that would be worse for them; so if you ask me, it would really have been making
up
for the treason, to
take it,” which struck Temeraire as a very just point, and one he rather wished he had thought of at the
time.
“Only, I did not realize Laurence would lose his capital,” Temeraire said unhappily, “so I did not think it
would be so important.”
“Well, well, you are a young fellow yet,” Gentius said, relenting a little, “and you have time to make it up.
Win battles, take some prizes while you are at it, and it will all come right in the end—Government will
do you up right, if you are only heroic enough.”
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“But I have been
very
heroic,” Temeraire protested, “and they have not been fair at all; they have even
tried to take Laurence away from me.”
“You ain’t been the right sort of heroic,” Gentius said. “You must win battles, that is the road. That is
how my first captain was made, you know; they did not use to let Longwing captains be captain,
properly. They called her only Miss, and there was a fellow aboard she was supposed to listen to, only
he was a lummox and managed to be drunk out of his wits just when we had a battle to go to, and all our
formation waiting.” He snorted. “So she said to the crew—‘Gentlemen’—” and here he paused, rubbing
his forelegs restlessly against one another, with a frowning expression.
They waited, and waited, and waited; although Temeraire was almost quivering with impatience: if
Gentius’s captain had gone from
Miss
to
Captain,
surely Laurence might have his rank repaired, in the
same fashion—
“It is difficult to remember, the way she said it, exact,” Gentius said defensively. “They don’t talk as they
used to, but I think I have it: she said, ‘Gentlemen, seeing that our duty consisteth in going to war, I
should judge this a sad excuse to fail in it, insofar as we expect to contrive without Captain—without
Captain—’ Bother,” Gentius muttered, interrupting himself, “I have forgot his name. But she said it,” he
went on, “and she said, ‘insofar as we expect to contrive without his company, no worser an outcome
upon the field than our absence will ensure, the which I will stand surety for: therefore will I still go, and
any man who wisheth not to venture himself, under my command, may remain behind.’”
He rolled triumphantly through to the end of his recitation, but then had to wait for applause while his
audience worked out just what had been said. “But I don’t understand, did you win the battle or not?”
Messoria said finally, puzzled.
“Of course we won the battle,” Gentius said irritably. “And we did a sight better without Captain
Haulding—hah, I have remembered his name after all—aboard, I can tell you that. I was writ up in the
newspapers, even, and Government gave over and made her captain properly: because we had done
well,” he finished, with a meaningful nudge to Temeraire’s shoulder. “That is the road: win battles for
them, and they will come about, see if they don’t.”
“That is all very well,” Iskierka remarked, “as soon as they let us
have
some battles. There he comes
now, ask him when we shall be fighting,” and she nudged Temeraire: Laurence was coming down the
path from the castle.
Temeraire hardly knew how to look Laurence in the face; bitterly conscious now of his guilt, he
half-expected Laurence to upbraid him at once. But Laurence said only, to Roland and to Demane and
Sipho, “Go and rouse up the other captains; at once, if you please,” and stood waiting and silent until the
others had been drawn from their uncomfortable bivouacs. “Gentlemen, I have been commissioned
temporarily, and given command of this expedition; you will find your written orders there, and I trust
they allow of no ambiguity.”
Laurence had a sheaf of papers in his hands, packets each sealed separately and inscribed with the other
captains’ names; he handed the orders to Sipho to carry around.
“Damned paperwork, with Bonaparte in our parlor,” Berkley muttered. “Trust the Army for this sort of
thing—”
“You will oblige me greatly, Berkley, by putting those orders by safe, somewhere they cannot come to
harm,” Laurence said, when Berkley would have crumpled the parchment. “I would be glad to know the
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chain of command quite clear, to anyone who should inquire, in future.” All the other captains paused and
looked at him, and Temeraire wondered puzzled why it should matter; the red wax seals affixed to the
parchment were attractive, but they might be made anytime one wished; and Laurence had not kept one
himself.
But Laurence did not explain further. Instead he went on, “The French are harassing our farmers with
raiding bands, and so supplying the wants of their army. Our duty is to stop this predation, and so far as
is practicable without undue risk to the dragons, to reduce the forces available to Napoleon.”
There was a pause, and then Granby said, “—you mean—his irregulars?”
“I do,” Laurence said.
“What does he expect us to do with the prisoners, cart them about with us in the belly-rigging?” Berkley
said.
“There will be no quarter given,” Laurence said. There was a heavy finality to his tone, which somehow
warned off any other questions; the captains did not say anything even to one another. “We will begin in
Northumberland, tomorrow, and work our way south. We leave at dawn, gentlemen; that is all.”
They stood a moment longer looking at their orders and at Laurence, with oddly uncertain expressions;
in the end they all drifted away back to their tents without another word said. Temeraire himself was at a
standstill. He could not understand why Laurence should have taken the command.
He
was already in
command, and it was important, was it not, for a dragon to have the post—Laurence himself had said as
much. Temeraire did not mean to be selfish anymore, at all, now that he knew he had been selfish; if
Laurence wished the command, of course he should have it, and yet, if it mattered for politics—for all the
dragons—
He struggled over it; ventured at last timidly to ask, and added hurriedly, “I do not mind at all, for
myself,
personally,
I am very happy that you are restored, and a captain now again. Only, if it is
important—”
He was yet mostly coiled up with the others, but everyone else was asleep; the other men were gone
into their tents. Laurence had told Roland and Demane and Sipho to go and sleep in his tent, and had
stayed out, wrapped in his coat and cloak and looking over maps, which he had laid out on a small
camp-table; he was marking them with a small wax pencil, here and there.
