συя ғαмιℓү, συя нσмε
CONTINUATION OF MY BROTHER
Caesar gripped the spear tightly in his fingers, his eyes tracking the antlered beasts and their every move. A party of hunters surrounded him, each of them as deeply concentrated as he was, for this was the first time that they had located such large game in any great number. It was a victory beyond words that they had successfully tracked the herd, but it meant next to nothing if they returned to the hungry troop empty-handed. It was more important now than ever to make kills each day, for enough time had now passed for many females to be heavy with child and nearing birth, Caesar's own Cornelia among them. There was a lot riding on this hunt, even on a personal level.
To his left was Rocket, who had grown more loyal than Caesar could have anticipated, and to his right, his beloved Koba. The three of them had become skilled enough to lead these hunting trips, and with the three of them working together and a band of others backing them, they were a force to be reckoned with.
Brows furrowed in intense concentration, the lead ape motioned for Rocket to take a small number of chimpanzees around the herd on the left side. Caesar repeated this request with Koba, sending him and some others around the right side. The herd would be surrounded then, and with apes armed with spears high in the trees, they could attack without risk of being gored by those wicked antlers. Already several chimpanzees and a gorilla had been lost to such counter attacks, but now the apes knew of the danger and could prepare for it... Even use it to their advantage. In perhaps a cruel twist, antler points already tipped the ends of some of the spears which would be used to kill some of this herd; souvenirs of the few elk that the troop had managed to catch alone and slaughter.
When the apes were all in place, Caesar issued the command for all to unleash their spears into the heart of the herd. Weapons rained on the unsuspecting animals from all directions, and with some luck, the frenzied animals would tumble over one another as they were impaled and panicked due to fear and pain. Perhaps breaking their legs, or maybe inadvertently stabbing one another with their vicious headgear. As long as enough elk died to feed the colony and his apes remained unharmed in the process, Caesar did not care how the animals were killed.
















