登陆注册
15444000000024

第24章 CHAPTER V THE SHOOTING MATCH(3)

So Marais came, and with him Marie, who blushed and smiled, but to my mind looked more of a grown woman than ever before; one who had left girlhood behind her and found herself face to face with real life and all its troubles. Following her close, very close, as I was quick to notice, was Hernan Pereira. He was even more finely dressed than usual and carried in his hand a beautiful new, single-barrelled rifle, also fitted to take percussion caps, but, as I thought, of a very large bore for the purpose of goose shooting.

"So you have got well again," he said in a genial voice that yet did not ring true. Indeed, it suggested to me that he wished I had done nothing of the sort. "Well, Mynheer Allan, here you find me quite ready to shoot your head off." (He didn't mean that, though I dare say he was.)

"I tell you that the mare is as good as mine, for I have been practising, haven't I, Marie? as the 'aasvogels'" (that is, vultures)

"round the stead know to their cost."

"Yes, Cousin Hernan," said Marie, "you have been practising, but so, perhaps, has Allan."

By this time all the company of Boers had collected round us, and began to evince a great interest in the pending contest, as was natural among people who rarely had a gun out of their hands, and thought that fine shooting was the divinest of the arts. However, they were not allowed to stay long, as the Kaffirs said that the geese would begin their afternoon flight within about half an hour. So the spectators were all requested to arrange themselves under the sheer cliff of the kloof, where they could not be seen by the birds coming over them from behind, and there to keep silence. Then Pereira and I--I attended by my loader, but he alone, as he said a man at his elbow would bother him--and with us Retief, the referee, took our stations about a hundred and fifty yards from this face of cliff. Here we screened ourselves as well as we could from the keen sight of the birds behind some tall bushes which grew at this spot.

I seated myself on a camp-stool, which I had brought with me, for my leg was still too weak to allow me to stand long, and waited. Presently Pereira said through Retief that he had a favour to ask, namely, that I would allow him to take the first six shots, as the strain of waiting made him nervous. I answered, "Certainly," although I knew well that the object of the request was that he believed that the outpost geese--"spy-geese" we called them--which would be the first to arrive, would probably come over low down and slow, whereas those that followed, scenting danger, might fly high and fast. This, in fact, proved to be the case, for there is no bird more clever than the misnamed goose.

When we had waited about a quarter of an hour Hans said:

"Hist! Goose comes."

As he spoke, though as yet I could not see the bird, I heard its cry of "Honk, honk" and the swish of its strong wings.

Then it appeared, an old spur-winged gander, probably the king of the flock, flying so low that it only cleared the cliff edge by about twenty feet, and passed over not more than thirty yards up, an easy shot.

Pereira fired, and down it came rather slowly, falling a hundred yards or so behind him, while Retief said:

"One for our side."

Pereira loaded again, and just as he had capped his rifle three more geese, also flying low, came over, preceded by a number of ducks, passing straight above us, as they must do owing to the shape of the gap between the land waves of the veld above through which they flighted.

Pereira shot, and to my surprise, the second, not the first, bird fell, also a good way behind him.

"Did you shoot at that goose, or the other, nephew?" asked Retief.

"At that one for sure," he answered with a laugh.

"He lies," muttered the Hottentot; "he shot at the first and killed the second."

"Be silent," I answered. "Who would lie about such a thing?"

Again Pereira loaded. By the time that he was ready more geese were approaching, this time in a triangle of seven birds, their leader being at the point of the triangle, which was flying higher than those that had gone before. He fired, and down came not one bird, but two, namely, the captain and the goose to the right of and a little behind it.

"Ah! uncle," exclaimed Pereira, "did you see those birds cross each other as I pulled? That was a lucky one for me, but I won't count the second if the Heer Allan objects."

"No, I did not, nephew," answered Retief, "but doubtless they must have done so, or the same bullet could not have pierced both."

Both Hans and I only looked at each other and laughed. Still we said nothing.

