A Ten Pound Bag
Knucklehead House Press
Chapter 176: Cordite in the Air
Editor: nnpdad 21
Cordite. That smell of cordite was my first impression after I released the shot.
It wasn’t actually cordite - that substance had been invented and then eventually abandoned many decades in the future but the word cordite sounded a lot better than ‘Ball Rifle Propellent WC844.’ The AR-15 doesn’t have much recoil and only a tiny bit of muzzle lift; however and in the hot, clean prairie air the smell of cordite was unmistakable.
Six hundred yards is well within range of the M16 variants and the round hit almost immediately, yet my brain registered the smell before the sound, the recoil or the small puff of dust that bloomed from the bulls hide on impact. The mighty beast took two more staggering steps before collapsing to the ground, I’d made a clean shot and he was dead before he hit the ground. The rifle report at that range was so small that the herd didn’t even lift their heads from grazing, he was one of the outliers after all. Still too young to challenge any of the senior bulls but almost full size without the tough meat that developed in older animals.
I moved on to the next target.
The fourth shot didn’t go so well because the bull decided to take a half-step back to gather some tasty morsel he had missed so I hit him square on the shoulder blade. That shot did disable him but didn’t amuse him and his bellows of pain and anger got the attention of the entire herd. His bellows were the signal the rest of the hunters were waiting for and the hunt began in earnest.
Petalesharo had stationed everyone correctly and gotten them well hidden using hillocks, blinds and anything else they could come up with. Rifles and muskets fired from every angle on the sides of the shallow valley they had urged the herd into. Almost fifty animals fell with the initial volley as the active hunt got underway; everyone went to horseback and I was racing down the hill on Lunch with my AR-15 scabbarded and my M1911 in hand. It was thrilling and adrenaline was pumping through my veins. Mouse and Matilda were already moving down to begin butchering my first kills, Lunch was in his element and made up the distance with amazing speed.
We closed with the herd and my big stallion showed his bravery by pacing a bull barely two feet away while I put a round into the beasts spine right behind the head. I managed three additional kills that way totaling eight for my immediate family. My current family counted five people giving me three carcasses to trade to the butcher should I choose to. In the end I gave one to Aunty and two were traded off or donated to the butcher giving me a running credit at his shop. This hunt would jumpstart the market place in our little town and the butcher and tanner would soon be doing a thriving business.
All told between us and the Pawnee we took almost five hundred head of buffalo that day which amazingly didn’t even put a dent in the overall herd. The herd had probably numbered close to twenty thousand animals and Pete later told me that it was much larger than normal as they had slowly forced multiple groups together for this event. They’d been working the herd for weeks to prepare the hunt and this little valley of mine was the perfect ambush location.
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