fruits and water and cocoanut milk, and his questions were
of generalities and trade, wide-ranging. He had a bolt of
cloth to show Laurence, calico-patterned and certainly from
the mills of England; some bottles of whiskey, unpleasantly
harsh and cheap by the smell, also of foreign manufacture.
"You sell these things to the Lunda," Moshueshue said, "and
those also?" indicating the muskets.
"They have lately fought a war against them," Mrs. Erasmus
said, quickly adding her own explanation, at the tail of
the translation: there had been a battle won, two-days'
flight from the falls. "North-west, I think," she said, and
asked Moshueshue permission to show him the territory, on
the great map of the continent: north-west, and still deep
inland, but in a few days' striking-distance of the ports
of Louanda and Benguela.
"Sir," Laurence said, "I have never heard of the Lunda
before two weeks ago; I believe they must have these goods
from perhaps the Portuguese traders, upon the coast."
"And do you only want captives, or will you take other
things in trade? The medicines you stole, or-" and one of
the women carried over at Moshueshue's beckoning a box of
jewels, absurdly magnificent, which would have made the
Nizam stare: polished emeralds tumbled like marbles with
diamonds, and the box itself of gold and silver. Another
carried over carefully a tall curious vase, made of woven
wire strung occasionally with beads, in an elaborate
pattern without figures, and another an enormous mask,
nearly tall as she herself was, carved of dark wood inlaid
with ivory and jewels.
Laurence wondered a little if this were meant for another
sort of inducement. "A trader would oblige you, sir, I am
sure. I am not a merchant myself. We would be glad-would
have been glad-to pay you for the medicines, in what barter
you desired."
Moshueshue nodded, and the treasure was taken away. "And
the-cannon?" He used the English word, himself, with
tolerable pronunciation. "Or your boats which cross the
ocean?"
There were enough jewels in the box to have tolerably
purchased and outfitted a fleet of merchantmen, Laurence
would have guessed, but he did not think the Government
would be very pleased to see such a project go forward; he
answered cautiously, "These are dearer, sir, for the
difficulty in their construction; and would do you very
little good without the men who understand their operation.
But some men might be found, willing to take service with
you, and such an arrangement made possible; if there were
peace between our countries."
Laurence thought this was not further than he could in
justice go, and as much attempt at diplomacy as he knew how
to make; he hoped as a hint, it would not be badly
received. Moshueshue's intentions were not disguised; it
was not wonderful that he, more than the king, should have
taken to heart the advantages of modern weaponry, more
easily grasped at musket-scale by men than by dragons, and
should have cared to establish access to them.
Moshueshue put his hand on the map-table and gazed
thoughtfully down upon it. At last he said, "You are not
engaged in this trade, you say, but others of your tribe
are. Can you tell me who they are, and where they may be
found?"
"Sir, I am sorry to say, that there are too many engaged in
the trade for me to know their names, or particulars,"
Laurence said awkwardly, and wished bitterly that he might
have been able to say with honesty it had been lately
banned. Instead he could only add, that he believed it soon
would be; which was received with as much satisfaction as
he had expected.
"We will ban it ourselves," the prince said, the more
ominously for the lack of any deliberately threatening
tone. "But that will not satisfy our ancestors." He paused.
"You are Kefentse's captives. He wants to trade you for
more of his tribe. Can you arrange such an exchange?
Lethabo says you cannot."
"I have told them that most of the others cannot be found,"
Mrs. Erasmus added quietly. "-it was nearly twenty years
ago."
"Perhaps some investigation could locate the survivors,"
Laurence said to her doubtfully. "There would be bills of
sale, and I suppose some of them must yet be on the same
estates, where they first were sold-you do not think it
so?"
She said after a moment, "I was taken into the house when I
was sold. Those in the fields did not live long, most of
them. A few years; maybe ten. There were not many old
slaves."
Laurence did not quarrel with her finality, and he thought
she did not translate her own words, either; likely to
shield him from the rage which they could provoke. She said
enough to convince Moshueshue of the impossibility,
however, and he shook his head. "However," Laurence said,
trying, "we would be glad to ransom ourselves, if you would
arrange a communication with our fellows at the Cape, and
to carry an envoy with us, to England, to establish
peaceful relations. I would give my own word, to do
whatever could be done to restore his kin-"
"No," Moshueshue said. "There is nothing I can do with
this, not now. The ancestors are too roused up; it is not
Kefentse only who has been bereft, and even those who have
not lost children of their own are angry. My father's
temper was not long when he was a man, and it is shorter
since his change of life. Perhaps after." He did not say,
after what, but issued orders to the attending dragons:
without a chance to speak, Laurence was snatched up, and
carried out at once.
The dragon did not turn back for the prison-cave, however,
but turned instead for the falls, rising up out of the
gorge and to the level of the plateau across which the
great river flowed. Laurence clung to the basketing talons
as they flew along its banks and over another of the great
elephant-herds, too quickly for him to recognize if any of
his compatriots were among the followers tending the
ground; and to a distance at which the sound of the falls
was muted, although the fine cloud of smoke yet remained
visible, hovering perpetual in place to mark their
location. There were no roads below at all, but at regular
intervals Laurence began to notice cairns of stones, in
circles of cleared ground, which might have served as
signposts; and they had flown ten minutes when there came
rearing up before them a vast amphitheater.
