Authors: Brian Falkner
“A most able display,” the earl says. “Let Bony come. Let him bring his blasted dinosaurs. We will kill them and then throw his Grande Armée back into the sea.”
The duke does not seem to share his enthusiasm. “Frazer, you were in the thick of things at Waterloo,” he says. “What is your opinion of the rocket display?”
Frazer, a fine-featured man with piercing eyes, takes a long sip of wine before answering and the table goes quiet, waiting for his response.
“My lord, I must defer,” he says. “There was much smoke and confusion on the battlefield at Waterloo. It was all over in an instant and although I saw the creatures, I am not able to say how the rockets might fare against them.”
“A shame,” the duke says.
“Might I instead pass the question to the saur-slayer, the hero of Waterloo,” Frazer says. “Young Lieutenant Frost, who was in the midst of the action and managed to kill not one battlesaurus, but two.”
All eyes turn to Frost, who seems aware of it despite his blindness. He draws his handkerchief and coughs lightly into it before speaking.
“Your Grace, might I be permitted to speak plainly?” he asks.
“That is what we want,” the duke says.
“And my plain speaking should offer no offense to Sir William, whom I regard as a genius and a personal hero of mine,” Frost says.
“None will be taken,” Congreve says, smiling politely.
“I think it was a wonderful demonstration today,” Frost says. “Although I could not see it, I heard it well enough and Private Sullivan, who now acts as my eyes, described it vividly for me. I understand that all five of the available wooden dinosaurs were destroyed.”
“Indeed they were, Lieutenant,” Congreve says proudly.
“And the demonstration lasted what, an hour?” Frost asks.
“Less,” the earl says.
“Merely fifty-two minutes by my timepiece,” Frazer agrees.
“On the battlefield at Mont-Saint-Jean, it was all over in a fraction of that,” Frost says. “From when the battlesaurs charged out of the Sonian Forest to when my ammunition caisson exploded could not have been ten minutes. The creatures are quick and agile. It was great skill on behalf of my crew that we were able to turn our gun rapidly enough to kill one of the creatures as it attacked. The second was pure luck. We had no time to reload.”
“Then what happened to it?” the earl asks.
“It was killed by our exploding caisson, as nearly was I, and Sullivan, my spongeman, the only survivors from my team.”
“Then you regard today as a failure, lieutenant?” Congreve asks, his eyes hard.
“I do not, Sir William,” Frost says. “I regard it as neither a success nor a failure, but rather as a distraction. I fear that firing an hour's worth of rockets at stationary targets is so far removed from the reality of the battlefield as to provide no useful evidence as to their effectiveness.”
“I am outraged, sirâ” Congreve begins, but stops as the duke holds up a hand.
“You have no right to outrage,” the duke says. “The lieutenant asked for, and was given, permission to speak plainly. He has a firm opinion, and quite frankly, as he has firsthand experience of these animals, I feel his opinion should carry some weight. I also was disturbed at the time it took to destroy the targets today.”
“We are refining the weapons every day,” Congreve says with a glance at Frost more dangerous than any of his rockets. “They grow more accurate and more reliable. In fact, we are already working on a design that would spin the rocket, like the rifling on a carbine, providing stability in flight.”
“Then perhaps you should have waited until that design was ready for demonstration,” the duke says. “In the meantime I am afraid our best hopes are still the mesmerization techniques and the pepper.”
“Sparkle sticks against dinosaurs,” Congreve scoffs.
“We still have time to perfect the rockets,” Wood says. “Napoléon will not dare to invade anytime soon. The Royal Navy still controls the Channel. He will lose his ships and his precious battlesaurs, should he risk them in a Channel crossing.”
There are murmurs of agreement, but Frost coughs loudly and in the quiet that follows says, “Napoléon is a cunning tactician.”
“A fact we are all aware of,” the duke says. “What is your point?”
“The man knows he cannot sneak past or defeat the Royal Navy, yet he still plans an invasion. Why?” Frost asks.
“He is delusional,” the earl says.
“Let Frost speak,” the duke says. “I want to hear his thoughts.”
