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Synopsis
Naomi Novik's triumphant debut, His Majesty's Dragon, introduced a dynamic pair of heroes to the annals of fantasy fiction: the noble fighting dragon Temeraire and his master and commander, Capt. Will Laurence, who serves Britain's peerless Aerial Corps in the thick of the raging Napoleonic Wars. Now they soar to new heights of breathtaking action and brilliant imagination.
It is a grim time for the dragon Temeraire. On the heels of his mission to Africa, seeking the cure for a deadly contagion, he has been removed from military service-and his captain, Will Laurence, has been condemned to death for treason. For Britain, conditions are grimmer still: Napoleon's resurgent forces have breached the Channel and successfully invaded English soil. Napoleon's prime objective: the occupation of London.
Separated by their own government and threatened at every turn by Napoleon's forces, Laurence and Temeraire must struggle to find each other amid the turmoil of war and to aid the resistance against the invasion before Napoleon's foothold on England's shores can become a stranglehold.
If only they can be reunited, master and dragon might rally Britain's scattered forces and take the fight to the enemy as never before-for king and country, and for their own liberty. But can the French aggressors be well and truly routed, or will a treacherous alliance deliver Britain into the hands of her would-be conquerors?
Release date: July 8, 2008
Publisher: Del Rey
Print pages: 352
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Victory of Eagles
Naomi Novik
The breeding grounds were called Pen Y Fan, after the hard, jagged slash of the mountain at their heart, like an ax-blade, rimed with ice along its edge and rising barren over the moorlands: a cold, wet Welsh autumn already, coming on towards winter, and the other dragons sleepy and remote, uninterested in anything but their meals. There were a few hundred of them scattered throughout the grounds, mostly established in caves or on rocky ledges, wherever they could fit themselves; nothing of comfort or even order provided for them, except the feedings, and the mowed-bare strip of dirt around the borders, where torches were lit at night to mark the lines past which they might not go, with the town-lights glimmering in the distance, cheerful and forbidden.
Temeraire had hunted out and cleared a large cavern, on his arrival, to sleep in; but it would be damp, no matter what he did in the way of lining it with grass, or flapping his wings to move the air, which in any case did not suit his instinctive notions of dignity: much better to endure every unpleasantness with stoic patience, although that was not very satisfying when no-one would appreciate the effort. The other dragons certainly did not.
He was quite sure he and Laurence had done as they ought, in taking the cure to France, and no-one sensible could disagree; but just in case, Temeraire had steeled himself to meet with either disapproval or contempt, and he had worked out several very fine arguments in his defense. Most importantly, of course, it was just a cowardly, sneaking way of fighting: if the Government wished to beat Napoleon, they ought to fight him directly, and not make his dragons sick to try and make him easy to defeat; as if British dragons could not beat French dragons, without cheating. “And not only that,” he added, “but it would not be only the French dragons who died: our friends from Prussia who are imprisoned in their breeding grounds would also have got sick, and perhaps it might even have gone so far as China; and that would be like stealing someone else’s food, even when you are not hungry; or breaking their eggs.”
He made this impressive speech to the wall of his cave, as practice: they had refused to give him his sand-table, and he had no-one of his crew to jot it down for him, either; he did not have Laurence, who would have helped him work out just what to say. So he repeated the arguments over to himself quietly, instead, so he should not forget them. And if these should not suffice to persuade, he thought, he might point out that after all, he had brought the cure back, in the first place: he and Laurence, with Maximus and Lily and the rest of their formation, and if anyone had a right to say where it should be shared out, they did: no-one would even have known of it if Temeraire had not contrived to be sick in Africa, where the mushrooms which cured it grew.
He might have saved the trouble. No-one accused him of anything, nor, as he had privately, a little wistfully, thought just barely possible, hailed him as a hero; because they did not care.
The older dragons, not feral but retired, were a little curious about the latest developments in the war, but only distantly, more inclined to tell over their own battles of earlier wars; and the rest had plenty of indignation over the recent epidemic, but only in a provincial way. They cared that they and their own fellows had sickened and died; they cared that the cure had taken so long to reach them; but it did not mean anything to them that dragons in France had also been ill, or that the disease would have spread, killing thousands, if Temeraire and Laurence had not taken over the cure; they also did not care that the Lords of the Admiralty had called it treason, and sentenced Laurence to die.