“In the present case, it is the more important you should not be in command, or anyone but myself,”
Laurence said.
There was something odd in his voice: queerly flat, as if he did not much care what he was saying, and
he did not look up from his work. Temeraire wished very much it were not so dark, and he could see
Laurence’s face. “In any case,” Laurence added, “whether the courts will believe you truly the
commander is a proposition yet untried; and I hope you would not risk the lives and the careers of the
other captains, unconsenting, for the sake of your precedence.”
“But,” Temeraire said, “are they not risking their lives anyway?”
“In battle,” Laurence said, “not afterwards.”
Temeraire did not much want to pursue; however dreadful to think Laurence was angry with him, it
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would be all the worse to
know,
to hear it from Laurence himself. “Laurence,” Temeraire said anyway,
bravely, “pray explain to me; I know—I know I have let you be hurt, because I did not try to understand
well enough, and I do not mean to let it happen again, only I cannot help it, if I do not know.”
Laurence did look up at that, his eyes briefly catching a reflection from the castle upon the hill. “There is
nothing to help; I am in no danger.”
“If
they
should be, so should you,” Temeraire said.
“I cannot be condemned twice,” Laurence said. “Pray get some rest: we have a hundred miles to fly in
the morning.”
“I WANT HIM BLED,”Wellesley had said, in the tower room of Edinburgh Castle, standing over the
map of England swarming with blue markers, with the icy rain lashing at the windows. Distantly, down the
hall, the muffled sound of the King’s voice was rising in some complaint; to Laurence it seemed very
loud. “Every man to him is worth five to us. He must bring them across at great expense, and he must
spend his dragons’ strength to do it. And his men live off the land—he relies upon them raiding the
countryside, feeding themselves and driving in cattle for the dragons, and keeping his supply lines meager
and short.”
“You mean you wish us to attack his irregulars,” Laurence broke in, tired of evasions.
“His supply-lines, his foragers, his scouts.” Wellesley thumped the map. “He has hundreds of small
raiding parties scattered throughout the country north of London; he cannot survive long without them,
and they are exposed. You will destroy every one of them you can find.
“You will not engage,” he added, “any substantial party, with other dragons in number, or artillery: I do
not mean to lose any of the beasts.”
Laurence had expected something of the sort, from the tenor of Wellesley’s summons; he was not
surprised, and heard it with dull acceptance. The strategy was sound, coldly speaking: if Bonaparte
began to lose men quicker than he could replace them, and found his supply growing short, he would
have to accept a battle on whatever terms it was offered him, or withdraw entirely.
But dragons were not put to such a use in civilized warfare; Wellesley knew it, and so did he.
Pragmatism alone held them too valuable to risk and too expensive to supply, save against a more
substantial target, of strategic importance, than a small party of light foot armed only with muskets. But it
was not pragmatism but sentiment which with a single voice called inhuman the exceptions made from
time to time. There was little that aroused more horror and more condemnation from ordinary men than
the prospect of dragons set loose against them; men had been court-martialed and hanged for it, even by
their own side.
“Pillaging,” Wellesley added after a moment, “of course, cannot be tolerated—”
“There will be none,” Laurence said, “save what must be requisitioned to feed the dragons. Is there
anything else?”
Wellesley looked at him narrowly. “Will you do it?”
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There was little enough Laurence could now do, to repair what he had done; he could not restore the
lives of the slain, or raise up ships from the Channel floor that had been sunk, or make recompense to all
the ordinary countrymen whose livelihood and possessions had been raided away by an invading army.
He could not repair his father’s health, or the King’s, or Edith’s happiness. But he had already stained
himself irrevocably with dishonor, for the sake of an enemy nation and a tyrant’s greed; he could stain
himself a little more for the sake of his own, and shield with his own ruined reputation those who yet had
one to protect.
“I do not need written orders for myself,” he had answered Wellesley. “But I require them for those
other officers of the Corps involved: you may say merely that they must follow my orders.”
Wellesley had understood very well, what Laurence offered him, and he had not refused it. The orders
were written, and given him, and he had left Wellesley in his tower, and gone down and down, to the
waiting covert.
It was a silent, grim camp in the morning, as they harnessed the dragons and the crews went aboard;
twice or more, Laurence thought Harcourt almost meant to speak to him. But in the end they all mounted
up and flew with no words exchanged. The cold wind in Laurence’s face was welcome, and the steady
beat of Temeraire’s wings, and the silence; his small crew did not address him, and sitting forward on
Temeraire’s neck, they might have been alone in a wide-open sky; the rolling unmarred moors beneath
them knew nothing of war or boundaries.
Wellesley’s spies had reported already a dozen raiding bands or more, moving through the North
Country, stealing from farms and seizing cattle; Laurence had marked them on his map, as best the
reports could place them. But the enemy provided them instead a convenient beacon of smoke, easily
visible ten miles off. It was a thin black coil turning lazily upwards from the roof of a great farmhouse, the
fire mostly extinguished by the time they arrived: the rest of the village stood empty, when the dragons
came down, but for two men in homespun: villagers, not soldiers, laid out in the road dead, with stab
wounds flower-red upon their bellies; they had been bayoneted.
“The villagers shan’t come out while we have the dragons here,” Harcourt said. “If we leave them
outside—”
“No,” Laurence said; he did not mean to waste time on such things. He cupped his hands around his
mouth and shouted, “We are officers of the King. You will come out at once, or we will have the dragons
tear down the houses until you do.”
There was no reply, no stirring. “Temeraire,” Laurence said, and indicated a small neat cottage near the
end of the village lane. “Bring it down, if you please.”