  quick  spurt  from  nearly  four  hundred  feet  in  the  air,  and  no
cannon  from  the  ground  could  ever  fire  so far  straight  up.  Pepper  guns  might  hamper  her,
but  her  only  real  danger  would  come  from  aloft:  she  would  be  the  target  of  every  enemy
dragon  in  the  air,  and  the  formation  as  a  whole  was  designed  to  protect  her.  The  group
would  be  a  formidable  presence  upon  any  battlefield,  Laurence could  easily  see;  he  would
not  have  liked  to  be  beneath  them  in  a  ship,  and  the  prospect  of  doing  so  much  good  for
England gave him fresh interest for the work.

Unfortunately, as the weeks wore on, he saw plainly that Temeraire found it harder going to
keep  up  his  own  interest.  The  first  requirement  of  formation  flying  was  precision,  and
holding one's position relative to the others. Now that Temeraire was flying with the group,
he  was  limited  by  the  others,  and  with  speed  and  maneuverability  so  far  beyond  the
general,  he  soon  began  to  feel  the  constraint.  One  afternoon,  Laurence  overheard  him
asking, "Do you ever do more interesting flying?" to Messoria; she was an experienced older
dragon of thirty years, with a great many battle-scars to render her an object of admiration.

She  snorted  indulgently  at  him.  "Interesting  is  not  very  good;  it  is  hard  to  remember
interesting in the middle of a battle," she said. "You will get used to it, never fear."

Temeraire  sighed  and  went  back  to  work  without  anything  more  like  a  complaint;  but
though he never failed to answer a request or to put forth an effort, he was not enthusiastic,
and  Laurence  could  not  help  worrying.  He  did  his  best  to  console  Temeraire  and  provide
him  with  other  subjects  to  engage  his  interest; they  continued  their  practice  of  reading
together,  and  Temeraire  listened  with  great  interest  to  every  mathematical  or  scientific
article that Laurence could find. He followed them all without difficulty, and Laurence found
himself  in  the  strange  position of  having  Temeraire  explain  to  him  the  material  which  he
was reading aloud.

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Even  more  usefully,  perhaps  a  week  after  they  had  resumed  training  a  parcel  arrived  for
them  in  the  mail  from  Sir  Edward  Howe.  It  was  addressed  somewhat  whimsically  to
Temeraire, who  was  delighted  to  receive  a  piece  of  mail  of  his  very  own;  Laurence
unwrapped  it  for  him  and  found  within  a  fine  volume  of  dragon  stories  from  the  Orient,
translated by Sir Edward himself, and just published.

Temeraire  dictated  a  very  graceful  note  of thanks,  to  which  Laurence  added  his  own,  and
the Oriental tales became the set conclusion to their days: whatever other reading they did,
they would finish with one of the stories. Even after they had read them all, Temeraire was
perfectly happy to begin over again, or occasionally request a particular favorite, such as the
story  of  the  Yellow  Emperor  of  China,  the  first  Celestial  dragon,  on  whose  advice  the  Han
dynasty  had  been  founded;  or  the  Japanese  dragon  Raiden,  who  had  driven  the  armada  of
Kublai  Khan  away  from  the  island  nation.  He  particularly  liked  the  last  because  of  the
parallel with Britain, menaced by Napoleon's Grande Armée across the Channel.

He  listened  also  with  a  wistful  air  to  the  story  of  Xiao  Sheng,  the  emperor's  minister,  who
swallowed a pearl from a dragon's treasury and became a dragon himself; Laurence did not
understand his attitude, until Temeraire said, "I do not suppose that is real? There is no way
that people can become dragons, or the reverse?"

"No,  I  am  afraid  not,"  Laurence  said  slowly;  the  notion  that  Temeraire  might  have  liked  to
make a change was distressing to him, suggesting as it did a very deep unhappiness.

But Temeraire  only sighed and said, "Oh, well; I thought as much. It would have been nice,
though,  to  be  able to  read  and  write  for  myself  when  I  liked,  and  also  then  you  could  fly
alongside me."

Laurence laughed, reassured. "I am sorry indeed we cannot have such a pleasure; but even if
it were possible, it does not sound a very comfortable process from the story, nor one which
could be reversed."

"No,  and  I  would  not  like  to  give  up  flying  at  all,  not  even  for  reading,"  Temeraire  said.
"Besides, it is very pleasant to have you read to me; may we have another one? Perhaps the
story  about  the  dragon  who  made  it  rain,  during  the  drought,  by  carrying  water  from  the
ocean?"