They had nothing to care for. They were fed, and there was enough for everyone. If the shelter was not pleasant, it was no worse than what even the retired dragons were used to, from the days of their active service; they had none of them even heard of a pavilion, or thought they might be made more comfortable than they were. No-one ever molested an egg; the grounds-keepers would take them away, but with infinite care, in waggons lined with straw, hot-water bottles and woolen blankets in the wintertime; and they would bring back reports until the eggs were hatched and no more of anyone’s concern; so everyone knew the eggs were safe in their hands; safer, even, than keeping them oneself, so even the dragons who had not cared to take a captain themselves, at all, would often as not hand over their own eggs. They could not go flying very far, because they were fed at no set time but randomly, from day to day, so if one went away out of ear-shot of the bells, one was likely to come too late, and go hungry all the day. So there was no larger society, no intercourse with the other breeding grounds or with the coverts, except when some other dragon came from afar, to mate; even that was arranged for them. Instead they sat, willing prisoners in their own territory, Temeraire thought bitterly; he would never have endured it if not for Laurence, only for Laurence, who would surely be put to death at once if Temeraire did not obey.
He held himself aloof from their society at first. There was his cave to be arranged: despite its fine prospect it had been left vacant for being inconveniently shallow, and he was rather crammed-in; but there was a much larger chamber beyond, visible through holes in the back wall, which he gradually opened up with the slow and cautious use of his roar. Slower, even, than perhaps necessary—he was very willing to have the task consume several days. The cave had then to be cleared of debris, old gnawed bones and inconvenient boulders, which he scraped out painstakingly even from the corners too small for him to lie in, for neatness’ sake; and he found a few rough boulders in the valley and used them to grind the cave walls a little smoother, by dragging them back and forth, throwing up a great cloud of dust.
It made him sneeze, but he kept on; he was not going to live in a raw untidy hole. He knocked down stalactites from the ceiling, and beat protrusions flat into the floor, and when he was satisfied, he arranged along the sides of what was now his antechamber, with careful nudges of his talons, some attractive rocks and old, dead tree-branches, twisted and bleached white, which he had collected from the woods and ravines. He would have liked a pond and a fountain, but he could not see how to bring the water up, or how to make it run when he had got it there, so he settled for picking out a promontory on Llyn y Fan Fawr which jutted into the lake, and considering it also his own.
To finish he carved the characters of his name into the cliff face by the entrance, and also in English, although the letter R gave him some difficulty and came out looking rather like the reversed numeral 4; then he was done with that, and routine crept up and devoured his days. To rise, when the sun came in at the cave-mouth; to take a little exercise, to nap, to rise again when the herdsmen rang the bell, to eat, then to nap and to exercise again, and then back to sleep; and that was the end of the day, there was nothing more. He hunted for himself, once, and so did not go to the daily feeding; later that day one of the small dragons brought up the grounds- master, Mr. Lloyd, and a surgeon, to be sure that he was not ill; and they lectured him on poaching sternly enough to make him uneasy for Laurence’s sake.
For all that, Lloyd did not think of him as a traitor, either; did not think enough of him to consider him one. The grounds-master only cared about his charges so far as they all stayed inside the borders, and ate, and mated; he recognized neither dignity nor stoicism, and anything which Temeraire did out of the ordinary was only a bit of fussing. “Come now, we have a fresh lady Anglewing visiting to-day,” Lloyd would say, jocularly, “quite a nice little piece; we will have a fine evening, eh? Perhaps we would like a bite of veal, first? Yes, we would, I am sure,” providing the responses with the questions, so Temeraire had nothing to do but sit and listen; and as Lloyd was a little hard of hearing, if Temeraire did try to say, “No, I would rather have some venison, and you might roast it first,” he was sure to be ignored.
