Birds of Prey (62 page)

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Authors: Wilbur Smith

BOOK: Birds of Prey
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The ground ahead rose up so steeply that the horse could not take it straight up, and the path began to zigzag across the slope. There was another joyous cry from below, like the halloo of the
fox hunter, and they saw their pursuers strung out over a mile or more of the track. The leaders were much closer now.

‘Long musket shot,’ Hal hazarded, and as he said it one of the leading soldiers dropped to his knee behind a rock and took deliberate aim before he fired. They saw the puff of muzzle
smoke long before they heard the dull pop of the shot. The ball struck a blue chip off a rock fifty feet below where they stood. ‘Still too far. Let them waste their powder.’

The grey mare leaped upwards over the rocky steps in the path, much surer on her feet than Hal could have hoped. Then they reached the outer bend in the wide dogleg and started back across the
slope. Now they were approaching their pursuers at an oblique angle, and the gap between them narrowed even faster.

The men on the path below welcomed them with joyous shouts. They flung themselves down to rest, to steady their pounding hearts and shaking hands. Hal could see them checking the priming in the
pans of their muskets and lighting their slow-match, preparing themselves to make the shot as the grey mare and her rider came within fair musket range.

‘Satan’s breath!’ Hal muttered. ‘This is like sailing into an enemy broadside!’ But there was nowhere to run or hide, and they laboured on up the path.

Hal could see Schreuder now: he had worked his way steadily towards the head of the column and was staring up at them. Even at this range Hal could see that he had driven himself far beyond his
natural strength: his face was drawn and haggard, his uniform torn, filthy, soaked with sweat, and blood from a dozen scratches and abrasions. He heaved and strained for breath, but his sunken eyes
burned with malevolence. He did not have the strength to shout or to shake a weapon but he watched Hal implacably.

One of the green-jackets fired and they heard the ball hum close over their heads. Aboli was urging on the mare at her best pace over the steep, broken path, but they would be within musket
range for many more minutes. Now a ripple of fire ran along the line of soldiers along the path below. Musket balls thudded among the rocks around them, some flattening into shiny discs where they
struck. Others sprayed chips of stone down upon them, or whined away in ricochet across the valley.

Unscathed, the grey mare reached the outward leg of the path and started back. Now the range was longer and most of the Hottentot infantrymen jumped to their feet and took up the pursuit. One or
two started directly up the slope, attempting to cut the corner, but the hillside proved too sheer for even their nimble feet. They gave up, slid back to the angled pathway and hurried after their
companions along the gentler but longer route.

A few soldiers remained kneeling in the path, and reloaded, stabbing the ramrods frantically down the muzzles of their muskets, then pouring blackpowder into the pan. Schreuder had watched the
fusillade, leaning heavily against a rock while his pounding heart and laboured breathing slowed. Now he pushed himself upright and seized a reloaded musket from one of his Hottentots, elbowing the
other man aside.

‘We are beyond musket shot!’ Hal protested. ‘Why does he persist?’

‘Because he is mad with hatred for you,’ Aboli replied. ‘The devil gives him strength to carry on.’

Swiftly Schreuder stripped off his coat and bundled it over the rock, making a cushion on which to rest the forestock of the musket. He looked down the barrel and picked up the pip of the
foresight in the notch of the backsight. He settled it for an instant on Hal’s bobbing head, then lifted it until he had a slice of blue sky showing beneath it, compensating for the drop of
the heavy lead ball when it reached the limit of its carry. In the same motion he swept the sight ahead of the grey’s straining head.

‘He can never hope for a hit from there!’ Hal breathed, but at that instant he saw the silver smoke bloom like a noxious flower on the stem of the musket barrel. Then he felt a
mallet blow as the ball ploughed into the ribs of the grey mare an inch from his knee. Hal heard the air driven from the horse’s punctured lungs. The brave animal reeled backwards and went
down on its haunches. It tried to recover its footing by rearing wildly, but instead threw itself off the edge of the narrow path. Just in time, Aboli grabbed Hal’s injured leg and pulled him
from its back.

