best he could, and then they waited. They had made enough
noise, to be sure, but the region was vast: they had flown
two days to reach the river, and Laurence was not sanguine.
They slept that night on the bank with no response; and the
second day also passed without event, except that Temeraire
went hunting and brought back four antelope, which they
roasted on a spit for dinner. Not very successfully: Gong
Su had remained back at the camp, to feed the other dragons
who yet continued ill, and young Allen, detailed to turn
the spit, grew distracted and forgot, so that they were
scorched black on one side and unappetizingly raw on the
other. Temeraire put back his ruff in disapproval; he was,
Laurence sadly noted, becoming excessive nice in his
tastes, an unfortunate habit in a soldier.
The third day crept onward, hot and clinging from the
first, and the men wilted gradually into silence; Emily and
Dyer scratched unenthusiastically at their slates, and
Laurence forced himself to rise at intervals to pace back
and forth, that he would not fall asleep. Temeraire gave a
tremendous yawn and put down his head to snore. At an hour
past noon they had their dinner: only bread and butter and
a little grog, but no one wanted more in the heat, even
after the debacle of the previous evening's meal. The sun
dipped only reluctantly back towards the horizon; the day
stretched.
"Are you comfortable, ma'am?" Laurence asked, bringing Mrs.
Erasmus another cup of grog; they had set her up a little
pavilion with the traveling-tents, so she might keep in the
shade: the little girls had been left back at the castle,
in the charge of a maid. She inclined her head and accepted
the cup, seeming as always quite careless of her own
comfort. A necessary quality, to be sure, for a
missionary's wife being dragged the length of the globe,
yet it felt uncivilized to be subjecting her to the
violence of the day's heat for so little evident use; she
did not complain, but she could not have enjoyed being
packed aboard a dragon, however well she concealed her
fears, and she wore a high-necked gown with sleeves to the
wrist, of dark fabric, while the sun beat so ferociously
that it glowed even through the leather of the tent.
"I am sorry we have imposed upon you," he said. "If we hear
nothing tomorrow, I think we must consider our attempt a
failure."
"I will pray for a happier outcome," she said, in her deep
steady voice, briefly, and kept her head bowed down.
Mosquitoes sang happily as dusk drew on, though they did
not come very close to Temeraire; the flies were less
judicious. The shapes of the trees were growing vague when
Temeraire woke with a start and said, "Laurence, there is
someone coming, there," and the grass rustled on the
opposite bank.
A very slight man emerged in the half-light on the far
bank: bare-headed, and naked but for a small blanket which
was draped rather too casually around his body to preserve
modesty. He was carrying a long, slim-hafted assegai, the
blade narrow and spade-shaped, and over his other shoulder
was slung a rather skinny antelope. He did not come across
the stream, keeping a wary eye on Temeraire; he craned his
neck a little to look over their blanket of goods, but
plainly he would come no farther.
"Reverend, perhaps if you would accompany me," Laurence
said softly and set out, Ferris following along doggedly
behind them without having been asked. Laurence paused at
the blanket and lifted up the most elaborate of the cowrie
chains, a neck-collar in six or seven bands of alternating
dark and light shells, interspersed with gold beads.
They forded the river, shallow here and not coming over the
tops of their boots; Laurence surreptitiously touched the
butt of his pistol, looking at the javelin: they would be
vulnerable, coming up the bank. But the hunter only backed
away towards the woods as they emerged from the water, so
in the dim light he was very nearly invisible against the
underbrush, and could easily have dived back into the
obscurity which this afforded: Laurence supposed he had
more right than they to be alarmed, alone to their large
party, with Temeraire behind them sitting cat-like on his
haunches and regarding the situation with anxiety.
"Sir, pray let me," Ferris said, so plaintively Laurence
surrendered the neck-chain to him. He edged cautiously out
across the distance, the necklace offered across his palms.
The hunter hesitated, very obviously tempted, and then he
tentatively held out the antelope towards them, with a
slightly abashed air, as if he did not think it a very fair
exchange.
Ferris shook his head, and then he stiffened: the bushes
behind the hunter had rustled. But it was only a small boy,
no more than six or seven, his hands parting the leaves so
he could peek out at them with large, curious eyes. The
hunter turned and said something to him sharply, in a voice
which lost some of its severity by cracking halfway through
the reprimand. He was not stunted at all, but only a boy
himself, Laurence realized; only a handful of years between
him and the one hiding.
The small boy vanished again instantly, the branches
closing over his head, and the older one turned back to
Ferris with a defiant wary look; his hand was clenched
sufficiently on the assegai to show pale pink at the
knuckles.
"Pray tell him, if you can, that we mean them no harm,"
Laurence said quietly to Erasmus. He did not wonder very
much what might have lured them here to take a risk perhaps
others of his clan had preferred not to run; the hunter was
painfully thin, and the younger boy's face had none of the
soft-cheeked look of childhood.
Erasmus nodded, and approaching tried his few words of
dialect, without success. Retreating to more simplistic
communication, he tapped his chest and said his name. The
boy gave his as Demane; this exchange at least served to
make him grow a little easier: he did not seem quite so
ready to bolt, and he suffered Ferris to approach him
closer, to show him the small sample of the mushroom.
Demane exclaimed, and recoiled in disgust; with no little
cause: its confinement in the leather bag during the day's
heat had not improved its aroma. He laughed at his own
reaction, though, and came back; but though they pointed to
the mushroom, and the string of shells in turn, he
continued to look perfectly blank; although he kept
reaching out to touch the cowries with rather a wistful
expression, rubbing them between thumb and forefinger.