The  stories  were  obviously  myths,  but  Sir  Edward's  translation  included  a  great  many
annotations,  describing  the  realistic  basis  for  the  legends  according  to  the  best  modern
knowledge.  Laurence  suspected  even  these  might  be  exaggerated  slightly;  Sir  Edward  was
very  clearly  enthusiastic  towards  Oriental  dragons.  But  they  served  their  purpose
admirably: the fantastic stories made Temeraire only more determined to prove his similar
merit, and gave him better heart for the training.

The  book  also  proved  useful  for  another  reason,  for  only  a  little  while  after  its  arrival,
Temeraire's  appearance  diverged  yet  again  from  the  other  dragons,  as  he  began  to  sprout
thin tendrils round his jaws, and a ruff of delicate webbing stretched between flexible horns
around  his  face,  almost  like  a  frill.  It  gave  him  a  dramatic,  serious  look,  not  at  all
unbecoming,  but  there  was  no  denying  he  looked  very  different  from  the  others,  and  if  it
had  not  been  for  the  lovely  frontispiece  of  Sir  Edward's  book,  an  engraving  of  the  Yellow
Emperor which showed that great dragon in possession of the same sort of ruff, Temeraire
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would certainly have been unhappy at being yet again marked apart from his fellows.

He  was  still  anxious  at  the  change  in  his  looks,  and  shortly  after  the  ruff  had  come  in,
Laurence  found  him  studying  his  reflection  in  the  surface  of  the  lake,  turning  his  head this
way and that and rolling his eyes back in his head to see himself and the ruff from different
angles.

"Come  now,  you  are  like  to  make  everyone  think  you  are  a  vain  creature,"  Laurence  said,
reaching  up  to  pet  the  waving  tendrils.  "Truly,  they  look  very  well;  pray  give  them  no
thought."

Temeraire  made  a  small,  startled  noise,  and  leaned  in  towards the  stroking.  "That  feels
strange," he said.

"Am I hurting you? Are they so tender?" Laurence stopped at once, anxious. Though he had
not  said  as  much  to  Temeraire,  he  had  noticed  from  reading  the  stories  that  the  Chinese
dragons,  at  least  the  Imperials  and  Celestials,  did  not  seem  to  do  a  great  deal  of  fighting,
except  in  moments  of  the  greatest  crisis  for  their  nations.  They  seemed  more  famed  for
beauty  and  wisdom,  and  if  the  Chinese  bred  for  such  qualities  first,  it  would  not  be
impossible  that  the  tendrils  might  be  of  a  sensitivity  which  could  make  them  a  point  of
vulnerability in battle.

Temeraire nudged him a little and said, "No, they do not hurt at all. Pray do it again?" When
Laurence  very  carefully  resumed  the  stroking,  Temeraire  made  an  odd  purring  sort  of
sound,  and  abruptly  shivered  all  over.  "I  think  I  quite  like  it,"  he  added,  his  eyes  growing
unfocused and heavy-lidded.

Laurence  snatched  his  hand  away.  "Oh,  Lord,"  he  said,  glancing  around  in  deep
embarrassment; thankfully no other dragons or aviators were about at the moment. "I had
better  speak  to  Celeritas  at  once;  I  think  you  are  coming  into  season  for  the  first  time.  I
ought  to  have  realized,  when  they  sprouted;  it  must  mean  you  have  reached  your  full
growth."

Temeraire blinked. "Oh, very well; but must you stop?" he asked plaintively.

"It  is  excellent  news,"  Celeritas  said,  when  Laurence  had  conveyed  this  intelligence.  "We
cannot breed him yet, for he cannot be spared for so long, but I am very pleased regardless:
I am always anxious when sending an immature dragon into battle. And I will send word to
the breeders; they will think of the best potential crosses to make. The addition of Imperial
blood to our lines can only be of the greatest benefit."

"Is there anything-some means of relief-" Laurence stopped, not quite sure how to word the
question in a way which would not seem outrageous.

"We will have to see, but I think you need not worry," Celeritas said dryly. "We are not like
horses or dogs; we can control ourselves at least as well as you humans."

Laurence  was  relieved;  he  had  feared  that  Temeraire  might  find  it  difficult  now  to  be  in
close company with Lily or Messoria, or the other female dragons, though he rather thought
Dulcia was too small to be a partner of interest to him. But he expressed no interest of that
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sort in them; Laurence ventured to ask him, once or twice, in a hinting way, and Temeraire
seemed mostly baffled at the notion.

Nevertheless  there  were  some  changes,  which  became  perceptible  by  degrees.  Laurence
first noticed  that  Temeraire  was  more  often  awake  in  the  mornings  without  having  to  be
roused; his appetites changed also, and he ate less frequently, though in greater quantities,
and might voluntarily go so long as two days without eating at all.

