clan_destine
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2006
- Posts
- 112
The third was bigger than the others, which most likely meant that he was leader of the pack, thought the Hunter. He bore neither long stick nor short, but three of an intermediate length. Soundless as death itself, the Hunter hurled her weight upon this pack leader. even s she bore him to earth, she thrust her good, right forepaw around his head, hooked her big claws into the flesh over the jaw, then jerked sharply back and to the right.
The Hunter growled deep satisfaction at the snapping of the neck. Then she spun upon her haunches and bounded back into the brush-grown copse, leaving the other two-legs shouting behind her. Many of the little black sticks were hurled after her, but only one of the hastily aimed missiles fleshed, and that one only split the tip of her ear before hissing on to rattle among the tree trunks.
Milo could not suppress a groan as Dik Esmih dabbed a bit of homespun cloth at the hot blood gushing from the claw-torn cheek.
"Let be, Dik, let be," he gasped. "That cat is not only canny, she's strong as a horse. She broke my neck like a dry twig, but it will knit quickly enough. Just leave me here."
Milo lay still, feeling the pains of regeneration of bone and tissue already commencing. He was aware that Dik and one other squatted nearby, unwilling to leave him hurt and alone in this cold and dangerous place.
"They're good men," he thought, "all of them. I'm glad it was me that that wily flea factory chose as victim, and not one of them. In thirty minutes, those tears in my cheek will be fading scars and even the vertebrae will be sound again in an hour or less. But if she'd jumped one of them, we'd be bearing a well-dead Linsee or Esmith back to camp."
- The Clan of the Cats - Robert Adams
The Hunter growled deep satisfaction at the snapping of the neck. Then she spun upon her haunches and bounded back into the brush-grown copse, leaving the other two-legs shouting behind her. Many of the little black sticks were hurled after her, but only one of the hastily aimed missiles fleshed, and that one only split the tip of her ear before hissing on to rattle among the tree trunks.
Milo could not suppress a groan as Dik Esmih dabbed a bit of homespun cloth at the hot blood gushing from the claw-torn cheek.
"Let be, Dik, let be," he gasped. "That cat is not only canny, she's strong as a horse. She broke my neck like a dry twig, but it will knit quickly enough. Just leave me here."
Milo lay still, feeling the pains of regeneration of bone and tissue already commencing. He was aware that Dik and one other squatted nearby, unwilling to leave him hurt and alone in this cold and dangerous place.
"They're good men," he thought, "all of them. I'm glad it was me that that wily flea factory chose as victim, and not one of them. In thirty minutes, those tears in my cheek will be fading scars and even the vertebrae will be sound again in an hour or less. But if she'd jumped one of them, we'd be bearing a well-dead Linsee or Esmith back to camp."
- The Clan of the Cats - Robert Adams
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