"I suppose he cannot conceive anyone should want to trade
for it," Ferris said, not very much under his breath, his
face averted as much as he could.
"Hannah," Erasmus said, startling Laurence: he had not
noticed Mrs. Erasmus come to join them, her skirts dripping
over her bare feet. Demane stood a little straighter and
dropped his hand from the shells, very like he had been
caught at something by a schoolteacher, and edged back from
her. She spoke to him a little while in her low voice,
slowly and clearly; taking the mushroom from Ferris, she
held it out, imperiously gesturing when Demane made a face.
Once he had gingerly taken it from her, she grasped him by
the wrist and showed him holding it out to Ferris. Ferris
held out the shells in return, miming the transfer, and
comprehension finally dawned.
A small voice piped up from the bushes; Demane answered it
quellingly, then began to talk volubly at Mrs. Erasmus, a
speech full of the odd clicking, which Laurence could not
imagine how he produced, at such speed; she listened,
frowning intently as she tried to follow. He took the
mushroom and knelt down to put it on the ground, next to
the base of a tree, then mimed pulling it up and throwing
it on the ground. "No, no!" Ferris sprang only just in time
to rescue the precious sample from being stamped upon by
his bare heel.
Demane observed his behavior with a baffled expression. "He
says it makes cows sick," Mrs. Erasmus said, and the
gesture was plain enough: the thing was considered a
nuisance, and torn up where it was found; which might
explain its scarcity. It was no wonder, the local tribesmen
being cattle-herders by livelihood, but Laurence was
dismayed, and wondered where they should look for the
enormous quantities necessary to their cause if it had been
the settled practice of generations, perhaps, to eradicate
what to them was nothing more than an unpleasant weed.
Mrs. Erasmus continued to speak to the boy, taking the
mushroom, and miming a gesture of stroking it, gently, to
show him they valued it. "Captain, will you have the crew
bring me a pot?" she asked, and when she had put the
mushroom into it, and made stirring motions, Demane looked
at Laurence and Ferris with a very dubious expression, but
then shrugged expressively and pointed upwards, drawing his
hand from horizon to horizon in a sweeping arc. "Tomorrow,"
she translated, and the boy pointed at the ground where
they stood.
"Does he think he can find us some?" Laurence asked
intently, but either the question or the response she was
unable to convey, and only shook her head after a moment.
"Well, we must hope for the best; tell him if you can that
we will return," and the next day, at the same hour near
dusk, the boys came out of the brush again, the younger now
trotting at Demane's heels, perfectly naked, and with them
a small raggedy dog, its mongrel fur mottled yellow and
brown.
It planted itself on the bank and yapped piercingly and
continuously at Temeraire while the older boy attempted to
negotiate for its services over the noise. Laurence eyed it
dubiously; but Demane took the mushroom piece again and
held it out to the dog's nose, then kneeling down covered
the dog's eyes with his hands. The younger boy ran and hid
the mushroom deep in the grass, and came back again; then
Demane let the dog go again, with a sharp word of command.
It promptly returned to barking madly at Temeraire,
ignoring all his instructions, until, looking painfully
embarrassed, Demane snatched up a stick and hit it on the
rump, hissing at it, and made it smell the leather satchel
where the mushroom had been kept. At last reluctantly it
left off and went bounding across the field, came trotting
back with the mushroom held in its mouth, and dropped it at
Laurence's feet, wagging its tail with enthusiasm.
Having decided, very likely, that they were fools, or at
least very rich, Demane now turned up his nose at the
cowries, wishing rather to be paid in cattle, evidently the
main source of wealth among the Xhosa: he opened the
negotiations at a dozen head. "Tell him we will give them
one cow, for a week of service," Laurence said. "If he
leads us to a good supply of the mushroom, we will consider
extending the bargain, otherwise we will return the two of
them here with their payment." Demane inclined his head and
accepted the diminished offer with a tolerable attempt at
calm gravity; but the wide eyes of the younger boy, whose
name was Sipho, and his rather excited tugging at Demane's
hand, made Laurence suspect he had even so made a poor
bargain by local standards.
Temeraire put his ruff back when the dog was carried
squirming towards him. "It is very noisy," he said
disapprovingly, to which the dog barked an answer equally
impolite, by the tone of it, and tried to jump out of its
master's arms and run away; Demane was no less anxious.
Mrs. Erasmus sought to coax him a little closer, and
reached out to pat Temeraire's forehand to show there was
no danger: perhaps not the best encouragement, since it
drew his attention to the very substantial talons: Demane
pushed a more interested than alarmed Sipho behind him, the
wriggling dog clutched against him with his other arm, and
shaking his head vocally refused to come nearer.
Temeraire cocked his head. "That is a very interesting
sound," he said, and repeated one of the words, mimicking
the clicking noise with more success than any of them but
still not quite correctly. Sipho laughed from behind
Demane's shoulder and said the word to him again; after a
few repetitions Temeraire said, "Oh, I have it," although
the clicking issued a little oddly, from somewhere deeper
in his throat than the boys produced it; and they were
gradually reconciled by the exchange to being loaded
aboard.
Laurence had learnt the art of carrying livestock aboard a
dragon from Tharkay, in the East, by drugging the beasts
with opium before they were loaded on, but they had none of
the drug with them at present, so with a dubious spirit of
experimentation they put the whining dog aboard by main