Laurence  was  somewhat  concerned  that  Temeraire  was  starving  himself  to  avoid  the
unpleasantness of not being given precedence, or the sideways looks of the other dragons at
his new appearance. However, his fears were relieved in dramatic fashion, scarcely a month
after the ruff had developed. He had just landed Temeraire at the feeding grounds and stood
off  from  the  mass  of  assembled  dragons  to  observe,  when  Lily  and  Maximus  were  called
onto  the  grounds.  But  on  this  occasion,  another  dragon  was  called  down  with  them: a
newcomer of a breed Laurence had never before seen, its wings patterned like marble, veins
of orange and yellow and brown shot through a nearly translucent ivory, and very large, but
not bigger than Temeraire.

The  other  dragons  of  the  covert  gave  way  and  watched  them  go  down,  but  Temeraire
unexpectedly  made  a  low  rumbling  noise,  not  quite  a  growl,  from  deep  in  his  throat;  very
like a croaking bullfrog if a frog of some twelve tons might be imagined, and he leapt down
after them uninvited.

Laurence  could not  see  the  faces  of  the  herders,  so  far  below,  but  they  milled  about  the
fences as if taken aback; it was quite clear however that none of them liked to try and shoo
Temeraire away, not surprising considering that he was already up to his chops in the gore
of his first cow. Lily and Maximus made no objection, the strange dragon of course did not
even  notice  it  as  a  change,  and  after  a  moment  the  herders  released  half  a  dozen  more
beasts into the grounds, that all four dragons might eat their fill.

"He  is of  a  splendid  conformity;  he  is  yours,  is  he  not?"  Laurence  turned  to  find  himself
addressed  by  a  stranger,  wearing  thick  woolen  trousers  and  a  plain  civilian's  coat,  both
marked  with dragon-scale  impressions:  he  was  certainly  an  aviator  and  an  officer  besides,
his  carriage  and  voice  gentleman-like,  but  he  spoke  with  a  heavy  French  accent,  and
Laurence was puzzled momentarily by his presence.

The  Frenchman  was  not  alone;  Sutton  was  keeping  him  company,  and  now  he  stepped
forward to make the introductions: the Frenchman's name was Choiseul.

"I have come from Austria only last night, with Praecursoris," Choiseul said, gesturing at the
marbled  dragon  below,  who  was  daintily  taking  another  sheep,  neatly  avoiding  the  blood
spurting from Maximus's third victim.

"He has some good news for us, though he makes a long face over it," Sutton said. "Austria is
mobilizing; she is coming into the war with Bonaparte again, and I dare say he will have to
turn his attention to the Rhine instead of the Channel, soon enough."

Choiseul said, "I hope I do not discourage your hopes in any way; I would be desolate to give
you unnecessary concern. But I cannot say that I have great confidence in their chances. I do
not wish to sound ungrateful; the Austrian corps was generous enough to grant myself and
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Praecursoris  asylum  during  the  Revolution,  and  I  am  most  deeply  in  their  debt.  But  the
archdukes  are  fools,  and  they  will  not  listen  to  the  few  generals  of  competence  they  have.
Archduke Ferdinand to fight the genius of Marengo and Egypt ! It is an absurdity."

"I  cannot say  that Marengo  was  so  brilliantly  run  as  all  that,"  Sutton said.  "If  the  Austrians
had only brought up their second aerial division from Verona in time, we would have had a
very different ending; it was as much luck as anything."

Laurence  did  not  feel  himself  sufficiently  in  command  of  land  tactics  to  offer  his  own
comment, but this seemed perilously close to bravado; in any case, he had a healthy respect
for luck, and Bonaparte seemed to attract a greater share than most generals.

For his part, Choiseul smiled briefly and did not contradict, saying only, "Perhaps my fears
are excessive; still, they have brought us here, for  our position in a defeated Austria would
be untenable. There are many men in my former service who are very savage against me for
having  taken  so  valuable  a  dragon  as  Praecursoris  away,"  he  explained,  in  answer  to
Laurence's  look  of  inquiry.  "Friends  warned  me  that  Bonaparte  means  to  demand  our
surrender  as  part  of  any  terms  that  might  be  made, and  to  place  us  under  a  charge  of
treason. So again we have had to flee, and now we cast ourselves upon your generosity."

He  spoke  with  an  easy,  pleasant  manner,  but  there  were  deep  lines  around  his  eyes,  and
they were unhappy; Laurence looked at him with sympathy. He had known French officers
of  his  sort  before,  naval  men  who  had  fled  France  after  the  Revolution,  eating  their  hearts
out  on  England's  shores;  their  position  was  a  sad  and  bitter  one:  worse,  he  felt,  than  the
merely dispossessed noblemen who had fled to save their lives, for they felt all the pain of
sitting  idle  while  their  nation  was  at  war,  and  every  victory  celebrated  in  England  was  a
wrenching loss for their own service.