It was almost enough to put one off making eggs, and in any case Temeraire was growing uncomfortably sure that his mother would not have approved in the least, how often they wished him to try, and how indiscriminately. Lien would certainly have sniffed in the most insulting way. It was not the fault of the female dragons sent to visit him, they were all very pleasant, but most of them had never managed an egg before, and some had never even been in a real battle or done anything interesting at all. So then they were embarrassed, as they did not have any suitable present for him which might have made up for it; and it was not as though he could pretend that he was not a very remarkable dragon, even if he liked to. Which he did not, very much, although he would have tried for Bellusa, a poor young Malachite Reaper without a single action to her name, sent by the Admiralty from Edinburgh, who miserably offered him a small knotted rug, which was all her confused captain would afford: it might have made a blanket for Temeraire’s largest talon.
“It is very handsome,” Temeraire said awkwardly, “and so cleverly done; I admire the colors very much,” and tried to drape it carefully over a small rock, by the entrance, but the gesture only made her look more wretched, and she burst out, “Oh, I do beg your pardon; he wouldn’t understand in the least, and thought I meant I would not like to, and then he said—” and she stopped abruptly in even worse confusion; so Temeraire was sure that whatever her captain had said, it had not been at all nice. It was as painful as could be, and he had not even the satisfaction of delivering one of his cherished retorts, because it was not as though she herself had said anything rude. So he did not much want to, but he obliged anyway. He was determined he would be patient, and quiet, in all things; he would not cause any trouble. He would be perfectly good.
Temeraire did not let himself think very much about Laurence; he did not trust himself. It was hard to endure the perpetual sensation of deep unease, almost overpowering, when he thought how he did not know how Laurence was, what his condition might be. Temeraire was sure to know every moment where his breastplate was, and his small gold chain, these being in his own possession; his talon-sheaths had been left with Emily, and he was quite certain she was to be trusted to keep them safe. Ordinarily he would have trusted Laurence, too, to keep himself safe; at least, if he were not proposing to do something dangerous for no very good reason, which he was sadly given to, on occasion; but the circumstances were not what they ought to be, and it had been so very long. The Admiralty had promised that so long as he behaved, Laurence would not be hanged, but they were not to be trusted, not at all. Temeraire resolved twice a week that he should go to Dover at once, to London—only to make inquiries, to see they had not, only to be sure—but unwanted reason always asserted itself, before he had even set out. He must not do anything which should persuade the Government he was unmanageable, and therefore Laurence of no use to them. He must be as complaisant and accommodating as ever he might.
It was a resolution already sorely tried by the end of his third week, when Lloyd brought him a visitor, admonishing the gentleman loudly, “Remember now, not to upset the dear creature, but to speak nice and slow and gentle, like to a horse,” infuriating enough, even before the gentleman was named to him as one Reverend Daniel Salcombe.
“Oh, you,” Temeraire said, which made that gentleman look aback, “yes, I know perfectly well who you are; I have read your very stupid letter to the Royal Society, and I suppose you are come to see me behave like a parrot, or a dog.”
Salcombe stammered excuses, but it was plainly the case; he began laboriously to read to Temeraire off a prepared list of questions, something quite nonsensical about predestination, but Temeraire would have none of it. “Pray be quiet; Saint Augustine explained it much better than you, and it still did not make any sense even then. Anyway, I am not going to perform for you, like a circus animal. I really cannot be bothered to speak to anyone so uneducated he has not read the Analects,” he added, guiltily excepting Laurence, in the back of his mind; but then Laurence did not set himself up as a scholar, and write insulting letters about people he did not know. “And as for dragons not understanding mathematics, I am sure I know more of it than do you.”
He scratched out with his claw a triangle, in the dirt, and labeled the two shorter sides. “There; tell me the length of the third, and then you may talk; otherwise, go away, and stop pretending you know anything about dragons.”
