his way out to the street through them, making apologies muttered as softly as he could; he might have stayed to listen, himself, another time. At present he had to make his way through the streets, a thick dark slurry of half-frozen ice and muck chilling his boots, back to the London covert, where Temeraire was waiting anxiously to receive the unhappy news.
"But surely there must be some means of reaching him," Temeraire said. "I cannot bear that our friends should all grow worse, when we have so easy a remedy at hand."
"We will have to manage on what we can afford within the current bounds, and stretch that little out," Laurence said. "But some effect may be produced by the searing of the meat alone, or stewing; let us not despair, my dear, but hope that Gong Su's ingenuity may yet find some answer."
"I do not suppose this Grenville eats raw beef every night, with the hide still on, and no salt; and then goes to sleep on the ground," Temeraire said resentfully. "I should like to see him try it a week and then refuse us." His tail was lashing dangerously at the already-denuded tree-tops around the edge of the clearing.
Laurence did not suppose it, either: and it occurred to him that the First Lord might very likely dine from home. He called to Emily for paper, and wrote quickly several notes; the season was not yet begun, but he had a dozen acquaintances likely to be already in town in advance of the opening of Parliament, besides his family. "There is very little chance I will be able to catch him," he warned Temeraire, to forestall raising hopes only to be dashed, "and still less that he will listen to me, if I do."
He could not wish whole-heartedly for success, either; he did not think he could easily sustain his temper, in his present mood, against still more of the casual and unthinking insult he was likely to meet in his aviator's coat, and any social occasion promised to be rather a punishment than a pleasure. But an hour before dinner, he received a reply from an old shipmate from the gunroom of the Leander, long since made post and now a member himself, who expected to meet Grenville that night at Lady Wrightley's ball: that lady being one of his mother's intimates.
There was a sad and absurd crush of carriages outside the great house: a blind obstinacy on the part of two of the coach drivers, neither willing to give way, had locked the narrow lane into an impasse so that no one else could move. Laurence was glad to have resorted to an old-fashioned sedan-chair, even if he had done so for the practical difficulties in getting a horse-drawn carriage anywhere near the covert. He reached the steps un-spattered, and if his coat was green, at least it was new, and properly cut; his linen was beyond reproach, and his knee-breeches and stockings crisply white, so he felt he need not blush for his appearance.
He gave in his card and was presented to his hostess, a lady he had met in person only once before, at one of his mother's dinners. "Pray how does your mother; I suppose she has gone to the country?" Lady Wrightley said, perfunctorily giving him her hand. "Lord Wrightley, this is Captain William Laurence, Lord Allendale's son."
A gentleman just lately entered was standing beside Lord Wrightley, still speaking with him; he startled at overhearing the introduction, and turning insisted on being presented to Laurence as a Mr. Broughton, from the Foreign Office.
Broughton at once seized on Laurence's hand with great enthusiasm. "Captain Laurence, you must permit me to congratulate you," he said. "Or Your Highness, as I suppose we must address you now, ha ha!" and Laurence's hurried, "I beg you will not - " went thoroughly ignored as Lady Wrightley, astonished as she might justly be, demanded an explanation. "Why, you have a prince of China at your party, I will have you know, ma'am. The most complete stroke, Captain, the most complete stroke imaginable. We have had it all from Hammond: his letter has been worn to rags in our offices, and we go about wreathed in delight, and tell one another of it only to have the pleasure of saying it over again. How Bonaparte must be gnashing his teeth!"
"It was nothing to do with me, sir, I assure you," Laurence said with despair. "It was all