"Oh  yes,  it  is  uncommon  generous  of  us,  taking  in  a  Chanson-de-Guerre  like  this,"  Sutton
said, with heavy but well-meant raillery. "After all, we have so very many heavyweights we
can hardly squeeze in another, particularly so fine and well-trained a veteran."

Choiseul bowed slightly in acknowledgment and looked down at his dragon with affection.
"I  gladly  accept  the  compliment  for  Praecursoris,  but  you  have  already  many  fine  beasts
here;  that  Regal  Copper  looks  prodigious,  and  I  see  from  his  horns  he  is  not  yet  at  his  full
growth. And your dragon, Captain Laurence, surely he is some new breed? I have not seen
his like."

"No, nor are you likely to again," Sutton said, "unless you go halfway round the world."

"He  is  an  Imperial,  sir,  a  Chinese  breed,"  Laurence said,  torn  between  not  wishing  to show
off  and  an  undeniable  pleasure  in  doing  just  so.  Choiseul's  astonished  reaction,  though
decently  restrained,  was  highly  satisfying,  but  then  Laurence  was  obliged  to  explain  the
circumstances  of  Temeraire's  acquisition,  and  he  could  not  help  but  feel  somewhat
awkward  when  relating  the  triumphant  capture  of  a  French  ship  and  a  French  egg  to  a
Frenchman.

But  Choiseul  was  clearly  used  to  the  situation  and  heard  the  story  with  at  least  the
appearance  of  complaisance,  though  he  offered  no  remark.  Though  Sutton  was  inclined  to
dwell on the French loss a little smugly, Laurence hurried on to ask what Choiseul would be
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doing in the covert.

"I understand there is a formation in training, and that Praecursoris and I are to join in the
maneuvers:  some  notion  I  believe  of  our  serving  as  a  relief,  when  circumstances  allow,"
Choiseul  said.  "Celeritas  hopes  also  that  Praecursoris  may  be  of  some  assistance  in  the
training of your heaviest beasts for formation flying: we have always flown in formation, for
close on fourteen years now."

A thundering rush of wings interrupted their conversation as the other dragons were called
to  the  hunting  grounds,  the  first  four  having  finished  their  meal,  and  Temeraire  and
Praecursoris  both  made  an  attempt  to  land  at  the  same  convenient  outcropping  nearby:
Laurence was startled to see Temeraire bare his teeth and flare his ruff at the older dragon.
"I  beg  you  to  excuse  me,"  he  said  hastily,  and  hurried  to  find  another  place,  calling
Temeraire, and with relief saw him wheel away and follow.

"I would have come to you," Temeraire said, a little reproachfully, casting a narrowed eye at
Praecursoris,  who  was  now  occupying  the  contested  perch  and  speaking  quietly  with
Choiseul.

"They are guests here; it is only courteous to give way," Laurence said. "I had no notion that
you were so fierce in matters of precedence, my dear."

Temeraire furrowed the ground before him with his claws. "He is not any bigger than I am,"
he  said.  "And  he  is  not  a  Longwing,  so  he  does  not  spit  poison,  and  there  are  no  fire-breathing dragons in Britain; I do not see why he is any better than I am."

"He is not one jot better, not at all," Laurence said, stroking the tensed foreleg. "Precedence
is  merely  a  matter  of  formality,  and  you  are  perfectly  within  your  rights  to  eat  with  the
others. Pray do not be quarrelsome, however; they have fled the Continent, to be away from
Bonaparte."

"Oh?"  Temeraire's  ruff  smoothed  out  gradually  against  his  neck,  and  he  looked  at  the
strange dragon with  more  interest.  "But they  are  speaking French;  if they  are  French,  why
are they afraid of Bonaparte?"

"They are royalists, loyal to the Bourbon kings," Laurence said. "I dare say they left after the
Jacobins  put  the  King  to death;  it was  very  dreadful  in  France  for  a  while,  I  am  afraid,  and
though Bonaparte is at least not chopping people's heads off anymore, he is scarcely much
better in their eyes; I assure you they despise him worse than we do."

"Well,  I  am  sorry  if  I  was  rude,"  Temeraire  murmured,  and  straightened  up  to  address
Praecursoris.  "Veuillez  m'excuser,  si  je  vous  ai  dérangé,"  he  said,  to  Laurence's
astonishment.

Praecursoris  turned  around.  "Mais  non,  pas du  tout,"  he  answered  mildly,  and  inclined  his
head. "Permettez que je vous présente Choiseul, mon capitaine," he added.

"Et  voici  Laurence,  le  mien,"  Temeraire  said.  "Laurence,  pray  bow,"  he  added,  in  an
undertone, when Laurence only stood staring.

