The sour
smell of man, and of death. Two entities Godl knew in ways painful and
triumphant.
Pine
sap. Wood smoke. Ice. Cold granite. Heather and gorse. Mud. Scents foreign and
familiar threaded kaleidoscopically through the nostrils of the jaguar as it
made its way through the forest. His mouth hung slightly agape, tongue pressing
the roof of its mouth when a particularly intriguing smell trailed on the wind.
Muscles
rippling like blood or honey pouring from a bucket the jaguar ran at a steady
pace, loping his way along the riverbank while trying to keep to the
undergrowth. His legs ached from the unfamiliar exertion, but with each paw
forward he relaxed into a rhythm etched in his bones. The terrain was alien,
and it puzzled Godl. The motion was not. It was not so different from the hunt
of which he was the master. What he did not understand, as he had never really
felt it, not once in his old life in the jungle, was the fear. It wormed its
way into his lungs, riding on the faint reek of the Keeper and his kind, to
slip into Godl’s blood.
His
heart was cold. Godl growled sporadically, the sound of teeth sliding over
bone, to try and shake it loose. When it would not, the jaguar curled his lips
and snarled. The reek…
The
Keeper swore a mile a minute, sweating even in the cooling air settling down
the slope and congealing over the lake. The machete in its heavy leather
scabbard banged against his left thigh. The strap was working its way loose,
but he did not want to lose precious time by stopping to refasten it. Further
compounding his irritation, the Weatherby Synthetic 30.06 was the first rifle
he could get his hands on, but he had mistakenly grabbed an ammo belt stocked
with shotgun shells, not realizing the error until he had made it downhill to
the lake. All the cartridges he had were the ones in the magazine.
The
jaguar had a good head start. The Keeper was torn about running uphill and
tracking the animal with the truck. He reckoned he might catch up to Godl
before the animal could cross the ridgeline further south, but only if he ran
like hell. And dropped him with the first shot.
The Keeper
did some calculations in his head, checked the angle of the sun, and ran
headlong into the underbrush. He did not look back.
The
heron flew down the center of the river, mindful of the setting sun and
increasing altitude as he strained to keep up with the Keeper and his prey.
Heron did not believe that the Keeper knew of his existence, but given the
proclivity to violence and the awful weaponry the man carried, heron wanted to
take no chances. He flapped his weary wings, tips caressing the icy water as
green-gold eyes scanned the riverbank.
Godl
was there, Heron knew, he heard the faint crashing of trampled underbrush. Over
that, like distant thunderheads giving vent to displeasure of the gods, Heron
could hear the growls and snarls of the anxious jaguar. He veered slightly,
taken off guard by the basso profundo vibrations emanating from the forest and
unsettling his bowels. Heron swept upwards to better see where the jaguar might
be heading. Up ahead, in the not too distant south, the forest thinned out
somewhat and the reptilian backbone of rock signaled the line of low peaks that
stood in the way.
Heron
clacked his beak, circling and troubled, knowing that Godl was unaware. Below
him, not far behind, the Keeper clumsily made his way along the faint track
left behind by the big cat. A few spirals and a glance at the lowering sun, and
Heron changed direction to head for a notch in the ridgeline.
Blood
was in the air, Godl could smell it along with the cool metallic breeze that
was inching its way through the trees. The scent made him hungry, reminding his
aching belly that he had not eaten the last consignment of meat the Keeper had
brought. His stomach contracted around the memory of tapir and turtle eggs, the
familiar squeal and struggle warming his veins. Godl curled his lips, squinting
his liquid gold eyes into the sunlight that was beginning to brighten the tree
line up ahead.
A growl,
the sound of magma shifting under rock…and Godl knew the next blood to stain
the earth would not be his own.
I'm a big fan of smells threading kaleidoscopically through the nostrils. My favourite combo is bacon and coffee.
ReplyDeleteSuspense...
ReplyDeleteI'm with Only a Movie...waiting anxiously for part 2.
ReplyDeleteUm, really? Yes, yes sir, yours is MUCH better than mine. LOVE the new header, by the way. You ROCK.
ReplyDelete:-) Reading the jungle. Beautiful.
ReplyDeletePearl
I agree with Petra that yours is much better than mine, and I retract earlier (private) statements about your header.
ReplyDeleteYours, however, is gonna freak my dreams tonight...
Ooooooooh! I want more!
ReplyDeleteAre you sure that "kaleidoscopically" is an actual word?
ReplyDeletexo,
Charmaine