Hal and Aboli sprawled together on the rocks and looked down. The horse rolled until it struck the bend in the pathway, where it came to rest in a slide of small stones, loose earth and dust. It
lay with all four legs kicking weakly in the air. A resounding shout of triumph went up from the pursuing soldiers, whose cries rang along the cliffs and echoed through the gloomy depths of the
dark gorge.

Hal crawled shakily to his feet, and quickly assessed their circumstances. Both he and Aboli still had their muskets slung over their shoulders and their swords in their scabbards. In addition
they each had a pair of pistols, a small powder horn and a bag containing musket balls strapped around their waists. But they had lost all else.

Below them their pursuers had been given new heart by this reverse in their fortunes and were clamouring like a pack of hounds with the smell of the chase hot in their nostrils. They came
scrambling upwards.

‘Leave your pistols and musket,’ Aboli ordered. ‘Leave the powder horn and sword also, or their weight will wear you down.’

Hal shook his head. ‘We will need them soon enough. Lead the way on.’ Aboli did not argue and went away at full stride. Hal stayed close behind him, forcing his injured leg to serve
his purpose through the pain and the quivering weakness that spread slowly up his thigh.

Aboli reached back to hand him up over the more formidable steps in the pathway, but the incline became sharper as they laboured upwards and began to work round the sheer buttress of rock that
formed one of the portals of the dark gorge. Now, at every pace forward, they were forced to step up onto the next level, as though they were on a staircase, and were skirting the sheer wall that
dropped into the valley far below. The pursuers, though still close, were out of sight around the buttress.

‘Are we sure this is the right path?’ Hal gasped, as they stopped for a few seconds’ rest on a broader step.

‘Althuda is leaving sign for us still,’ Aboli assured him, and kicked over the cairn of three small pebbles balanced upon each other which had been erected prominently in the centre
of the path. ‘And so are my grey horses.’ He smiled as he pointed out a pile of shining wet balls of dung a little further ahead. Then he cocked his head. ‘Listen!’

Now Hal could hear the voices of Schreuder’s men. They were closer than they had been when last they had stopped. They sounded as though they were just round the corner of the buttress
behind them. Hal looked at Aboli with dismay, and tried to balance on his good leg to conceal the weakness of the other. They could hear the clink of sword on rock and the clatter of loose stones
underfoot. The soldiers’ voices were so clear and loud that Hal could distinguish their words, and Schreuder’s voice relentlessly urging his troops onwards.

‘Now you will obey me, Gundwane!’ said Aboli, and he leaned across and snatched Hal’s musket. ‘You will go on at your best speed while I hold them here for a
while.’ Hal was about to argue but Aboli looked hard into his eyes. ‘The longer you argue the more danger you place me in,’ he said.

Hal nodded. ‘See you at the top of the gorge.’ He clasped Aboli’s arm in a firm grip, then hobbled on alone. As the path turned into the main gorge, Hal looked back and saw
that Aboli had taken shelter crouching in the bend of the path, and that he had laid the two muskets on the rock in front of him, close to his hand.

Hal turned the corner, looked up and saw the gorge open up above him like a great gloomy funnel. The sides were sheer rock walls and it was roofed over by trees with tall thin stems that reached
up for the sunlight. They were draped and festooned with lichens. A small stream came leaping down, in a series of pools and waterfalls, and the path took to this stream bed and climbed up over
water-worn boulders. Hal dropped to his knees, plunged his face into the first pool and sucked up water, choking and coughing in his greed. As the water distended his belly he felt strength flow
back into his swollen, throbbing leg.

From the other side of the buttress behind him there came the thud of a musket shot, then the thump of a ball striking flesh, followed immediately by the scream of a man thrown into the abyss, a
scream that dwindled and faded as he fell away. It was cut off abruptly as he struck the rocks far below. Aboli had made certain of his first shot, and the pursuers would be thrown back in
disarray. It would take them time to regroup and come on more cautiously, so he had won precious minutes for Hal.

Hal scrambled to his feet, and launched himself up the stream bed. Each of the huge, smooth boulders tested his injured leg to its limit. He grunted, groaned and dragged himself upward,
listening at the same time for the sounds of fighting behind him, but he heard nothing more until he reached the next pool where he stopped in surprise.