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Laurence at once made his leg; he of course could not interrupt the formal exchange, but he
was  bursting with  curiosity,  and  as  soon  as they  were  winging their  way down to  the  lake
for Temeraire's bath, he demanded, "But how on earth do you come to speak French?"

Temeraire turned his head about. "What do you mean? Is it very unusual to speak French? It
was not at all difficult."

"Well, it is prodigious strange; so far as I know you have never heard a word of it: certainly
not  from  me,  for  I  am  lucky  if  I  can  say  my  bonjours  without  embarrassing  myself,"
Laurence said.

"I  am  not  surprised  that  he  can  speak  French,"  Celeritas  said,  when  Laurence  asked  him
later that afternoon, at the training grounds, "but only that you should not have heard him
do so before; do you mean to say Temeraire did not speak French when he first cracked the
shell? He spoke English directly?"

"Why, yes," Laurence said. "I confess we were surprised, but only to hear him speak at all so
soon. Is it unusual?"

"That  he  spoke,  no;  we  learn  language  through  the  shell,"  Celeritas  said.  "And  as  he  was
aboard a French vessel in the months before his hatching, I am not surprised at all that he
should  know  that  tongue.  I  am  far  more  surprised  that  he  was  able  to  speak  English  after
only a week aboard. Fluently?"

"From  the  first  moment,"  Laurence  said,  pleased  at  this  fresh  evidence  of  Temeraire's
unique gifts. "You have been forever surprising me, my dear," he added, patting Temeraire's
neck, making him preen with satisfaction.

But  Temeraire  continued  somewhat  more  prickly,  particularly  where  Praecursoris  was
concerned:  no  open  animosity,  nor  any  particular  hostility,  but  he  was  clearly  anxious  to
show himself an equal to the older dragon, particularly once Celeritas began to include the
Chanson-de-Guerre in their maneuvers.

Praecursoris  was  not,  Laurence  was  secretly  glad  to  see,  as  fluid  or  graceful  in  the  air  as
Temeraire;  but  his  experience  and  that  of  his  captain  counted  for  a  great  deal,  and  they
knew  and  had  mastered  many  of  the  formation  maneuvers  already.  Temeraire  grew  very
intent on his work; Laurence sometimes came out from dinner and found his dragon flying
alone  over  the  lake,  practicing  the  maneuvers  he  had  once  found  so  boring,  and  on  more
than  one  occasion  he  even  asked  to  sacrifice  part  of  their  reading  time  to  additional  work.
He would have worked himself to exhaustion daily if Laurence had not restrained him.

At  last  Laurence  went  to  Celeritas  to  ask  his  advice,  hoping  to  learn  some  way  of  easing
Temeraire's intensity, or perhaps persuading Celeritas to separate the two dragons. But the
training  master  listened  to  his  objections  and  said  calmly,  "Captain  Laurence, you  are
thinking  of  your  dragon's  happiness.  That  is  as  it  should  be,  but  I  must  think  first  of  his
training, and the needs of the Corps. Do you argue he is not progressing quickly, and to great
levels of skill, since Praecursoris arrived?"

Laurence  could only  stare;  the  idea  that  Celeritas  had  deliberately  promoted  the  rivalry  to
encourage  Temeraire  was  first  startling,  then  almost  offensive.  "Sir,  Temeraire  has  always
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been willing, has always put forth his best efforts," he began angrily, and only stopped when
Celeritas snorted to interrupt him.

"Pull up, Captain," he said, with a rough amusement. "I am not insulting him. The truth is, he
is  a  little  too  intelligent to  be  an  ideal  formation  fighter.  If  the  situation  were different, we
would  make  him  a  formation  leader  or  an  independent,  and  he  would do  very  well.  But  as
matters  stand,  given  his  weight,  we  must  have  him  in  formation,  and  that  means  he  must
learn  rote  maneuvers.  They  are  simply  not  enough  to  hold  his  attention.  It  is  not  a  very
common complaint, but I have seen it before, and the signs are unmistakable."

Laurence unhappily could offer no argument; there was perfect truth in Celeritas's remarks.
Seeing  that  Laurence  had  fallen  silent,  the  training  master  continued,  "This  rivalry  adds
enough spice to overcome  a natural boredom which would shortly progress to frustration.
Encourage him, praise him, keep him confident in your affection, and he will not suffer from
a bit of squabbling with another male; it is very natural, at his age, and better he should set
himself  against  Praecursoris  than  Maximus;  Praecursoris  is  old  enough  not  to  take  it
seriously."

