Authors: David Eddings
She even tried swimming in the beaver pond, but only once. She was almost blue when she came out. I was just as happy about that, all things considered, since I had designs on the trout.
We hiked around a bit and went horseback riding and laid around in the sun and made love at odd intervals. It was strange, seeing her walking around in her pink, innocent nudity in the places where so many other things had happened.
One night, in our cozy double sleeping bag, it got down to confession time.
“Danny?” she said tentatively.
“Yes?”
“You remember that first nightâthe time when you picked up Joan and me at the theater?”
“Of course I do.”
“I knew,” she said in a small voice.
“You knew what, dear?”
“I knew you'd never been to prison.”
“Oh? How was that?”
“You don't have any tattoos,” she said, tracing designs on my chest with her finger. “Everybody who's ever been to prison has tattoosâeven if it's only a few spots or something.”
I hadn't thought about that. “Why didn't you just blow the whistle on me then?”
“I wasn't really sure until I got your clothes off,” she said.
“You sure could have brought it all to a halt at that point,” I said.
“I know,” she said, her voice even tinier.
“Why didn't you?”
She buried her face in her arms. “I didn't want to,” she said.
I kissed her on the ear. “I won't tell anybody if you won't,” I said.
“There's something else,” she said, her face still buried in her arms.
“Oh? I'm not sure how much truth I can take in one day.”
“You remember how I used to talkâabout orgies and all that kind of thing?”
“Yes.”
“Well,” she said, “I was kind of exaggerating. There was only one other boy really.”
I didn't say anything. I'd more or less figured that out for myself.
“Are you mad at me?”
“For not being promiscuous?”
“No, dum-dum, for lying to you.”
“Well,” I said, “it's pretty awful.”
She looked up, stricken, until she saw that I was grinning at her.
“You rat!” she said suddenly, pounding on my chest as I laughed at her. “You absolute, unspeakable rat.”
I folded her up in my arms and kissed her soundly. It was one of the better nights.
I suppose I'd been putting it off, but I knew that sooner or later I was going to have to go up there. I'd brought the damned pistol belt alongâI'd told myself it was for coyotes or something, but I knew that wasn't really it. I had to duplicate as closely as possible what it had been like, so the gun had to go along.
“I've got to go up on the ridge today,” I told her as I came out of the tent that morning.
“Oh? I'll go along,” she said.
“I don't think you should really,” I said.
“Why not?”
“I'm going to see if I can find that deer,” I told her.
“Whatever for? Won't it be allâwellâ”
“Probably.”
“Then why on earth do you want to mess around with it?”
“It's not that I want to,” I told her.
“I don't suppose there's any point trying to talk you out of it?”
“Not really.”
“Well,” she said, “have fun.”
“That's not why I'm doing it.”
“
Men!
” she snorted. We'd both taken to doing that a lot lately.
After breakfast I saddled Ned and came back up to camp. I went in and strapped on the pistol.
“Wow,” she said, “if it isn't Pancho Villa himself.”
“Lay off,” I said. “I shouldn't be too long.”
“Take your time,” she said, stretching. “I'm going back to bed myself.” She went on back to the tent.
I nudged Ned on around and on down to the lower end of the basin and across the creek. “Come on, buddy,” I told him. “You know the way as well as I do.”
He flicked his ears, and we started up the ridge. Even after this short a period of time, the ridge looked different. I couldn't be really sure if it was the fact that the leaves hadn't started to turn or what, but it took me quite a while to find Stan's old post. I figured that would be about the best place to go down. I tied Ned to a bush and climbed on down to the wash at the bottom of the draw.
I covered the wash from the place where I'd entered it that day the year before to the cliff where the deer had fallen. Apparently, there'd been a helluva run-off that spring, because the whole shape of the thing was different. I'd have sworn that I could have gone straight to the spot, but once I got down there, I couldn't find any recognizable landmarks.
I finally settled on a place that had to have been pretty close, but the shape of the banks was all wrong.
It was gone. There was no way I'd ever be able to verify for myself whether it had ever really been there or not. I suppose
I'd dreamed about the damned thing so often that I'd begun to almost doubt my own memory of it.
Now, with the wash so changed from the way I remembered it, I was less sure than ever. And so the pale flicker in the brush that I remembered would always be a doubtful phantom for me. There in the shadows at the bottom of the wash, I felt a sudden chill. I climbed back up to the ridge and untied Ned.
“Struck out, old buddy,” I said, climbing up into the saddle.
He flickered his ears at me, and we went on back down.
That evening, as the sun was going down, Clydine and I were sitting on a log near the edge of the beaver pond.
“It's just lovely up here, Danny,” she said. “I think it's the most beautiful place in the whole world.”
I nodded. I don't think I'd said more than three words to her since I'd come back down the ridge.
I suppose I'd been building up to the question for several months. I knew that it was inevitable that sooner or later I should ask it despite all its obvious banality under the circumstances. Even so, it surprised me when I heard myself say itâfor one thing, it was badly phrased. You kind of halfway expect something a little more polished from somebody with my background.
