The Sound of Thunder

The Sound of Thunder by Wilbur Smith Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Sound of Thunder by Wilbur Smith Read Free Book Online
Authors: Wilbur Smith
eight, nine and the ten-all Clubs. Straight flush! You come second by a day’s march.” He lifted number one’s hands off the money, pulled it towards him and began stacking it in columns of twenty.
    “Pretty hot run of luck you’re having,” Horse Odour gave his opinion, his face still twisted with disappointment.
    “Yes,” agreed Sean. Two hundred and sixty-eight pounds.
    Very pretty’ Funny how it comes to you on the big hands,” Horse Odour went on. “And especially, when you’re dealing. What did you say your profession was?”
    Without looking up Sean began transferring the stacks of sovereigns to his pockets. He was smiling a little. The end to a perfect evening, he decided.
    Satisfied that the money was secure Sean looked up at Horse Odour and turned that smile full upon him.
    “Come along then, laddie,” he said.
    “It will be a pleasure.” Horse Odour shoved his chair back and stood up.
    “It will indeed,” agreed Sean.
    Horse Odour led down the back-stairs into the yard, followed by Sean and the entire clientele of the canteen. At the bottom he paused, judging Sean’s footstep on the wooden stairs behind him-then he spun and hit, swinging his body into the punch.
    Sean rolled his head, but it caught him on the temple and he went over backwards into the crowd behind him. As he fell he saw Horse Odour jerk back the tail of his jacket and bring out the knife. It shone dull silver in the light from the canteen windows skinning knife, curved, eight inches of blade.
    The crowd scattered leaving Sean lying on the stairs, and Horse Odour came in to kill him, making an ugly sound, bringing the knife arching down from overhead, a clumsy, unprofessional blow.
    Only slightly stunned, Sean followed the silver sweep of the knife with ease and the. man’s wrist slapped loudly into Sean’s open left hand.
    For a long moment the man lay on top of Sean, his knife-arm helpless in Sean’s grip, while Sean assessed his strength-and with regret realized it was no match. Horse Odour was big enough, but the belly pressed against Sean’s was flabby and large, and the wrist in Sean’s hands was bony without the hard rubbery give of sinew and muscle.
    Horse Odour started to struggle, trying to wrestle his knife arm free, the sweat de wed on his face and then began to drip it had an oily, unpleasant smell like rancid butter that blended poorly with the odour of the horses.
    Sean tightened his grip on the man’s wrist, at first using only the strength of his forearm.
    “Aah! ” Horse Odour stopped struggling. Sean brought in the power of his whole arm, so he could feel his shoulder muscles bunching and writhing.
    “Jesus Christ! ” Shrieking, as bone cracked in his wrist, Horse Odour’s fingers sprang open and the knife thumped on to the wooden stairs.
    Still holding him, Sean sat up, then came slowly to his feet.
    “Leave us, friend.” Sean flung him backwards into the dust of the yard. He was breathing easily, still feeling cold and detached as he looked down and watched Horse Odour scrabbling to his knees, nursing his broken wrist.
    Perhaps it was the man’s first movement towards flight that triggered Sean-or perhaps it was the liquor he had drunk that twisted his emotions, aggravated his sense of loss and frustration and channelled it into this insane outburst of hatred.
    Suddenly it seemed to Sean that here before him on the ground was the source of all his ills-this was the man who had taken Ruth from him.
    “You bastard!” he growled. The man sensed the change in Sean and scrambled to his feet, his face turning desperately from side to side as he sought an avenue of escape.
    “You filthy bastard! ” Sean’s voice rose, shrill with the strength of this new emotion. For the first time in his life Sean craved to kill. He advanced upon the man slowly, his fists opening and closing, his face contorted and the words that spilled from his mouth no longer making sense.
    A great stillness had fallen upon the

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