Laurence could not be so sanguine; Celeritas did not see how Temeraire fretted. Yet neither
could  Laurence  deny  that  his  remarks  were  motivated from  a  selfish  perspective:  he
disliked  seeing  Temeraire  driving  himself  so  hard.  But  of  course  he  needed  to  be  driven
hard; they all did.

Here  in  the  placid  green  north,  it  was  too  easy  to  forget  that  Britain  was  in  great  danger.
Villeneuve and the French navy were still on the loose; according to dispatches, Nelson had
chased  them  all  the  way  to  the  West  Indies  only  to  be  eluded  again,  and  now  was
desperately seeking them in the Atlantic. Villeneuve's intention was certainly to meet with
the  fleet  out  of Brest  and  then  attempt  to  seize  the  straits  of  Dover;  Bonaparte  had  a  vast
number of transports cramming every port along the French coast, waiting only for such a
break in the Channel defenses to ferry over the massive army of invasion.

Laurence  had  served  on  blockade-duty  for  many  long  months,  and  he  knew  well  how
difficult it was to maintain discipline through the endless, unvarying days with no enemy in
sight.  The  distractions  of  more  company,  a  wider  landscape,  books,  games:  these  things
made  the  duty  of  training  more  pleasant  by  far,  but  he  now  recognized  that  in  their  own
way they were as insidious as monotony.

So he only bowed, and said, "I understand your design, sir; thank you for the explanation."
But he returned to Temeraire still determined to curb the almost obsessive practicing, and if
possible to find an alternative means of engaging the dragon's interest in the maneuvers.

These  were  the  circumstances  which  first  gave  him  the  notion  of  explaining  formation
tactics to Temeraire. He did so more for Temeraire's sake than his own, hoping to give the
dragon  some  more  intellectual  interest  in  the  maneuvers.  But  Temeraire  followed  the
subject with ease, and shortly the lessons became real discussion, as valuable to Laurence as
to Temeraire, and more than compensating for his lack of participation in the debates which
the captains held among themselves.

Together they embarked on designing a series of their own maneuvers, taking advantage of
Temeraire's  unusual  flying  capabilities,  which  could  be fitted  into  the  slower  and  more
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methodical  pace  of  the  formation.  Celeritas  himself  had  spoken  of  designing  such
maneuvers, but the pressing need for the formation had forced him to put aside the plan for
the immediate future.

Laurence  salvaged  an  old  flight-table  from  the  attics,  recruited  Hollin's  help  to  repair  its
broken leg, and set it up in Temeraire's clearing under his dragon's interested eyes. It was a
sort of vast diorama set upon a table, with a latticework on top; Laurence did not have a set
of  the  proper  scale  figures  of  dragons  to  hang  from  it,  but  he  substituted  whittled  and
colored bits of wood, and by tying these with bits of thread from the lattice, they were able
to display three-dimensional positions for each other's consideration.

Temeraire  from  the  beginning  displayed  an  intuitive  grasp  of  aerial  movement.  He  could
instantly  declare  whether  a  maneuver  was  feasible  or  not,  and  describe  the  movements
necessary to bring it about if so; the initial inspiration for a new maneuver was most often
his. Laurence in turn could better assess the relative military strengths of various positions,
and suggest such modifications as would improve the force which might be brought to bear.

Their discussions were lively  and vocal,  and attracted the attention of the rest of his crew;
Granby  tentatively  asked  to  observe,  and  when  Laurence  gave  leave,  was  shortly  followed
by the second lieutenant, Evans, and many of the  midwingmen. Their years of training and
experience  gave  them  a  foundation  of  knowledge  which  both  Laurence  and  Temeraire
lacked, and their suggestions further refined the design.

"Sir, the others have asked me to propose to you that perhaps we might try some of the new
maneuvers," Granby said to him, some few weeks into the project. "We would be more than
happy  to  sacrifice  our  evenings  to  the  work;  it would  be  infamous  not  to  have  a  chance  of
showing what he can do."

Laurence was deeply moved, not merely by their enthusiasm, but by seeing that Granby and
the  crew  felt  the  same  desire  to  see Temeraire  acknowledged  and  approved.  He  was  very
glad indeed to find the others as proud of and for Temeraire as he himself was. "If we have
enough hands present tomorrow evening, perhaps we may," Laurence said.

Every officer from his three runners on up was present ten minutes early. Laurence looked
over them a little bemused as he and Temeraire descended from their daily trip to the lake;
he only now realized, with all of them  lined up and waiting, that his aerial crew wore their
full  uniforms,  even  now in  this  impromptu session.  The  other  crews  were  often  to  be seen
without coats or neckcloths, particularly in the recent heat; he could not help but take this
as a compliment to his own habit.