Althuda had left the five grey horses tethered to a dead tree at the water’s edge. When he looked beyond them to the next giant step in the stream bed, Hal knew why they had been abandoned
here. They could no longer follow this dizzy path. The gorge was constricted into a narrow throat high above his head – and his own courage faltered as he surveyed the perilous route that he
had to follow. But there was no other way, for the gorge had turned into a trap from which there was no escape. While he wavered, he heard from far below another musket shot and a clamour of angry
shouts.

‘Aboli has taken another,’ he said aloud, and his own voice echoed weirdly from the high walls of the gorge. ‘Now both his muskets are empty and he will have to run.’ But
Aboli had won this reprieve for him, and he dared not squander it. He drove himself at the steep path, dragging his wounded leg over glassy, water-polished rock, which was slippery and treacherous
with slimy green algae.

His heart pounding with exhaustion, and his fingernails ripped to the quick, he crawled the last few feet upwards and reached the ledge in the throat of the gorge. Here he dropped flat on his
belly and looked back over the edge. He saw Aboli coming up, leaping from rock to rock without hesitation, a musket clutched in each hand, not even glancing down to judge his footing on the
treacherous boulders.

Hal looked up at the sky through the narrow opening of the gorge high above his head, and saw that day was fading. It would be dark soon, and the tops of the trees were turning to gold in the
last rays of sunlight.

‘This way!’ he shouted down to Aboli.

‘Go on, Gundwane!’ Aboli shouted back. ‘Do not wait for me. They are close behind!’

Hal turned and looked up the steep stream bed behind him. For the next two hundred paces it was in full view: if he and Aboli tried to continue the climb, then Schreuder and his men would reach
this vantage point while their backs were still exposed. Before they could reach the next shelter they would be shot down by short-range musket fire.

We will have to make our stand here, he decided. We must hold them until nightfall, then try to slip away in the dark. Quickly he gathered loose rocks from the choked watercourse in which he hid
and stacked them along the lip of the ledge. When he looked down he saw that Aboli had reached the foot of the rock wall and was climbing rapidly up towards him.

When Aboli was half-way up, and fully exposed, there was a shout from further down the darkening gorge. Through the gloom Hal made out the shape of the first of their pursuers. There came the
flash and bang of a musket shot, and Hal peered down anxiously but Aboli was uninjured and still climbing fast.

Now the bottom of the gorge was swarming with men, and a fusillade of shots set the echoes booming and crashing. Hal picked out Schreuder down there in the gloom: his white face stood out among
the darker ones that surrounded him.

Aboli reached the top of the rock-wall, and Hal gave him a hand on to the ledge. ‘Why have you not gone on, Gundwane?’ he panted.

‘No time for talking.’ Hal snatched one of the muskets from him and began to reload it. ‘We have to hold them here until dark. Reload!’

‘Powder almost finished,’ Aboli replied. ‘Only enough for a few more shots.’ As he spoke he was plying the ramrod.

‘Then we must make every shot tell. After that we will beat them back with rocks.’ Hal primed the pan of his musket. ‘And when we have run out of rocks to throw, we will take
the steel to them.’

Musket balls began to buzz and crack around their heads as the men below opened up a sustained rolling volley. Hal and Aboli were forced to lie below the lip, every few seconds popping up their
heads to take a quick glance down the wall.

Schreuder was using most of his men to keep up the fusillade, controlling them so that weapons were always loaded and ready to fire at his command while others reloaded. It seemed that he had
chosen a team of his strongest men to scale the wall, while his marksmen tried to keep Hal and Aboli from defending themselves.

This first wave of a dozen or more climbers carrying only their swords rushed forward and hurled themselves at the rock wall, scrambling upwards. Then, as soon as Hal and Aboli’s heads
appeared over the lip, there came a thunderous volley of musket fire and the muzzle flashes lit the gloom.

Hal ignored the balls that flew around and splashed against the rock below him. He thrust out the barrel of his musket and aimed down at the nearest climber. This was one of the white Dutch
corporals, and the range was point-blank. Hal’s ball struck him in the mouth, smashed in his teeth and shattered his jawbone. He lost his grip on the slippery face, and fell backwards. He
crashed into the three men below him, knocking them loose, and all four plummeted down to shatter on the rocks below.

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