Next part if you are interested,
@blackbound @Bradstick and
@harveygasson
QUARRY (5)
Rhys’s First Hunt
In spite of the pain, Rhys knew that he had to make good his escape but, as he did so, the pain of two broken ribs added to the lactic acid build-up in his arms to make him feel like just giving up and surrendering to the gun. He’d always been a stubborn boy and now that stubbornness cut in when it was most needed; he stumbled out or the release pen and went looking for some dense ground cover. He didn’t even look round at the sound as the dog was allowed to terrify the youngest purchase into running into the reserve.
The hunter waited and watched. If he had the chance, he would try for the most experienced quarry but, if he was out of luck, there were always the other two. He only wished that the middle one hadn’t been damaged by the largest one on the way out of the release pen. Being a sportsman, he didn’t like the quarry to be that easy to shoot. The little one would be easy; he had no experience, very little strength and was nearly paralysed with fear. Nevertheless, he’d come in handy for the hunter if he had not succeeded in the first two and a half hours. He watched carefully as his purchases made their way into the reserve. From past experience he knew that it was unlikely that, once the smallest HC had found what he considered to be a safe hiding place, he would move far from it. He knew more or less where to look if he needed him.
Rhys made his painful way through the scrub and scattered woodland until he thought he was out of sight of the release pen, whereupon he took a sharp right and headed towards the edge of the mown strip. Having found it, he headed back into the cover and took a turn back towards the release pen for a very short way until he found a drainage channel. He shunned that as a place to hide because it was too obvious a place that the hunter was sure to know. Eventually, he found a rhododendron thicket surrounding a substantial yew tree. Even moving as clumsily as he was, he thought that it would provide the best cover he could find. He pushed through the shrubs, leaving hardly a trace on the greenery of where he had been. Being barefoot had certain advantages in spite of the spiky twigs underfoot. He knew he needed to stop soon; his ribs were screaming and he needed to stop aggravating his injuries.
When he reached the yew, he found a slight hollow into which he crawled. Just being able to brace himself against the developing internal trunks gave welcome relief as he considered whether this hiding place would also be known to his purchaser. Pain got the better of him and he decided to stay. Eventually, Rhys became aware of the smell. It was certainly more potent than the smell of unwashed teenaged male. Perhaps that which had been left by the local foxes would help him to remain undetected; for fuck’s sake it had to – he just couldn’t go any further. He settled into his niche and worked on controlling his breathing and examining his surroundings. He looked for any traces that he might have left, he looked for any easy access points that the hunter might use, he looked for alternative escape routes if he did. By the time he’d controlled his heartbeat, he was sure he could hear if anyone approached through the bush. He already knew that the adrenaline would not keep coursing through his system for ever; now he knew that he could not afford to sleep.
As he crouched in his own little womb, his senses sharpened and each natural sound became an amplified cause for alarm. Time slowed down. How long had he been there?
Then he heard the report.
At least he knew that he was safe this time. What should he do now? Suppose that sound didn’t come from his hunter’s gun? Was anyone hunting in the adjoining reserve? His breath control left him.
Rhys decided to sit tight and, after some time, he heard the sound of the dog as it approached. He heard the sounds as the beast crashed through the rhodies surrounding his tree. The adrenaline started to course through him again; fight or flight. The dog barked noisily as it found him and thrust its muzzle into Rhys’s groin. It was then that Rhys evacuated his bowels.
The dog suddenly became quiet and went down. Now Rhys knew why the slave had taken that swab. After about five minutes Rhys heard a voice, “Come out or I give the dog a treat.â€
“Uuuww uuuww.†Rhys was shaking his head violently. Not that the Supervisor could see him, but he really did not want the dog to be given a treat. The best threats are never completely specified but Rhys’s damaged ribs burst into flame again as his head-shaking reverberated through his torso
He gradually uncurled himself, clumsily regained his feet and stepped carefully past the prone German shepherd who growled quietly as her potential plaything departed. “Come here, girl.†As Rhys carefully negotiated the tangle of undergrowth, he was overtaken by the somewhat disappointed dog. Emerging from the thicket Rhys saw the supervisor, the dog, who was once more prone but, to Rhys’s eyes, more than ready for a “treat†and the “first aid slave†who, by now, was in a bridle just like his. Christ, that must have hurt with his swollen tongue. The slave locked the curved metal plate onto the front of Rhys’s bridle and, instead of using the unforgiving wire noose, he slipped a choke chain round his neck and jerked him forwards.
