The Hunters. Kat Gordon
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Hunters - Kat Gordon страница 14

Название: The Hunters

Автор: Kat Gordon

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780008253080

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ court was rectangular, with a peg driven into the grass at the centre, and three hoops on either side. Four of the hoops stood almost at the corners of the rectangle, with the two inner hoops on each side slightly closer to the peg. I vaguely remembered having to follow a pattern of the outer hoops first, then the inner hoops, then playing another circuit in semi-reverse before you could hit the peg. My hands felt hot and slippery with sweat. It was a long time to keep upright and sober.

      Freddie placed both our balls on the ground near the south-west hoop. I gripped my mallet and swung gently at the blue ball. There was a thunk as it made contact, and I felt a momentary wash of relief, but the ball rolled uselessly to the side of the first hoop.

      ‘Never mind,’ Freddie called out behind me.

      I turned around, face burning, and handed the mallet to Nicolas, then went to stand with the other players, a few yards away from the first hoop.

      Lord Delamere took the first turn for the other side and the red ball sailed through the hoop. ‘I hear Black Harries was at Kariokor today,’ he said, lining up for a continuation stroke.

      ‘I didn’t see him,’ Freddie said. ‘And I’m surprised – I thought he never left Larmudiac.’

      ‘He sounds like a pirate,’ Sylvie said, lighting a cigarette.

      ‘He looks like one too – he’s got one hell of a black beard. And he’s probably the strongest man in Africa.’

      ‘They say he killed a leopard with a single blow to the head,’ Lord Delamere said. The red ball continued its path towards the second hoop, but stopped just short. Nicolas took the next turn and hit the black ball so it stopped just before the first hoop, dead on; Freddie grinned at me and I tried to return it.

      ‘He loves horses,’ he said, ‘but he doesn’t tame them. He has acres and acres of land, and he lets them roam around, but he doesn’t geld them or break them in or feed them.’

      ‘What happens with the horses if there’s a drought?’ Sylvie asked.

      ‘They starve.’

      ‘He sounds cruel.’

      ‘But they’re free.’ Freddie caught my eye. ‘Don’t you think animals prefer to be free, Theo?’

      ‘But Harries isn’t an animal,’ Sylvie said. Her lips were white and pressed together. ‘He knows they’ll starve and it’s in his power to do something about it.’

      ‘Don’t upset yourself, my dear,’ Lord Delamere said. He nodded at the ice bucket. ‘What if we distribute some of that champagne, eh?’

      The champagne was poured, candles were lit on the veranda and suddenly it was my turn again. I stood to the side of the first hoop and lined up the shot more carefully this time. I managed to get the ball halfway through the hoop but when I went to tap it again Delamere called out, ‘No continuation stroke – you haven’t run it through.’

      I handed the mallet over. ‘I’m not helping much.’

      ‘You’re helping us,’ one of the new women said kindly. She pointed at my glass. ‘Here – have a top-up.’

      We all moved to stand in a line along the west boundary now, watching Delamere’s play. The red ball was already through the second hoop, and he took it through the third and the fourth before his turn was up.

      ‘What do you think of that, eh?’ he said.

      Sylvie had gone quiet since the argument about Black Harries, but now she swore. ‘Fucking goddamn it. Not twice in one day.’

      I felt the mood change before Carberry reached us, and my heart sank. The conversation died out. Only Freddie looked comfortable still.

      ‘Ill met by moonlight, Carberry,’ he said.

      ‘I thought I’d find you here,’ Carberry said. ‘Talking about Johnny Bull.’

      ‘You’re British too,’ Freddie said. ‘Or Irish, at least. Have you forgotten, Baron Carberry?’

      Carberry took out a cigarette. Sylvie was at the end of the line, and he leaned towards her, taking her wrist in his fingers. ‘May I?’

      She shrugged, but I felt the revulsion coming off her. I took a long drink of my champagne.

      Carberry lit his cigarette on hers, then stood back. ‘I haven’t forgotten,’ he said, blowing smoke out in a cloud. ‘But I got my American naturalisation papers six years ago.’

      ‘I hear they were revoked,’ Lord Delamere said. ‘For bootlegging.’

      ‘Finally,’ Sylvie said, crushing out her own cigarette in the grass. ‘Something interesting about you.’

      Carberry nudged the yellow ball with his foot, sending it back towards the start. ‘I can’t wait to see your faces when your little Empire comes crashing down.’

      Lord Delamere turned purple. ‘Look, Carberry –’

      Carberry snapped his fingers at a waiter on the veranda and called over, ‘Bring me a whisky, boy. And don’t bother trying to cheat me on the chit – I can read.’

      Nicolas stepped onto the court and picked up the yellow ball, returning it to its old spot. ‘Lucky for us I have a photographic memory. Excuse us while we continue play, Carberry.’

      ‘Which team are you on?’ Carberry asked Sylvie. ‘I’ll join you. One of the only good British exports, this game.’

      She looked away.

      ‘It’s my turn,’ Nicolas said. ‘Take it if you want.’

      Carberry took the mallet Nicolas was offering, held his cigarette in his teeth, and hit my blue ball cleanly through the first hoop and all the way through the second.

      ‘Good shot,’ Delamere said reluctantly.

      We stayed on our boundary line, watching as Carberry played the blue ball through the third and fourth hoops and hit Delamere’s red ball. On either side of me, Delamere winced and Freddie murmured, ‘bad luck’. I went to take another mouthful of champagne and noticed my glass was empty.

      Carberry lined up the next shot more deliberately than any of his others, taking several practice swings to test the angle before smacking his mallet so hard against the blue ball that the red bounced completely out of court. The blue ball rolled forwards to rest in front of the fifth hoop. Carberry looked up at us, smirking.

      ‘Sorry, old boy. It’s just so easy to teach you all a lesson.’ He puffed out a cloud of smoke. ‘Strutting around as if you owned the place.’

      ‘We built the place,’ Lord Delamere said.

      Sylvie took his arm. ‘Don’t listen to him, darling.’

      Carberry snorted. ‘You and your bunch of amateurs. Most of them went back home with their tails between their legs, if I remember rightly.’ He came towards us and stopped just in front of Sylvie. ‘They’ve told you about J.D. Hopcraft, СКАЧАТЬ