“Napoléon is a master of deception,” Frost says. “The army at Calais could be a decoy.”
“He still must cross the Channel somewhere,” the earl says. “And the Royal Navy will not allow that.”
“There is talk of a French fleet at Brest,” Frost says.
“The fleet at Brest is nothing but a fancy,” the earl says. “This is your decoy. Our spies tell us that the so-called fleet consists of nothing but freighters and barges, painted to look like warships. Their cannon are made of wood. Napoléon seeks to deceive us, to divert our ships to the south so he can cross at the narrow of the Channel. We will not be so easily fooled.”
“A cargo ship can still carry a dinosaur,” Frost says.
“Napoléon is at Calais,” the duke says. “I know the man. He rides at the head of his army. If the attack was to come from Brest he would be there and so would his battlesaurs. Yet none have been spotted. They have, however, been parading around in open sight at Calais.”
“All the more reason to think that it is merely a decoy,” Frost says.
“Even if you were right,” the earl says, “it would not matter. A powerful squadron blockades the port at Brest. That fleet, real or no, will never leave the harbor.”
“It seems unlikely that Napoléon could make good his threat to invade the British Isles,” the duke says. “But Frost is right. He makes his preparations. And so we must make our own preparations in case he should make land.”
“My rocketeers will be ready,” Congreve says pompously.
The duke does not quite manage to conceal a look of mild frustration.
“The trojansaurs destroyed today were modeled on those we encountered at Waterloo,” Frost says.
“Of course. We had reliable witnesses to their size and ferocity,” Wood says. “You and your man Sullivan foremost among them.”
“It might interest Your Grace to know that those battlesaurs are not the largest in Napoléon's army,” Frost says.
There is a shocked silence around the table.
“You jest, sir,” Frazer says.
“I saw these creatures with my own eyes,” the duke says, “albeit from a greater distance than you. You say there are larger ones?”
“I do, sir,” Frost says. “A young man named Willem Verheyen, of Gaillemarde, near Waterloo, killed a much bigger animal prior to the battle when it escaped from Napoléon's men and attacked his village.”
“Ah, yes,” Congreve chuckles. “Willem, the Wizard of Gaillemarde.”
“The saurs at Waterloo were taller than an elephant,” the duke says doubtfully.
“And yet dwarfed by others in Napoléon's army,” Frost says.
“Rumor and exaggeration.” Congreve snorts. “I would question this Willem Verheyen myself, if he even exists.”
Frost smiles. “He most certainly exists.”
“Then bring the boy here,” Congreve says. “Let us hear from his own mouth about this mythical beast of Gaillemarde.”
“Indeed he is already here,” the duke says with a smile at Willem.
Willem leans forward so they can see him.
There is complete silence at the table.
“Major Lux?” Congreve asks, clearly shocked.
“A necessary subterfuge,” the duke says, “and one that I trust you will all treat with the greatest confidence.”
“Willem, do you honestly expect us to believe that the saur at your village was larger than the ones we encountered at Waterloo?” Frazer asks.
“Much larger, I think,” Willem says. “Although I did not see those at Waterloo.”
“Piffle,” Congreve says, and laughs. “What he saw grows larger in his mind's eye than ever it was in reality.”
“The beast was tall enough to take a man from our watchtower in the church steeple while standing at its base,” Willem says.
“The churches must be small in Gaillemarde,” Congreve scoffs, but as Willem looks at the faces that surround him, he sees only horror.
“Yet you killed this giant?” Frazer asks.
“With help from a friend,” Willem says.
“Using no more than mesmerization and a bolt from a crossbow,” Frost says. “Had Willem's village been armed with Sir Congreve's rockets I fear Willem would not be sharing luncheon with us today.”
“We must find some answer to Napoléon's great beasts, and soon,” the duke says. “Before the tyrant finds a way to outwit the Channel Fleet.”
“What about the Ottomans?” Wood asks. “Can we rely on them to join a new coalition against the French?”
All eyes turn to the earl.
“We cannot expect any help from that quarter,” the earl says.
“What was the response from Sultan Mahmud?” Frazer asks.