Recovery Time
Once the party had reached the release pen once more, Rhys found himself being prodded and manhandled causing the pain in his ribs to intensify even more. Although unaware of the situation, he was undergoing what passed for triage to ascertain the extent of his injuries. Compared to his ribs, even the pain of having his arms reduced to near immobility for so long and his jaw forced open to the extreme had slipped almost from his consciousness. Rhys also slipped from consciousness at that time.
Coming round again was a confusing, painful and relatively slow process. Rhys found himself back in the holding pen without the metal plate in front of his eyes. His torso had been wrapped round with several layers of tightly applied surgical tape that was supposed to hold his broken ribs in place while they started to heal. He could only catch a glimpse over his shoulder of the leather strap that was pulling his elbows towards one another. It stressed his shoulders and chest but was supposed to restrict his movements while the bones started to heal and it did relieve the stress on his wrists somewhat as well.
Rhys looked around and saw the older quarry who was still blindfolded and who had been chained loosely by his neck to the bars on the top of the holding pen so that he was unlikely to choke but was unable to sit down or even move very far. The purchaser had not been best pleased to find that one of his purchases had been damaged before even leaving the release pen and the supervisor had taken precautions to avoid it happening again. It took all the Manager’s persuasive skills to prevent the purchaser demanding the return of a large sum of money. In the end he had to make the purchaser a very generous offer. The purchaser went away somewhat mollified. Being unconscious at the time, Rhys had no idea what the offer was.
There was no sign of the smallest purchase.
The original slave was dropped into the pit with water and more of the nourishing mush that the quarry had to eat previously. Rhys sucked the tube until the full litre of water had gone and, even in his pain, made sure to take as much of the disgusting pap as he could face. The slave then inserted another tube in the hole in Rhys’s gag. The bottle was smaller but Rhys accepted even more water gratefully. Shortly afterwards, Rhys felt strangely disoriented. Shortly after that he was sound asleep on the reeking sandy floor of the holding pen.
Before he passed out from the effects of the pain-killing drug that had been administered, Rhys noticed the larger purchase being fed and watered but, as his hearing became fuzzy, he could not understand what was being said from above.
The slave was hauled out of the holding pen again and the second one returned with a very primitive piece of equipment and a bottle of special black ink. The device was about a foot long and was like two thin laths each about two inches wide and fastened together at one end. The other ends were separated by about an inch with one being slightly longer than the other. The slave applied ink to the double row of closely arranged spikes protruding from the longer lath and firmly placed the other against the chest of the older purchase. After a short period for fine adjustment, during which the unfortunate victim could be seen tensing his entire body, the slave punched the longer lath hard with the side of his fist. The dark quarry failed to suppress the scream no matter that he tried and, when the device was withdrawn, the blood oozing from the tiny wounds left a trace across the previous four tally marks. The tattooist wiped his work and examined it carefully before carrying on to his next task.
Rhys awoke suddenly. He could still feel where the adrenaline injection had been jabbed into his thigh. His arms and jaws still ached and his ribs still felt like they were trying to escape from his torso but the pain levels were noticeably lower than they had been before he drank the pain-killing draught. The intervening four hours’ sleep had done him no harm either. The new, sharp pain high up on his chest was new but, compared to the others, it hardly mattered. The metal plate was locked over Rhys’s eyes once more.
The other quarry was still blindfolded and chained by the neck and the hoist was lowered into the pen. First Rhys, then the other quarry, once he’d been released from the neck chain, and finally the “first-aid†slave were lifted out of the pen. The quarry was chained together and taken towards the release pens once more. Not that Rhys could see but they were taken to the one adjacent to the previous one this time so that the hunter could hunt on the other reserve. Once Rhys’s blindfold had been removed, he could see that the Manager had accompanied the Supervisor and the purchaser into the release pen along with the second slave. The curved metal plate remained in place on the other HC’s bridle; the manager was taking no chances this time.
The manager explained the situation to the two purchases. He had been forced to offer the purchaser a “free go†at the two remaining quarry because of the damage that had been done to Rhys between his purchase and his release into the original reserve. That free go was going to be now. The two quarry were separated, the gate opened, the supervisor’s dog barked and Rhys made good his exit. Shortly afterwards the other purchase was un-blindfolded and released.
The hunter waited and watched as his two potential trophies tried to get as far away as possible. “Good,†he thought, “They’ve both gone in the same direction.†He put down his field-glasses, smiled, picked up his rifle and, with a cursory nod towards the manager, set out on his hunt.
TBC