Killer by David Drake, Karl Edward Wagner

“What? No, but I’ve heard plenty of grisly reports about man-killers who will.”

“No, I don’t mean hunt down as prey. I mean track down for, well, revenge.”

“No, it doesn’t happen,” Vonones replied. “A wolf maybe, but not one of the big cats. They don’t go out of their way for anything, not even revenge. That’s a human trait you’re talking about.”

“I saw it happen once,” Lycon said. “It was a female, and one of my men had cleaned out her litter while she was off hunting. We figured later she must have followed him fifty miles before she caught up to him.”

“She followed her cubs, not the man.”

The beastcatcher shook his head. “He’d given me the cubs. The man was three villages away when she got him. Her left forepaw had an extra toe; there was no mistake.”

“So what?”

“Vonones, I’m going to let that tiger out.”

The dealer choked in disbelief. “Lycon, are you mad? This isn’t the same at all! You can’t . . .”

“Have you got a better idea? You know how all the animals hate this thing—that tiger even broke a tooth trying to chew his way to get at the lizard-ape. Well, I’m going to give him his chance.”

“I can’t let you turn yet another savage killer loose here!”

“Look, we can’t get that blue-scaled thing any other way. Once it runs wild through a few more tenant holdings, Domitian isn’t going to do any worse to you if you turn the whole damn caravan loose!”

“So the tiger kills the lizard-ape. Then I’m responsible for turning a tiger loose on his estate! Lycon . . .”

“I caught this tiger once. I know about tigers. This thing, Vonones . . .”

The dealer’s hand shook as he turned the key over to Lycon.

* * *

Muttering, the drivers made an armed cluster in the middle of the road, watching Lycon as he unlocked the cage and vaulted to the roof as the door swung down. The tiger bounded onto the road almost before the door touched gravel. Tail lashing, he paused in a half-crouch to growl at the nervous onlookers. Several bows arched tautly.

Lady Fortune, breathed Lycon, let him scent that lizard-ape and follow it.

Turning from the men, the cat moved toward the other cage. He rumbled a challenge into the empty interior, then swung toward where the tracks stabbed into the damp earth. Without a backward glance, the tiger headed off across the field.

Lycon jumped down, boar spear in hand, and stepped across the ditch.

“Where are you going?” Vonones called after him.

“I want to see this,” he shouted back, and loped off along the track he earlier had followed with the hounds.

“Lycon, you’re crazy!” Vonones shouted into the night.

Even after the earlier run, Lycon had no trouble keeping up with the tiger. Cats have speed but are not pacers like dogs, like men. The tiger was moving at a graceless quick-step, midway between his normal arrogant saunter and the awesome rush that launched him to his kill. Loose skin behind his neck wobbled awkwardly as his shoulder blades pumped up and down. Moonlight washed all the orange from between the black stripes, and it seemed to be a ghost cat that jolted through the swaying wheat. He ignored Lycon, ignored even the blood-soaked earth where the first victim’s corpse had lain—intent only on the strange, hated scent of its blue-scaled enemy.

Following at a cautious distance, Lycon marveled that his desperate stratagem had worked. It seemed impossible that the great cat was actually stalking the other killer. It was pure hatred, the same unnatural fury that had maddened the dogs, that had turned the compound into a raging chaos as long as the sauropithecus had been among them.

And the men? None of the men had liked the lizard-ape either. Uncertain fear had made Vonones’ crew useless in the hunt. And Vonones had unloaded the thing for a trivial sum, because neither he nor the buyer from Rome had wanted the beast around. Why then did he himself feel such fascination for the creature?

The tiger changed stride to clear the first hedgerow. Lycon warily climbed through after him, trotting toward the pall of reeking smoke that still hovered over the ruined hut. Vonones would see to things here, the hunter thought, praying that there would be no more such charnel scenes across the maze-like estate.

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