“The Ottoman Empire will not be joining any coalition,” the earl says. “The sultan does not want to antagonize Napoléon.”
“He joined us and the Prussians in the Second Coalition, why not this one?” Wood asks.
“He does not want to fight on the losing side,” Frazer says. “He dreams that having conquered Europe, Napoléon will leave the Near East alone.”
“He should learn from history,” the duke says. “The Mongol hordes once controlled Europe from west to east. I am sure Napoléon has even higher ambitions.”
“I also suspect that Mahmud conducts his own expeditions to the Amerigo Islands,” the earl says. “In search of his own dinosaurs.”
“That will do him no good,” Frost says. “He does not know how to train or control the saurs.”
“Nor how to fight them,” Frazer says. “Which we do, thanks to Willem.”
“Indeed,” the duke says with a warm smile at the young man. “Thank you for your efforts to date, Willem.”
“It has been my pleasure to serve,” Willem says formally. “I⦔ He falters, unsure how to continue.
“Speak your mind,” the duke says. “I presume you are about to remind me of my side of the bargain.”
“That was my intention, Your Grace,” Willem says uncomfortably.
“You are eager to rescue your mother and a young woman, whom the French have imprisoned at an abbey in the Sonian Forest near your village. Our agreement was two hundred light cavalry, if I remember correctly,” the duke says.
Willem thinks the duke remembers perfectly well, but says only, “Yes, Your Grace.”
“A well-conceived plan,” the duke says. “Such a force would be very mobile. How long do you think it would take you to reach the abbey after you make landfall?”
“A matter of hours, your grace,” Willem says. “Certainly before any sizable force could be mobilized against us.”
“And if they unleash their dinosaurs?” Wood asks.
“It is a good question,” the duke says. “Horses are no use against battlesaurs. We saw this at Waterloo. No matter how well trained, they will throw their riders and flee in terror.”
“Napoléon's dinosaurs have already joined units in Calais or Brussels,” Frost says. “There will be few, if any, left at the abbey.”
“And the battle will be a short one, Your Grace,” Willem says. “There are secret underground ways into the abbey. While the cavalry attack from the front, a small force, including myself, will emerge inside the abbey, rescue the prisoners, and retreat the same way. Even if there are still battlesaurs at the abbey, our entire force can withdraw, the battle over, before a single beast sees the light of day.”
The duke sighs and steeples his fingers. He looks at Willem across the top of them. “Young man, you know that Bonaparte sits just across the Channel, teetering on the edge of invasion.”
“Of course, Your Grace,” Willem says, desperately afraid of what the duke will say next.
“Two hundred horses, in the right place at the right time, might be the difference between throwing Napoléon back into the sea or England becoming the newest state of the French Empire,” the duke says.
“Your Grace, you made a promiseâ” Frost begins, but the duke stops him with a raised hand.
“An Englishman takes his honor and his promises very seriously,” the duke says. “And you shall have your two hundred cavalry. But not just yet. Let us deal with this threat of invasion, and as soon as our isles are secure once again, I will give you whatever you need to rescue your mother and this girl.”
“That may be too late,” Willem protests.
“It has been three months,” the duke says. “What is another three weeks, or another three months, if it comes to it?”
Willem stares at the table for a moment and there is silence. He slowly raises his eyes to meet the duke's.
“For many weeks I did not know where my mother was held,” Willem says. “Or Cosette, the girl who has my heart. When I found out, I wanted to rush there immediately, but I stayed to complete the training of your men, as per my promise. Now I need you to uphold yours, so that I can free them before they are moved or killed. Who knows what indignities they are being subjected to by Napoléon's men? You cannot default on your agreement.”
“Such insolence,” the earl says.
“He is young and passionate, not insolent,” the duke says. “And he is right, I made a promise. Willem, you will have your men, but not until I can release them. I am sorry, but that decision is final.”
He drains the last of his glass and refuses with a flat hand when offered more.
“It has been a truly interesting day,” he says, and stands. “In many ways. But now, unfortunately, I must return to Whitehall. Congreve, I look forward to a future demonstration of your spinning rockets.”