The simple diagramme had perplexed several gentlemen, when Temeraire had put it to them at a party in the London covert, rather disillusioning Temeraire as to the general understanding of mathematics among men. The Reverend Salcombe evidently had not paid much attention to that part of his education, either, for he stared, and colored up to his mostly bare pate, and turned to Lloyd furiously, saying, “You have put the creature up to this, I suppose! You prepared the remarks—” The unlikelihood of this accusation striking him, perhaps, as soon as he had made it to Lloyd’s gaping, uncomprehending face, he immediately amended, “They were given you, by someone, and you fed them to him, to embarrass me—”
“I never, sir,” Lloyd protested, to no avail, and it annoyed Temeraire so much that he nearly indulged himself in a small, a very small roar; but in the last moment he exercised great restraint, and only growled. Salcombe fled hastily all the same, Lloyd running after him, calling anxiously for the loss of his tip: he had been paid, then, to let Salcombe come and gawk at Temeraire, as though he really were a circus animal; and Temeraire was only sorry he had not roared, or better yet thrown them both in the lake.
And then his temper faded, and he drooped. He thought, too
late, that perhaps he ought to have talked to Salcombe, after all.
Lloyd would not read to him, or even tell him anything of the world
at all, even if Temeraire asked slowly and clearly enough to be understood,
but only said maddeningly, “Now, let’s not be worrying
ourselves about such things, no sense in getting worked up.” Salcombe,
however ignorant, had wished to have a conversation; and
he might yet have been prevailed upon to read him something from
the latest Proceedings, or a newspaper—oh, what Temeraire would
have done for a newspaper!
All this time the heavy-weight dragons had been finishing their
own dinners; the largest, a big Regal Copper, spat out a wellchewed
grey and bloodstained ball of fleece, belched tremendously,
and lifted away for his cave. His departure cleared a wide space of
the field, and now the rest came in a rush, middle-weights and lightweights
and the smaller courier-weight beasts landing in to take
their own share of the sheep and cattle, calling to one another noisily.
Temeraire did not move, but only hunched himself a little deeper
while they squabbled and played around him, and did not look up
even when one, a middle-weight with narrow blue-green legs, set
herself directly before him to eat, crunching loudly upon sheep
bones.
“I have been considering the matter,” she informed him, after a
little while, around a mouthful, “and in all cases, where the angle is
ninety degrees, as I suppose you meant to draw it, the length of the
longest side must be a number which, multiplied by itself, is equal
to the lengths of the two shorter sides, each multiplied by themselves,
added.” She swallowed noisily, and licked her chops clean.
“Quite an interesting little observation; how did you come to make
it?”
“I never,” Temeraire muttered. “It is the Pythagorean theorem;
everyone knows it who is educated. Laurence taught it me,” he
added, by way of making himself even more miserable.
“Hmh,” the other dragon said, rather haughtily, and flew away.
But she reappeared at Temeraire’s cave the next morning, uninvited,
and poked him awake with her nose, saying, “Perhaps you
would be interested to learn that there is a formula which I have invented,
which can invariably calculate the power of any sum; what
does Pythagoras have to say to that.”
“You never invented it,” Temeraire said, irritable at having been
woken up early, with so empty a day to be faced. “That is the binomial
theorem, Yang Hui made it a very long time ago,” and he put
his head under his wing and tried to lose himself again in sleep.
He thought that would be all, but four days later, while he lay
by his lake, the strange dragon landed beside him bristling and announced
in a furious rush, her words nearly tumbling over one another
in the attempt to get them out, “There, I have just worked out
something quite new: the prime number coming in a particular position,
for instance the tenth prime, is always very near the value of
that position, multiplied by the exponent one must put on the number
p to get that same value—the number p,” she added, “being a
very curious number, which I have also discovered, and named after
myself—”
“Certainly not,” Temeraire said, rousing with comfortable contempt,
when he had made sense of what she was talking about.
“That is e, and you are talking of the natural logarithm, and as for
the rest, about prime numbers, it is all nonsense; only consider the
prime fifteen—” and then he paused, working out the value in his
head.
“You see,” she said, triumphantly, and after working out another
two dozen examples, Temeraire was forced to admit the irritating
stranger might indeed be correct.
“And you needn’t tell me that this Pythagoras invented it first,”
the other dragon added, chest puffed out hugely, “or Yang Hui, because
I have inquired, and no-one has ever heard of either of them;
they do not live in any of the coverts or breeding grounds, so you
may keep your tricks. I thought as much; who ever heard of a
dragon named anything like Yang Hui; nonsense.”