“Don't you think it's about time we got married?” I asked her.
Just as I had known I was going to ask her, so she had known she was going to be asked. I guess every girl knows that even before the man has actually made up his mind. And so it was that she'd had plenty of time to devise an answer that would let me know how she felt and at the same time assert her independence.
She looked up at me, smiled, and squeezed my arm.
“Why not?” she said.
Raphael Taylor was a golden boy - blond, handsome, a gifted athlete and student. Damon Flood was a scoundrel - a smooth, smiling, cynical devil. The day Raphael met Damon was the day he began his mysterious fall from grace. And the golden boy fell very fast and very low.
Â
Damon introduces Raphael to drink, wealth and a seductive woman, and then sends him out to his doom. After losing a leg in a drunken car accident, Raphael goes to recuperate in a seedy backstreet in Spokane, Washington. There he is surrounded by âthe losers', a nightmarish subculture of violence and despair that is kept going - and kept out ot sight - by a band of incompetent social workers. Horrified yet fascinated, Raphael struggles to come to terms with his new surroundings - until Damon turns up on his doorstep, and the world of the losers explodes â¦
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In
The Losers
, David Eddings enters deeply into the lives of America's outcasts to reveal a new and brilliant side to his storytelling genius.
Â
âA rare mainstream outing from bestselling fantasist Eddings. Offbeat, intriguing, compelling ⦠an unexpected pleasure.'
Kirkus Reviews
ISBN 0 586 21759 2
His spectacular epic fantasy masterwork
The Diamond Throne, The Ruby Knight, The Sapphire Rose
complete in one volume
This compelling story of conflict between good and evil introduces the great Pandion Knight Sir Sparhawk, invincible warrior and master strategist, steadfast champion of Queen Ehlana. To save the life of his lovely young Queen, Sparhawk and his companions journey to the most dangerous regions of Eosia in a quest for the sacred jewel of the Troll-Gods, the Sapphire Rose.
Sparhawk and his allies must defeat the unholy triple alliance ranged against his Queen: Otha, degenerate sorcerer-king of the Zemochs; the renegade Pandion Knight Martel; and Annias, traitorous Primate of Cimmura and lover of Ehlana's wicked aunt Arissa. But to do so, Sparhawk may have to unleash the full power of the sacred jewel - and no one can predict whether the world itself will survive.
With daring, wit and brilliant panache, David Eddings brings to vivid life the world of Eosia and its inhabitants - they will live forever in the minds of enchanted readers.
âSparhawk is the best-realised hero in current fantasy'
Daily Telegraph
ISBN 0 586 21867 X
DUE NORTH
Mitchell Smith 0-00-647642-2 £4.99
NIGHTWING
Martin Cruz Smith 0-00-647908-1 £4.99
ALONG CAME A SPIDER
James Patterson 0-00-647615-5 £4.99
DESTROY THE KENTUCKY
Bart Davis 0-00-647639-2 £4.99
THE ICEMAN
John Sandford 0-586-21667-7 £4.99
HONOUR AMONG THIEVES
Jeffrey Archer 0-00-647606-6 £5.99
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David Eddings was born in Spokane, Washington, in 1931 and grew up near Seattle. He graduated from the University of Washington and went on to serve in the US Army. Subsequently he worked as a buyer for the Boeing Company and taught college-level English. His mainstream novels include
High Hunt
, which was his first novel, and
The Losers
. His spectacular career as a fantasy writer began with his bestselling series
The Belgariad
, which was followed by two more highly popular series,
The Malloreon
and
The Elenium
(now available in one volume). He has recently published
The Hidden City
, the third book in his new series,
The Tamuli
, which began with
Domes of Fire
and continued with
The Shining Ones
.
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âA tale of raw human drama.'
Today
âPowerful adventure.'
Manchester Evening News
âThrills come thick and fast.'
South Wales Evening Post
The Belgariad
Book One:
Pawn of Prophecy
Book Two:
Queen of Sorcery
Book Three:
Magician's Gambit
Book Four:
Castle of Wizardry
Book Five:
Enchanters' End Game
The Malloreon
Book One:
Guardians of the West
Book Two:
King of the Murgos
Book Three:
Demon Lord of Karanda
Book Four:
Sorceress of Darshiva
Book Five:
The Seeress of Kell
The Elenium
Book One:
The Diamond Throne
Book Two:
The Ruby Knight
Book Three:
The Sapphire Rose
The Tamuli
Book One:
Domes of Fire
Book Two:
The Shining Ones
Book Three:
The Hidden City
High Hunt
The Losers
HarperCollins
Publishers
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Hammersmith, London W6 8JB
This paperback edition 1994
3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2
First published in Great Britain by
HarperCollins
Publishers
1993
First published in the USA by
G. P. Putnam's Sons 1973
HIGH HUNT
. Copyright © David Eddings 1973. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
The Author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
ISBN 0 00 647593 0
EPub Edition © SEPTEMBER 2011 ISBN: 978-0-00-739560-6