"Over There" with the Australians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about "Over There" with the Australians.

"Over There" with the Australians eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 293 pages of information about "Over There" with the Australians.

Durand lashed out with a swinging left, all the weight of his body behind the blow.  Clay stepped back, shot a hard straight right to the cheek, and ducked the counter.  Jerry rushed him, flailing at his foe blow on blow, intending to wear him out by sheer hard hammering.  He butted with head and knee, used every foul trick he had learned in his rotten trade of prize-fighting.  Active as a wild cat, the Arizonan side-stepped, scored a left on the eye, ducked again, and fought back the furious attack.

The gangman came out of the rally winded, perplexed, and disturbed.  His cheek was bleeding, one eye was in distress, and he had hardly touched his agile opponent.

He rushed again.  Nothing but his temper, the lack of self-control that made him see red and had once put him at the mercy of a first-class ring general with stamina and a punch, had kept Jerry out of a world championship.  He had everything else needed, but he was the victim of his own passion.  It betrayed him now.  His fighting was that of a wild cave man, blind, furious, damaging.  He threw away his science and his skill in order to destroy the man he hated.  He rained blows on him—­fought him with head and knee and fist, was on top of him every moment, controlled by one dominating purpose to make that dancing figure take the dust.

How Clay weathered the storm he did not know.  Some blows he blocked, others he side-stepped, a few he took on face and body.  He was cool, quite master of himself.  Before the fight had gone three minutes he knew that, barring a chance blow, some foul play, or a bit of bad luck, he would win.  He was covering up, letting the pugilist wear himself out, and taking only the punishment he must.  But he was getting home some heavy body blows that were playing the mischief with Jerry’s wind.

The New Yorker, puffing like a sea lion, came out of a rally winded and spent.  Instantly Clay took the offensive.  He was a trained boxer as well as a fighter, and he had been taught how to make every ounce of his weight count.  Ripping in a body blow as a feint, he brought down Durand’s guard.  A straight left crashed home between the eyes and a heavy solar plexus shook the man to the heels.

Durand tried to close with him.  An uppercut jolted him back.  He plunged forward again.  They grappled, knocking over chairs as they threshed across the room.  When they went down Clay was underneath, but as they struck the floor he whirled and landed on top.

The man below fought furiously to regain his feet.  Clay’s arm worked like a piston rod with short-arm jolts against the battered face.

A wild heave unseated the Arizonan.  They clinched, rolled over and bumped against the wall, Clay again on top.  For a moment Durand got a thumb in his foe’s eye and tried to gouge it out.  Clay’s fingers found the throat of the gang leader and tightened.  Jerry struggled to free himself, catching at the sinewy wrist with both hands.  He could not break the iron grip.  Gasping for breath, he suddenly collapsed.

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"Over There" with the Australians from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.