Temeraire was neither despondent nor tired enough, in the moment,
to forget how dreadfully bored he was, and so he was less inclined
to take offense. “He is not a dragon, either of them,” he said,
“and they are both dead anyway, for years and years; Pythagoras
was a Greek, and Yang Hui was from China.”
“Then how do you know they invented it?” she demanded, suspiciously.
“Laurence read it me,” Temeraire said. “Where did you learn
any of it, if not out of books?”
“I worked it out myself,” the dragon said. “There is nothing
much else to do, here.”
Her name was Perscitia. She was an experimental cross-breed of
a Malachite Reaper and a light-weight Pascal’s Blue, who had come
out rather larger, slower, and more nervous than the breeders had
hoped; and her coloring was not ideal for any sort of camouflage:
the body and wings mostly bright blue and streaked with shades of
pale green, with widely scattered spines along her back. She was not
very old, either, unlike most of the once-harnessed dragons in the
breeding grounds: she had given up her captain. “Well,” Perscitia
said, “I did not mind my captain, he showed me how to do equations,
when I was small, but I do not see any use in going to war,
and getting oneself shot at or clawed up, for no reason which anyone
could explain to me. And, when I would not fight, he did not
much want me anymore,” a statement airily delivered, but Perscitia
avoided Temeraire’s eyes, making it.
“If you mean formation-fighting, I do not blame you; it is very
tiresome,” Temeraire said. “They do not approve of me in China,”
he added, to be sympathetic, “because I do fight: Celestials are not
supposed to.”
“China must be a very fine place,” Perscitia said, wistfully, and
Temeraire was by no means inclined to disagree; he thought sadly
that if only Laurence had been willing, they might now be together
in Peking, perhaps strolling in the gardens of the Summer Palace
again; he had not had the chance to see it in autumn.
And then he paused, and abruptly raising his head he said, “You
say you made inquiries: what do you mean by that? You cannot
have gone out.”
“Of course not,” Perscitia said. “I gave Moncey half my dinner,
and he went to Brecon for me and put the question out on the
courier circuit; this morning he went again, and the word was in noone
had ever heard of anybody by those names.”
“Oh—” Temeraire said, his ruff rising, “oh, pray; who is Moncey?
I will give him anything he likes, if only he can find out where
Laurence is; he may have all my dinner, for a week.”
Moncey was a Winchester, who had slipped the leash and eeled
right out the door of the barn where he had hatched, past a candidate
he did not care for, and so made his escape from the Corps. He
had been coaxed eventually into the breeding grounds, more by the
promise of company than anything else, being a gregarious creature.
Small and dark purplish, he looked like any other Winchester
at a distance, and excited no comment if either seen abroad or absent
from the daily feeding; and as long as his missed meals were
properly compensated for, he was very willing to oblige.
“Hm, how about you give me one of those cows, the nice fat
sort they save for you special, when you are mating,” Moncey said.
“I would like to give Laculla a proper treat,” he added, exultingly.
“Highway robbery,” Perscitia said indignantly, but Temeraire
did not care at all; he was learning in any case to hate the taste of
the cows, when it meant yet another miserably awkward evening
session, and nodded on the bargain.
“But no promises, mind,” Moncey cautioned. “I’ll put it about,
no fears, but it’ll be as many as a few weeks to hear back, if you
want it sorted out proper to all the coverts, and to Ireland, and even
so maybe no-one will have heard anything.”
“There is sure to have been word,” Temeraire said, low, “if he is
dead.”
the ball came in down through the ship’s bows and crashed
recklessly the length of the lower deck, the drumroll of its passage
preceding it with castanets of splinters raining against the walls for
accompaniment. The young Marine guarding the brig had been
trembling since the call to go to quarters had sounded above; a mingling,
Laurence thought, of anxiety and the desire to be doing something,
and the frustration at being kept at so useless and miserable
a post: a sentiment he shared from his still more useless place within
the cell. The ball seemed only to be rolling at a leisurely pace by the
time it approached the brig, and offered a first opportunity; the Marine
had put out his foot to stop it before Laurence could say a
word.
