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Clive Barker – Books Of Blood Vol 3

The pony was still panicking. It stamped and rolled its eyes like a bad tragedian. There were flecks of foam on its lips. A little apologetically Gwen patted its flank. She’d lost her temper. Time of the month. Now she regretted it. She only hoped Amelia hadn’t been at her bedroom window watching.

A gust of wind caught the barn-door and it swung closed. The sound of rain on the yard outside was abruptly muted. It was suddenly dark.

The pony stopped stamping. Gwen stopped stroking its side. Everything stopped: her heart too, it seemed. Behind her a figure that was almost twice her size rose from

beyond the bales of hay. Gwen didn’t see the giant, but her innards churned. Damn periods, she thought, rubbing her lower belly in a slow circle. She was normally as regular as clockwork, but this month she’d come on a day early. She should go back to the house, get changed, get clean.

Rawhead stood and looked at the nape of Gwen Nicholson’s neck, where a single nip would easily kill. But there was no way he could bring himself to touch this woman; not today. She had the blood-cycle on her, he could taste its tang, and it sickened him. It was taboo, that blood, and he had never taken a woman poisoned by its presence.

Feeling the damp between her legs, Gwen hurried out of the barn without looking behind her, and ran through the downpour back to the house, leaving the fretting pony in the darkness of the barn.

Rawhead heard the woman’s feet recede, heard the house door slam.

He waited, to be sure she wouldn’t come back, then he padded across to the animal, reached down and took hold of it. The pony kicked and complained, but Rawhead had in his time taken animals far bigger and far better armed than this.

He opened his mouth. The gums were suffused with blood as the teeth emerged from them, like claws unsheathed from a cat’s paw. There were two rows on each jaw, two dozen needle-sharp points. They gleamed as they closed around the meat of the pony’s neck. Thick, fresh blood poured down Rawhead’s throat; he gulped it greedily. The hot taste of the world. It made him feel strong and wise. This was only the first of many meals he would take, he’d gorge on anything that took his fancy and nobody would stop him, not this time. And when he was ready he’d throw those pretenders off his throne, he’d cremate them in their houses, he’d slaughter their children and wear their infants’ bowels as necklaces. This place was his. Just because they’d tamed the wilderness for a while didn’t mean they owned the earth. It was his, and nobody would take it from him, not even the holiness. He was wise to that too. They’d never subdue him again.

He sat cross-legged on the floor of the barn, the grey-pink intestines of the pony coiled around him, planning his tactics as best he could. He’d never been a great thinker. Too much appetite: it overwhelmed his reason. He lived in the eternal

present of his hunger and his strength, feeling only the crude territorial instinct that would sooner or later blossom into carnage.

The rain didn’t let up for over an hour.

Ron Milton was becoming impatient: a flaw in his nature that had given him an ulcer and a top-flight job in Design Consul­tancy. What Milton could get done for you, couldn’t be done quicker. He was the best: and he hated sloth in other people as much as in himself. Take this damn house, for instance. They’d promised it would be finished by mid-July, garden landscaped, driveway laid, everything, and here he was, two months after that date, looking at a house that was still far from habitable. Half the windows without glass, the front door missing, the garden an assault-course, the driveway a mire.

This was to be his castle: his retreat from a world that made him dyspeptic and rich. A haven away from the hassles of the city, where Maggie could grow roses, and the children could breathe clean air. Except that it wasn’t ready. Damn it, at this rate he wouldn’t be in until next spring. Another winter in London: the thought made his heart sink.

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