Mr.  Hollin  and  the  ground  crew  were  also  ready  and  waiting;  even  though  Temeraire  was
inclined to fidget in his excitement, they swiftly had him in his combat-duty harness, and the
aerial crew came swarming aboard.

"All  aboard  and  latched  on,  sir,"  Granby  said,  taking  up  his  own  launch  position  on
Temeraire's right shoulder.

"Very well. Temeraire, we will begin with the standard clear-weather patrol pattern twice,
then shift to the modified version on my signal," Laurence said.

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Temeraire nodded, his eyes bright, and launched himself into the air. It was the simplest of
their  new  maneuvers,  and  Temeraire  had  little  difficulty  following  it; the  greater  problem,
Laurence saw at once,  as Temeraire pulled out of the last corkscrewing turn and back into
his  standard  position,  would  be  in  accustoming the  crew.  The  riflemen had  missed  at  least
half their targets, and Temeraire's sides were stained where the lightly weighted sacks full
of ash that stood for bombs in practice had hit him instead of falling below.

"Well,  Mr.  Granby,  we  have  some  work  ahead  of  us  before  we  can make  a  creditable
showing of it," Laurence said, and Granby nodded ruefully.

"Indeed, sir; perhaps if he flew a little slower at first?" Granby said.

"I think perhaps we must adjust our thinking as well," Laurence said, studying the pattern of
ash  marks. "We  cannot  be  hurling  bombs  during  these  quick  turns  he  makes,  there  is  no
way we can be sure of missing him. So we cannot work steadily: we must wait and release
the equivalent of a full broadside in the moments when he is level. We will be at greater risk
of missing a target entirely, but that risk can be borne; the other cannot."

Temeraire  flew  in  an  easy  circuit  while  the  topmen  and  bellmen  hastily  adjusted  their
bombing gear; this time, when they attempted the maneuver again, Laurence saw the sacks
falling away, and there were no fresh marks to be seen on Temeraire's sides. The riflemen,
also  waiting  for  the  level  parts  of  the  run,  improved  their  record  as  well,  and  after  half  a
dozen repetitions, Laurence was well-satisfied with the results.

"When we  can  deliver  our  full  allotment  of  bombs  and  achieve  perhaps  an  eighty  percent
success rate in our gunnery, on this and the other four new maneuvers, I will  consider our
work worth bringing to Celeritas's attention," Laurence said, when they had all dismounted
and  the  ground  crew  were  stripping  Temeraire  and  polishing  the  dust  and  grime  off  his
hide.  "And  I  think  it  eminently  achievable:  I  commend  all  of  you,  gentlemen,  on  a  most
creditable performance."

Laurence  had  previously  been  sparing  with  his  praise,  not  wishing  to  seem  as  though  he
was courting the crew's affections, but now he felt he could scarcely be overly enthusiastic,
and he was pleased to see the  heartfelt response of his officers to the approval. They were
uniformly eager to continue, and after another four weeks of practice, Laurence was indeed
beginning to think them ready to perform for a wider audience when the decision was taken
from his hands.

"That  was  an  interesting  variation  you  were  flying  last  evening,  Captain,"  Celeritas  said  to
him at the end of the morning session, as the dragons of the formation landed and the crews
disembarked.  "Let  us  see  you  fly  it  tomorrow  in  formation."  With  that  he  nodded  and
dismissed  them,  and Laurence  was  left to  call  together  his  crew  and  Temeraire for  a  hasty
final practice.

Temeraire  was  inclined  to  be  anxious,  late  that  evening,  after  the  others  had  gone  back
inside  and  he  and Laurence  were  sitting  quietly  together  in  the  dark,  too  tired to  do  more
than rest in each other's company.

"Come, do not let yourself fret," Laurence said. "You will do very well tomorrow; you  have
mastered  all  of  the  maneuvers  from  beginning  to  end.  We  have  been  holding  back  only  to
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give the crew better mastery."

"I  am  not  very  worried  about  the  flying,  but  what  if  Celeritas  does  not  approve  of  the
maneuvers?" Temeraire said. "We would have wasted all our time to no purpose."

"If  he  thought  the  maneuvers  wholly  unwise,  he  would  never  have  solicited  us,"  Laurence
said. "And in any case our time has not been wasted in the least; the crew have all learned
their work a good deal better for  having to give more attention and thought to their tasks,
and  even  if  Celeritas  disapproved  entirely  I  would  still  count  all  these  evenings  of  ours
profitably spent."

He at last soothed Temeraire to sleep and himself dozed off by the dragon's side; though it
was early September, the summer's warmth was lingering, and he took no chill. Despite all
his reassurances to Temeraire, Laurence himself was up and alert by first light, and he could
not  wholly  repress  a  degree  of  anxiety  in  his  own  breast.  Most  of  his  crew  were  at  the
breakfast table as early as he was, so he made a point of speaking with several of them, and
eating heartily; he would rather have not taken anything but coffee.