He had seen much the same impulse have much the same result
on other battlefields: the ball took off the better part of the foot and
continued unperturbed into and through the metal grating, skewing
the door off its top hinge and finally embedding itself two inches
deep into the solid oak wall of the ship, there remaining. Laurence
pushed the crazily swinging door open and climbed out of the brig,
taking off his neckcloth to tie the Marine’s foot; the young man was
staring amazed at the bloody stump, and needed a little coaxing to
limp along to the orlop. “A clean shot; I am sure the rest will come
off nicely,” Laurence said for comfort, and left him to the surgeons;
the steady roar of cannon-fire was going on overhead.
He went up the stern ladderway and plunged into the confusion
of the gundeck: daylight shining in from her east-pointed bows,
through jagged gaping holes, and making a glittering cloud of the
smoke and dust kicked up from the cannon. Roaring Martha had
jumped her tackling, and five men were fighting to hold her wedged
against the roll of the ship long enough to get her secure again; at
any moment the gun might go running wild across the deck, crushing
men and perhaps smashing through the side. “There girl, hold
fast, hold fast—” The captain of the gun-crew was speaking to her
like a skittish horse, his hands wincing away from the barrel,
smoking-hot; one side of his face was bristling with splinters standing
out like hedgehog spines.
In the smoke, in the red light, no one knew Laurence; he was
only another pair of hands. He had his flight gloves still in his coat
pocket; he clapped on to the metal with them and pushed her by the
mouth of the barrel, his palms stinging even through the thick
leather, and with a final thump she heaved over into the grooves
again. The men tied her down and then stood around her trembling
like well-run horses, panting and sweating.
There was no return firing, no calls passed along from the quarterdeck,
no ship in view through the gunport. The ship was griping
furiously where Laurence put his hand on the side, a sort of low
moaning complaint as if she were trying to go too close to the wind,
and water was glubbing in a curious way against her sides: a sound
wholly unfamiliar, and he knew this ship. He had served on Goliath
four years in her midshipmen’s mess as a boy, as lieutenant for another
two and at the Battle of the Nile; he would have said he could
recognize every note of her voice.
He put his head out the porthole and saw the enemy crossing
their bows and turning to come about for another pass: a frigate
only, a beautiful trim thirty-six-gun ship which could have thrown
not half of Goliath’s broadside; an absurd combat on the face of it,
and he could not understand why they had not turned to rake her
across the stern. Instead there was only a little grumbling from the
bow-chasers above, not much reply to be making. Looking forward
along the ship, he saw that she had been pierced by an enormous
harpoon sticking through her side, as if she were a whale. The end
inside the ship had several ingeniously curved barbs, which had
been jerked sharply back to dig into the wood; and the cable at the
harpoon’s other end swung grandly up and up and up, into the air,
where two enormous heavy-weight dragons were holding on to it:
an older Parnassian, likely traded to France during an earlier peacetime,
and a Grand Chevalier.
It was not the only harpoon: three more cable-lines dangled
down from their grip to the bow, and another two from the stern,
that Laurence could see. The dragons were too far aloft for him to
make out the details, with the ship’s motion underneath him, but
the cables were somehow laced into their harnesses, and merely by
flying together and pulling, they were pivoting the ship’s head into
the wind: all her sails must have been taken aback, and the dragons
were too far aloft for round-shot to reach them. One of them
sneezed from the action of the frantically speaking pepper guns, but
they had only to beat their wings a little more to get away from the
pepper, hauling the ship along while they did it.
“Axes, axes,” the lieutenant was shouting, with a clattering of
iron as the bosun’s mates came spilling weapons across the floor:
hand-axes, cutlasses, knives. The men snatched them up and began
to reach out the portholes to try and hack the ship free, but the harpoons
were two foot long from the hook, and the ropes had enough
slackness to give no good purchase to their efforts. Someone would
have to climb out of a porthole to saw at them: open and exposed
against the hull of the ship, with the frigate coming around again.
No-one moved to go, at first; then Laurence reached out and
took a short cutlass, sharpened, from the heap. The lieutenant
looked into his face and knew him, but said nothing. Turning to the
porthole, Laurence worked his shoulders through and pulled himself
out, many hands quickly co
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