The Alex King Series by A BATEMAN (free ebook reader for ipad TXT) ๐
Read free book ยซThe Alex King Series by A BATEMAN (free ebook reader for ipad TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: A BATEMAN
Read book online ยซThe Alex King Series by A BATEMAN (free ebook reader for ipad TXT) ๐ยป. Author - A BATEMAN
A big name in the London financial sector, the man had turned up looking like Allan Quartermain and had wanted to hunt elephant. Subdued after taking a mature bull, that had not been a clean kill, he had taken himself back to town and the airport and left behind every piece of his African adventure kit at the lodge, including the rifle. Wanting and doing were two entirely different things. The man hadnโt known that elephants cry. That they shed tears and express fear as you stand over them, see your own reflection cast in their glossy, intelligent eye and finish them off at close range. He hadnโt known that fact, but he soon did, and from that moment, he had looked haunted by his actions. Hollowed out by guilt and regret.
The rifle, which to the uninitiated looked like a traditional side by side shotgun, wasnโt equipped with a telescopic sight, but Romo wasnโt planning on hunting at long range, just merely keeping themselves out of the food chain. The open iron sights were adjustable out to three-hundred yards. The Anderson Wheeler was an old school piece of kit, but packed an enormous punch.
At the summit of the ridge, they were afforded the expansive view of the plateau. The flat ground spread out before them to the next line of hills some twenty-miles distant. Interspersing the flatness were clumps of trees and thorn bushes, as well as sporadic boulders the size of family cars. They seemed to shimmy in the heat haze. The sky above the distant summit graduated from washed-out blue, to the darkest, clearest azure imaginable.
โDulla said that he saw the man firing down the side of the gulch. The ground is flatter, like a billiard table, and there are no obstructions for the entire line of sight out to six-thousand metres.โ
โWhat?โ Romo looked at his younger sibling. โHeโs not even firing from an elevated position?โ
โNo.โ
The older man shook his head. โThis gets better and better,โ he said. He took off his hat and used it to shield his eyes from the sun as he squinted into the distance. โI canโt see him,โ he said.
Vigus shrugged. โMaybe heโs gone back, eh โbro?โ
Romo shook his head. He studied the terrain, then stopped and stared. โYou got the field glasses?โ
โNo.โ
โShit.โ
โWhatโs up?โ
Romo squinted. โThereโs something down there. There are bushes and rocks in the way, but the shape is wrong.โ He shouldered the rifle and aimed. He wasnโt taking a shot, just gauging the distance using the blade of the foresight and a rock he knew to be at least six-feet tall. โAbout one and a half klicks.โ
โWhat is it?โ
โI think heโs prone, eh? I think heโs lining up on a shot.โ
โAre we going down there to take a look, or what?โ
โYeah. Letโs see what this gamie can do.โ
The two men made their way down the slope, a slightly steeper gradient than their ascent. There were more rocks too, and progress was slow as both men kept their wits about them. There were leopards in these rocks, baboons also, and both were fearsome predators. The baboons were worse, they could mass in numbers quickly and if they reached twenty or more, then the men would be in real trouble. Baboons feared nothing in a large enough group.
Snakes like the puff adder and black mamba liked the shade afforded from direct sunlight and the morning warmth of the rocks as they heated in the sun. In the day, they nestled in the tufts of grass and under thorny bushes. Both creatures were game changers if they bit an unsuspecting leg. Black Mambas had been known to chase people down and bite for no apparent reason. They were also Africaโs deadliest snake.
โCan you see him now?โ Vigus asked. He looked in the direction his brother had been studying. โI canโt see shit, bro.โ
โNo. Weโve dropped too much now,โ he replied. โBut Iโve got the area marked. When we hit the plateau, itโs five-hundred paces or so to the rocks. He was behind them, twenty paces out, I reckon.โ He shrugged. Distances were relative in the African sun; the man may well be fifty-metres out from where he had best guessed.
Vigus dropped down, the shotgun raised to his shoulder, Romo followed suit with the double rifle. He frowned across at his brother.
โLions,โ Vigus explained. โTwo females, both large.โ
โThe Biedmet pride,โ Romo replied. โNo other prides come in here. They havenโt been here for weeks either.โ
โThere are two males nearby, juveniles. Banished, lucky not to have been killed by the old male. It may be time to take out the old fella and let the other two fight it out for the crown. When is our next lion client coming in?โ
โTwo weeks,โ the younger brother said. โIโll mark down a sighting on the map when we get back. Those two juveniles follow the pride for scraps. The old male would make a great trophy.โ
โGood. Get Dulla to start tracking the pride. If theyโre here, then it will be a good score for the next client.โ
Both men remained crouched, not wanting to risk being seen. They would wait and see what the two lionesses did before moving onwards. They did not
Comments (0)