When he came out into the training courtyard he found Temeraire there already in his gear
and looking over the valley; his tail was lashing the air uneasily. Celeritas was not yet there;
fifteen minutes passed before any of the other dragons of the formation arrived, and by then
Laurence had taken Temeraire and his crew out to fly a few circuits of the area. The younger
ensigns  and  midwingmen  were  particularly  inclined  to  be  shrill,  and  he  had  the  hands  go
through exchanging places to settle their nerves.

Dulcia landed, and Maximus after her; the full formation was now assembled, and Laurence
brought  Temeraire  back  in  to  the  courtyard.  Celeritas  had  still  not  yet  arrived.  Lily  was
yawning widely; Praecursoris was quietly speaking with Nitidus, the Pascal's Blue, who also
spoke French, his egg having been purchased from a French hatchery many years before the
start  of  the  war,  when  relations  had  been  amicable  enough  to  permit  such  exchanges.
Temeraire  still  looked  at  Praecursoris  with  a  brooding  eye,  but  for  once  Laurence  did  not
mind, if it would provide some distraction.

A bright flurry of wings caught his eye; looking up, he saw Celeritas coming in to land, and
beyond him the rapidly dwindling forms of several  Winchesters and Greylings, going away
in various directions. Lower in the sky, two Yellow Reapers were heading south in company
with  Victoriatus,  though  the  wounded  Parnassian's  convalescence  was  not  properly  over.
All  the  dragons  came  alert,  sitting  up;  the  captains'  voices  died  away;  the  crews  fell  into  a
heavy and expectant silence, all before Celeritas even reached the ground.

"Villeneuve and his fleet have been caught," Celeritas said, raising his voice to be heard over
the noise. "They have been penned up in the port of Cadiz, with the Spanish navy also." Even
as  he  spoke,  the  servants  were  running  out  of  the  hall,  carrying  hastily  packed  bags  and
boxes;  even  the  maids  and  cooks  had  been  pressed  into  duty.  Without  being  ordered,
Temeraire rose to all four legs, just as did the other dragons; the ground crews were already
unrolling the belly-netting and climbing up to rig the tents.

"Mortiferus has been sent to Cadiz; Lily's formation must go to the Channel at once to take
the place of his wing. Captain Harcourt," Celeritas said, turning to her, "Excidium remains at
the Channel, and he has eighty years' experience; you and Lily must train with him in every
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free  moment  you  have.  I  am  giving  Captain  Sutton  command  of  the  formation  for  the
moment;  this  is  no  reflection  upon  your  work,  but  with  this  abbreviation  of  your  training,
we must have more experience in the role."

It  was  more  usual  for  the  captain  of  the  lead  dragon  of  a  formation  to  be  the  commander,
largely  because  that  dragon  had  to  lead  off  every  maneuver,  but  she  nodded  without  any
sign  of offense.  "Yes,  certainly,"  she  said;  her  voice  came  out  a  little  high,  and  Laurence
glanced at her with quick sympathy: Lily had hatched unexpectedly early, and Harcourt had
become a captain barely out of her own training; this might well be her first action, or very
nearly so.

Celeritas  gave  her  an  approving  nod.  "Captain  Sutton,  you  will  naturally  consult  with
Captain Harcourt as far as possible."

"Of course," Sutton said, bowing to Harcourt from his position aboard Messoria's back.

The baggage was already pulled down tight, and Celeritas took a moment to inspect each of
the harnesses in turn. "Very good: try your loads. Maximus, begin."

One by one, the dragons all rose to their hind legs, wind tearing across the courtyard as they
beat their wings and tried to shake the rigging loose; one by one they dropped and reported,
"All lies well."

"Ground  crews  aboard,"  Celeritas  said,  and  Laurence  watched  while  Hollin  and  his  men
hurried into the belly-rigging and strapped themselves in for the long flight. The signal came
up from below, indicating they were ready, and he nodded to his signal-ensign, Turner, who
raised the green flag. Maximus's and Praecursoris's crews raised their flags only a moment
later; the smaller dragons were already waiting.

Celeritas sat back onto his haunches, surveying them all. "Fly well," he said simply.

There was nothing more, no other ceremony or preparation; Captain Sutton's signal-ensign
raised  the  flag  for  formation  go  aloft,  and  Temeraire  sprang  into  the  air  with  the  others,
falling  into  position  beside  Maximus.  The  wind  was  in  the  north-west,  almost  directly
behind  them,  and  as  they  rose  through  the  cloud  cover,  far  to  the  east  Laurence  could  see
the faint glimmer of sunlight on water.