Eagle in the Sky - Smith Wilbur (бесплатные версии книг .txt) 📗
them of her best. The goodrains fell steadily, always beginning in the
afternoon after a incoming of tall clouds and heavy air filled with
static and the feel of thunder. In the sunset the lightning played and
flickered across the gilt cloud banks, turned by the angry sun to the
colour of burnished bronze and virgins blushes. Then in the darkness as
they lay entwined, the thunder struck like a hammer blow and the
lightning etched the window beyond the bed to a square of blinding white
light, and the rain came teeming down with the sound of wild fire and
running hooves. With David beside her, Debra was unafraid.
In the morning it was bright and cool, the trees washed sparkling clean
so that the leaves glinted in the early sun and the earth was dark with
water and spangled with standing pools.
The rains brought life and excitement to the wild things, and each day
held its small discoveries -unexpected visitations, and strange
occurrences.
The fish eagles moved their two chicks from the great shaggy nest in the
mhobahoba at the head of the pools and taught them to perch out on the
bare limb that supported it. They sat there day after day, seeming to
gather their courage. The parent birds were frenetic in their
ministrations, grooming their offspring for the great moment of flight.
Then one morning, as he and Debra ate breakfast on the stoop, David
heard the swollen chorus of their chanting cries, harsh with triumph,
and he took Debra's hand and they went down the steps into the open.
David looked up and saw the four dark shapes spread on wide wings
against the clear blue of the sky, and his spirit soared with them in
their moment of achievement.
They flew upwards in great sweeping circles, until they dwindled to
specks and vanished, gone to their autumn grounds upon the Zambezi
River, two thousand miles to the north.
There was, however, one incident during those last days that saddened
and subdued them both. One morning, they walked four miles northwards
beyond the line of hills to a narrow wedge-shaped plain on which stood a
group of towering leadwood trees.
A pair of martial eagles had chosen the tallest leadwood as their mating
ground. The female was a beautiful young bird but the male was past his
prime. They had begun constructing their nest on a high fork, but the
work was interrupted by the intrusion of a lone male eagle, a big young
bird, fierce and proud and acquisitive.
David had noticed him lurking about the borders of the territory,
carefully avoiding overlying the airspace claimed by the breeding pair,
choosing a perch on the hills overlooking the plain and gathering his
confidence for the confrontation he was so clearly planning. The
impending conflict had its particular fascination for David and his
sympathy was with the older bird as he made his warlike show, screeching
defiance from his perch upon the high branches of the leadwood or
weaving his patrols along his borders, turning on his great wings always
within the limits of that which he claimed as his own.
David had decided to walk up to the plain that day, in order to choose a
site for the photographic blind he planned to erect overlooking the nest
site, and also in curiosity as to the outcome of this primeval clash
between the two males.
It seemed more than chance that he had chosen the day when the crisis
was reached.
David and Debra came up through the gap in the hills and paused to sit
on an outcrop of rock overlooking the plain, while they regained their
breath. The battlefield was spread below them.
The old bird was at the nest, a dark hunched shape with white breast and
head set low on the powerful shoulders. David looked for the invader,
sweeping the crests of the hills with his binoculars, but there was no
sign of him. He dropped the binoculars to his chest and he and Debra
talked quietly for a while.
Then suddenly David's attention was attracted by the behaviour of the
old eagle. He launched suddenly into flight, striking upwards on his
great black pinions, and there was an urgency in the way he bored for
height.
His climb brought him close over their heads, so that David could
clearly see the cruel curve of the beak and the ermine black splashes
that decorated the imperial snow of his breast.
He opened the yellow beak and shrieked a harsh challenge, and David
turned quickly in the old fighter pilot's sweep of sky and cloud. He
saw the cunning of it immediately. The younger bird had chosen his
moment and his attack vector with skill beyond his years. He was
towering in the sun, high and clear, a flagrant trespasser, daring the
old eagle to come up at him and David felt his skin crawl in sympathy as
he watched the defender climb slowly on flogging wings.
Quickly, and a little breathlessly, he described it to Debra and she
reached for his hand, her sympathy with the old bird also.
Tell me! 'she commanded.
The young bird sailed calmly in waiting circles, cocking his head to
watch his adversary's approach.
There he goes! David's voice was taut, as the attacker went wing over
and began his stoop.
I can hear him, Debra whispered, and the sound of his wings carried
clearly to them, rustling like a bush fire in dry grass as he dived on
the old bird.
Break left! Go! Go! Go! David found he was calling to the old eagle
as though he were flying wingman for him, and he gripped Debra's hand
until she winced. The old eagle seemed almost to hear him, for he
closed his WIngs and flicked out of the path of the strike, tumbling for
a single turn so that the attacker hissed by him with talons reaching
uselessly through air, his speed plummeting him down into the basin of
the plain.
The old bird caught and broke out of his roll with wings half-cocked,
and streaked down after the other. In one veteran stroke of skill he
had wrested the advantage.
Get him! screamed David. Get him when he turns!
Now!
The young bird was streaking towards the tree-toops and swift death, he
flared his wings to break his fall, turning desperately to avoid the
lethal stoop of his enemy. In that moment he was vulnerable and the old
eagle reached forward with his terrible spiked talons and without
slackening the searing speed of his dive he hit the other bird in the
critical moment of his turn.
The thud of the impact carried clearly to the watchers on the hill and
there was a puff of feathers like the burst of explosives, black from
the wings and white from the breast.
Locked together by the old bird's honed killing claws, they tumbled,
wing over tangled wing, feathers streaming from their straining bodies
and then drifting away like thistledown on the light breeze.
Still joined in mortal combat, they struck the top branches of one of
the leadwood trees, and fell through them to come to rest at last in a
high fork as an untidy bundle of ruffled feathers and trailing wings.
Leading Debra over the rough ground David hurried down the hill and
through the coarse stands of arrow grass to the tree.
Can you see them? Debra asked anxiously, as David focused his
binoculars on the struggling pair.
They are trapped, David told her. The old fellow has his claws buried
to the hilt in the other's back. He will never be able to free them and
they have fallen across the fork, one on either side of the tree. The