From the spectators under the cliff there came a murmur of congratulation not unmixed with astonishment. Again Pereira loaded, aimed, and loosed at a rather high goose--it may have been about seventy yards in the air. He struck it right enough, for the feathers flew from its breast; but to my astonishment the bird, after swooping down as though it were going to fall, recovered itself and flew away straight out of sight.

"Tough birds, these geese!" exclaimed Pereira. "They can carry as much lead as a sea-cow."

"Very tough indeed," answered Retief doubtfully. "Never before did I see a bird fly away with an ounce ball through its middle."

"Oh! he will drop dead somewhere," replied Pereira as he rammed his powder down.

Within four minutes more Pereira had fired his two remaining shots, selecting, as he was entitled to do, low and easy young geese that came over him slowly. He killed them both, although the last of them, after falling, waddled along the ground into a tuft of high grass.

Now murmurs of stifled applause broke from the audience, to which Pereira bowed in acknowledgment.

"You will have to shoot very well, Mynheer Allan," said Retief to me, "if you want to beat that. Even if I rule out one of the two birds that fell to a single shot, as I think I shall, Hernan has killed five out of six, which can scarcely be bettered."

"Yes," I answered; "but, mynheer, be so good as to have those geese collected and put upon one side. I don't want them mixed up with mine, if I am lucky enough to bring any down."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 赤爱时代

    赤爱时代

    直到后来,他们都会明白,其实他们的爱一直都是如此的赤裸裸,赤裸裸的没有任何瑕疵,赤裸裸的没有任何结局
  • 半世残魂

    半世残魂

    【一个月更一次,慎入】抱歉抱歉抱歉,作者还没想出合适的简介。/黑脸
  • 二嫁狂妃:驭皇叔

    二嫁狂妃:驭皇叔

    她是首席特工,腹黑狡黠,智商高超,身手敏捷。当苏如是不堪受辱一头撞死在金銮殿时,她穿越了。他是当今皇帝的九弟,当今的九皇叔,下身瘫痪,长年作于轮椅,他看似温润如玉,却是冷清孤僻。“这个男人,我要了!”酒馆之中,她眉眼张狂,霸道的宣誓。从此,他沦落入那双的狂傲的眸子里。从此,他的生命里只剩下爱她,宠她。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 源之镜像空间

    源之镜像空间

    我们......是否拥有灵魂?当经过了种种沧海桑田,还能否回到最初的起点?当无数的偶然错综交织在一起,那就是一条我们必经的冒险之路。
  • 五胡英魂录

    五胡英魂录

    九州狼烟四处起,英雄枭雄造世势。前生因缘今世报,天命时数天知晓。八万仙魔鏖兵竞,五胡英魂逐鹿群。将军名留万千世,小兵枯骨何处寻?
  • 少爷么的巨星之路

    少爷么的巨星之路

    千陌槿扮男装和其他四位古老家族的少爷闯入娱乐圈,混的风生水起,而她的神秘身份是否会暴露?
  • 驱魔师传人:薰衣草秘密

    驱魔师传人:薰衣草秘密

    她是失忆的墨氏千金,又是驱魔慕家的传人,见鬼杀鬼,零失误,从小深爱的娃娃亲对象记忆却又因为失忆抹去,11年后,两人再次相遇,会擦出怎样的火花?
  • 凰火降世

    凰火降世

    一次叛乱,身份一落千丈;一次放逐,带来脱离困境的希望;她自尸山血海中走出,来到学院;一次相遇,足以融化冰山。
  • 花开茶靡许你一世

    花开茶靡许你一世

    他说,爱情可以有两种,喜欢和深爱.他说,我对你的爱是深爱.他说,在遇到你之前,我对你的爱已经在心里像酒一样慢慢发酵了22年.等遇到你的时候,这份爱,已经变成了可以为你付出生命的爱.他说,只要你幸福,我便得偿所愿.她说,我要有你我才会幸福.美丽的爱情总是让人向往,可是残酷的现实总是让人绝望,哈特菲利亚?一切到底怎么回事?
  • 抒情集

    抒情集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。