Ratha's Courage
by Clare Bell
Excerpt copyright 2007
Chapter
One
A
shiver of excitement went through Ratha. She began her stalk, belly fur brushing
the ground. Grass whispered past her legs as she felt the slow controlled power
of each muscle. Her tail-tip tingled with the urge to twitch, but she held it
still.
The
horse the Named called a striper tossed its head and flapped its tail, eyes
widening. Ratha slowed her down-wind stalk so that she seemed nearly frozen, yet
was still moving. The striper swung its neck around, jerking its head and ears
back.
Ratha
stilled until the herdbeast settled, then quickened her stalk, easing her weight
from one foot to the next, placing each directly ahead of the one behind and
moving so smoothly she felt as though she were flowing across and through the
grass, a green-eyed river of tawny gold.
Nearing
the striper’s dancing rear hooves, inhaling it’s sweat-sharpened scent,
Ratha trembled with the impulse to dash, spring and wrestle her prey to the
ground. She took a long slow breath, as the herding teacher, Thakur had taught
her, mastered her urge and crept around the striper, circling in front of it.
Stripers
were new to the Named herds. This horse was dun, with dark brown mane and tail.
Ratha turned her head to bring her gaze down along its banded forelegs to the
three-toed feet. These feet differed from those of the smaller dappleback horses
that the clan had long tended. The striper’s center toe, sheathed in a single
hoof, was larger, the side toes further off the ground. That hoof had far more
power than the four and three-toed feet of the dapplebacks. Ratha had dodged it
many times and other herders had been sent sprawling.
The striper grunted and
whinnied, its nostrils flaring with her smell. From her crouch, Ratha lifted her
chin and stared up at the horse, trying to catch and hold its gaze. As if
sensing her purpose, the striper reared, its forefeet cutting the air, its tail
whisking its flanks. She froze again; waited.
When
the striper dropped down, she pounced on its stare with her own. Again it evaded
her, closing its eyes and ducking its head, showing her only its bristling mane.
She
knew the stripers were smarter than the dapplebacks; by now her stare would have
a dappleback helplessly imprisoned.
Thakur
had warned her that the stripers were clever; that the larger head held amore
alert and cunning mind. Suppressing her frustrated growl, Ratha made several
rasping snarls that were almost barks.
The
sounds had the effect she wanted. The striper’s ears swiveled, the head came
up, the eyes opened. Again her eyes sought the striper’s gaze and this time
she captured it. The animal stiffened, as if about to fight, but snort and stamp
as it would, the striper couldn’t break Ratha’s stare. It stilled to
near-immobility, only its hide shivering.
Ratha
felt triumph strengthen her heartbeat and deepen her breathing.
She was so close; she could reach out and tap one of the horse’s
forelegs with a front paw.
Again
came the rush of desire that threatened to propel her up onto the horse’s
shoulders, driving her teeth into its neck. In her imagination, she was already
atop the striper, feeling the stiff upright mane bristle into the corners of her
mouth. Part of her already felt the velvet-furred skin resist, stretch and then
tear through beneath the points of her fangs, her neck muscles pulling and
twisting in just the right way so that her fangs would slip between the
neckbones and skillfully separate them while the prey’s blood flowed in pulses
over her tongue. . .
Outwardly
Ratha shuddered, yet kept her eyes fixed on those of the horse while inwardly
she swiped the feelings aside. No, such a fevered attack was not the way of the
Named. She had fought this internal battle many times before, when
she trained as a cub under Thakur, and later when she began her duties as a
herder. Even when she culled herd-beasts, she would not let instinct run wild.
Ratha
used her frustration and desire, pouring them out savagely through her eyes. The
horse was now as still as if it were already in her killing embrace. The muscles
and tendons atop her forelegs quivered with the need to drive her claws out and
deep into flesh.
She
lifted out of her crouch, rearing up on her hind paws to lay one foreleg almost
gently over the horse’s shoulders and up along the back of its neck. In spite
of her care, the beast started, but before it could begin its escape flurry,
Ratha slapped the other forepaw around the underside of its neck.
Now
Ratha used her claws, but only enough to maintain her hold as she pushed
backwards with her hind feet to unbalance the striper and pull it over. She was
so close to the horse now that she couldn’t hold its gaze, but she no longer
needed to. It was falling into the daze that doomed prey often assumed.
Instead
of digging into the striper’s nape with claws and teeth, Ratha used the
pressure and friction of her pads combined with her weight and her experience in
knowing exactly how and where to push in order to topple the beast.
As
if in a trance, the striper sank to its knees. Ratha climbed further onto it,
using her weight to press the horse down onto its belly. She draped herself
across the animal, one forepaw keeping the horse’s forelegs, with their
dangerous hooves, at a distance. She wrapped the other forepaw around the top of
the horse’s head, twisting it up so that the throat lay exposed.
Feeling
the striper's heartbeat thudding through its ribs and into her own body, Ratha
bent her head, jaws starting to open. The heart’s beat was strong in the
creature’s neck, visibly jolting the skin over the great vessels and releasing
a deep temptation in Ratha to bite deeply and hard.
Instead
she opened her mouth to its full gape and set her teeth in position for the
instinctive throat bite. With the horse’s sweat-smell hot in her nose, she
squeezed her eyes shut with the effort not to bite, feeling the jaw-closing
muscles beneath her eyes and on the sides of her forehead tremble with the
strain.
The
onlookers, Thakur and the young cubs learning herding from him, had grown quiet,
as if they sensed the conflict within her.
back over her teeth as her mouth closed. She swallowed the saliva that had flooded
her mouth, staying atop the striper while the youngsters shrilled their praise and
Thakur added his deeper note. Their cries sounded strangely muted to her, as if they
were distant or her ears muffled.
(End of excerpt)
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