It was near to nothing, in his own experience, but the
Colosseum in Rome; built entirely of blocks of stone fitted
so snugly that no mortar, visibly, held them together, the
outer enclosure was built in an oval shape, with no
entrances but a few, at the base, formed with great
overlapping slabs of stone laid one against another like
the old stone circles in England. It stood in the middle of
a grassy field, undisturbed, as he would have expected from
some ancient unused ruin; only a few faintly worn tracks
showed where men had come into the entries on foot, mostly
from the river, where stakes had been driven in the ground,
and a few simple boats were tied up.
But they flew in directly over the walls, and there were no
signs of disuse within. The same drymortar method of
construction had raised a series of terraces, topped and
leveled out with more stone slabs, laid flat, and
irregularly arranged; instead of even tiers, narrow
stairways divided the theater into sections, each a
haphazard arrangement of boxes intended for human use and
filled with wooden benches and stools, some beautifully
carved, and large stalls surrounding them for dragons. The
higher levels simplified further, into wide-open stands
with sections marked off only with rope; at the center of
it all, a large grassy oval stood bare, broken up with
three large stone platforms, and on the last of these, a
prisoner with drooping head, was Temeraire.
Laurence was set down a few lengths away, with the usual
carelessness, jarring his back sorely; at his repressed
gasp, Temeraire growled, a deep and queerly stifled noise.
He had been muzzled, with a piece of dreadful iron
basketry, secured upon his head with many thick leather
straps, which allowed his jaws a scant range of motion: not
enough to roar. A thick iron collar around his throat, at
the top of his neck, was leashed with three of the massive
grey hawsers, which Laurence could now see were made of
braided wire, rather than rope; these were fixed to iron
rings set in the ground, equidistant from one another, and
preventing Temeraire from throwing his weight against any
one of them more than the others.
"Laurence, Laurence," Temeraire said, straining his head
towards him with all the inches the cables would yield;
Laurence would have gone to him at once, but the dragon
which had brought him set its foreleg down between them: he
was not permitted.
"Pray do not hurt yourself, my dear; I am perfectly well,"
Laurence called, forcing himself to straighten; he was
anxious lest Temeraire should have done himself some
mischief, flinging himself against the collar: it looked to
be digging into the flesh. "You are not very uncomfortable,
I hope?"
"Oh, it is nothing," Temeraire said, panting with a
distress which belied his words, "nothing, now I see you
again; only I could not move very much, and no-one comes to
talk to me, so I did not know anything: if you were well or
hurt; and you were so strange, when I saw you last."
He backed slowly and cautiously one pace and let himself
down again, still breathing heavily, and gave his head a
little shake, as much as the chains would allow, so they
rang around him; like a horse in traces. "And it makes
eating a little difficult," he added bravely, "and water
taste of rust, but it does not signify: are you sure you
are well? You do not look well."
"I am, and very glad to see you," Laurence said, businesslike, though in truth he was at some pains to keep his
feet, "if beyond words with surprise; we were mortally
certain we should never be found."
"Sutton said we would never find you, by roaming wild about
the continent," Temeraire said, low and angry, "and that we
ought to go back to Capetown. But I told him that was a
very great piece of nonsense, for however unlikely we
should find you looking in the interior, it was very much
less likely we should find you back at the Cape. So we
asked directions-"
"Directions?" Laurence said, baffled.
He had consulted with some of the local dragons, who,
living farther to the south, had not been subject yet to
the slave-raiding, and were not so disposed to be hostile.
"At least, not once we had made them a few presents of some
particularly nice cows-which, I am sorry, Laurence, we took
quite without permission, from some of the settlers, so I
suppose we must pay them when we have got back to
Capetown," Temeraire added, as confidently as if nothing
stood in the way of their return. "It was a little
difficult to make them understand what we wanted, at first,
but some of them understood the Xhosa language, which I had
got a little of from Demane and Sipho, and I have learnt a
little of theirs as we came closer: it is not very
difficult, and there are many bits which are like Durzagh."
"But, forgive me; I do not mean to be ungrateful," Laurence
said, "-the mushrooms? What of the cure? Were there any
left?"
"We had already given all those we collected to the Fiona,"
Temeraire said, "and if those were not enough, then
Messoria and Immortalis could do very well taking back the
rest, without us," he finished defiantly, "so Sutton had no
right to complain, if we liked to go; and hang orders
anyway."
Laurence did not argue with him; he had no wish of giving
any further distress, and in any case, Temeraire's
insubordination having been answered by a success so
improbable, he would certainly not be inclined to listen to
any criticism on the subject: the sort of break-neck
reckless venture crowned inevitably, Laurence supposed, by
either triumph or disaster; speed and impudence having
their own virtue. "Where are Lily and Dulcia, then?"
"They are hiding, out upon the plains," Temeraire said. "We
agreed that first I should try, as I am big enough to carry
you all; and then if anything should go wrong, they would
still be loose." He switched his tail with something
halfway between irritation and unease. "It made very good
sense at the time, but I did not quite realize, that
anything would go wrong, and then I would not be able to
help them plan," he added plaintively, "and now I do not
know what they mean to do; although I am sure they will
think of something"-but he sounded a little dubious.