sake, enough cosseting," Catherine said. "In any case, I will do much better sitting here in the cool shade than tearing back and forth, weighing you down to no purpose when you might be carrying another pair of hands instead. No, not a man will you take; only make all the speed in the world, and the sooner you have gone, the sooner you will come back again," she added.
The belly-netting was as full as it could be without cramming, and Temeraire and Lily were got off at last, still making wistful complaints. "Near enough five hundred, already," Chenery said triumphantly, looking up from his tally, "and most of them fat, handsome things; enough to dose half the Corps, if only they will last the journey."
"We will give them their damned herd of cows," Laurence said to Ferris, meaning Demane and Sipho, who were now taking their ease stretched out upon the ground before the cavern mouth, making grass whistle and refusing to pay much attention to Reverend Erasmus's attempts to read them an instructive tract for children, his first attempt at translation into their tongue; his wife was helping with the harvest.
Ferris blotted his forehead against his sleeve and said, in stifled, choked tones, "Yes, sir."
"We will need larger quantities than required of the fresh," Dorset said, joining them. "Should some potency be lost in the journey, a concentrated dose will compensate for the preservation. Pray stop the harvesting for now: at this rate no one will be left to carry." The frantic pace had already slackened, with the wearing away of the first flush of excitement and the urgency of getting the dragons loaded, and many of the men looked sick and wan; several were being noisily sick into the grass.
The tents had all gone to make sacks of mushrooms, and there would certainly be no sleeping in the cavern, so they cleared instead the ground before it, chopping through the thornbushes with swords and axes. The remnants they used to build a low encircling break about the edge of the clearing, thorny and obdurate enough to give pause to smaller beasts, and a few parties were set to collecting dry wood for a fire. "Mr. Ferris, let us establish a watch," Laurence said, "and now that we have all been rested, we will go to work in shifts: I should like to see a more efficient job of it."
A quarter-of-an-hour seemed long enough, inside that damp, dark space beneath, with only the narrow crack of white light at one end. Besides the mushrooms themselves, there was a grassy stink very like damp manure throughout, and the sour smell of fresh vomit which they had themselves added to the atmosphere. Where they had already cleared the mushrooms, the earth was strangely springy underfoot, almost matted, not like dirt at all.
Laurence staggered out again into the fresh air, gratefully, with his arms full. "Captain," Dorset said, following him out: he was not carrying a mushroom, and when Laurence had deposited his armload before the newly organized sorters, Dorset showed him a torn-edged square of matted grass and muck, the flooring of the cave. Laurence gazed at it uncomprehendingly. "It is elephant dung," Dorset said, breaking apart the chunk, "and dragon also."
"Wing, two points west of north." Emily Roland's treble voice rang out high and sharp, before Laurence had fully understood; at once all was a confused hurrying into the shelter of the cave. He looked for Reverend Erasmus, and the children; but before he could be herded inside the cave, Demane with one quick look at the oncoming dragon snatched his brother up bodily from the ground, and ran instead away into the underbrush, the dog dashing off after them; its barking came back twice, at increasing distances, and then cut off into a muzzled whine.
"Leave the mushrooms, take the guns," Laurence cupped his hands over his mouth to roar over the commotion; he snatched up his own sword and pistols, put aside to help with the carrying, and gave Mrs. Erasmus his hand to descend into the cavern, past the riflemen already crouched down by the door; shortly the rest of them were crammed in also, all of them jostling involuntarily to keep as near the entrance and its fresh air as they could, until the dragon landed with an earth-trembling heavy thud, and thrust his muzzle directly up against the opening.
It was the self-same feral: dark red-brown, with the queer ivory tusks in his muzzle. The hot