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The Second Western Megapack

Page 144

by Various Writers


  Penny halted at the edge of the clearing. It was the first time she had seen Rangoon at close range, and she found him wholly repugnant. His face was pitted from smallpox, scarred from a knife brawl, and generally greasy with sweat, but it was his eyes that made him hideous. They were small, bloodshot, and set too close together. He had only one eyebrow, which extended clear across the ridge of his receding forehead, serving both eyes. The expression in the eyes was one of confidence and insolence.

  Instinctively, Penny felt that she should turn at once and ride back home. Rangoon advanced on foot, and held a hand toward her.

  “I’ll help yuh down from the saddle,” he said.

  “I’m not dismounting, I was just about to turn back.”

  “I don’t reckon you’ll want tuh turn back right now,” Rangoon said. “There’s somethin’ over here you’ll be right glad to have a look at.”

  “I doubt it.” Penny tried to jerk the reins around, but Rangoon was holding them. “Please let go of my reins, Rangoon. I’m going home.”

  Rangoon shook his head slowly. “I wouldn’t,” he said, “if I was you. I understand that yer uncle’d be right sore if he found you’d rid up here in spite of all he’s said about it.”

  Penny pulled suddenly and hard, but vainly.

  “It ain’t no use tryin’ tuh pull free jest yet,” Rangoon advised her, “because I aim tuh have yuh take jest one look at what I seen. Then yore free tuh go, if yuh want tuh.”

  Penny was armed: she wore a small-caliber revolver on a belt around her waist. She felt that she could use this if necessary. She was more angry than frightened. She dismounted, ignoring the offered hand of the pock-marked man. He shrugged his shoulders as if to say it didn’t matter. She noticed that his own horse was tethered to a near-by tree.

  “What is it you want to show me?”

  “I suppose,” Rangoon said slowly, “you’re downright disappointed that it’s me yuh seen here instead of yer other friend.”

  Penny noticed the use of the word “other.” It implied that in his mind Rangoon had no intention of considering himself in the humble position of a waddie on her uncle’s ranch, but rather as one on an equal social footing. Penny made no comment.

  “Yuh wonder how I know about him, eh?” Rangoon said. “Wal, there is what I wanted yuh tuh see.” He pointed to the ground.

  Penny saw the marks of her small boots clearly showing where she had stood yesterday. Near by were the prints that Tonto’s moccasins had made. Penny stared and felt herself growing cold with fury at the realization of what she knew must be in Rangoon’s foul mind. Not only were the prints there together, but both pairs led toward the lean-to.

  “’Tain’t as if it was one of the boys from the Basin,” the tantalizing voice behind her said, “but a critter wearin’ moccasins! That might mean a redskin.”

  Penny acted instinctively. She whirled quickly and swung with all the force of her arm. Her gloved hand smacked against the scar on Rangoon’s cheek.

  Then she burned with embarrassment. Any explanation would be futile. She walked quickly toward her horse.

  “Not so fast,” Rangoon said sharply, grabbing Penny’s arm.

  “You let go of my arm, or I’ll shoot you.”

  “The hell yuh will!”

  In that instant Penny was ready to kill. All reasoning left her. The hand on her arm brought her fury to white heat. She snatched for her gun, but Rangoon slapped the weapon from her hand.

  Rangoon released his grip on her arm, and caught up the reins of her horse. “Jest git yer senses while I tie up yer hoss, an’ we’ll talk.”

  Released, the girl made a dive for her gun, which was on the ground. Rangoon saw the motion, and put his foot on the weapon.

  “I’ll fix that,” he growled. He picked up the gun and emptied it of cartridges. “Now you c’n have the shootin’ iron back,” he said, handing it to her while he tossed the ammunition deep among the heavy brush. Penny took her weapon mechanically and put it, empty, in her holster.

  Fear gripped her for a moment when she realized that she was practically helpless. To turn and race away on foot would be a futile gesture. She thought of fainting, but that wouldn’t help matters any. She looked defiantly at Rangoon.

  “What do you want to talk about?”

  “Now, that’s more like it. Yuh needn’t be scairt of me; I don’t aim tuh hurt yuh none.” There was a definite sneer in both the voice and expression while the man tossed Las Vegas’ reins about a tree and knotted them.

  “Don’t get the notion that you gotta fight fer yer honor an’ all that sort o’ tripe like in the readin’ books. I don’t aim tuh git shot up by men in the Basin fer makin’ passes at you. I like my women without no killin’ fights tied ontuh them.”

  Penny stubbornly refused to let her face indicate her feelings. She stood, chin up, listening.

  “First of all,” Rangoon said, “I hanker tuh know why yuh rid up here.”

  “It’s none of your business.”

  “Goin’ tuh be stubborn again, eh? Now you’ll git home a sight quicker if yuh answer my questions.”

  “Why are you here?” countered Penny.

  “That’s easy. I tell, then you tell,” Rangoon grinned. “Makin’ a sort o’ game of it, eh? Wal, yesterday I seen smoke comin’ outen the treetops. I wondered who was campin’ here, but couldn’t git away from the Basin tuh see. I rid up tuhday an’ found some downright interestin’ footprints. Now it’s yore turn tuh tell jest what they mean.”

  “And then you’ll let me leave here?”

  “Talk first.”

  “I used to ride up this way before I went to school. I came up yesterday and found a friendly Indian camped here.”

  “Why?”

  “How do I know?”

  “Yuh rid up here twice.”

  Penny hadn’t credited Rangoon with such skill at reading signs.

  “Yes, I came up twice.”

  “The redskin had two horses with him. What about ’em?”

  Penny, while hating herself for enduring the man’s insolence, felt that there was no use trying to evade the truth, which after all was harmless. She told Rangoon about bringing food for the Indian’s friend.

  When she mentioned the friend, Rangoon showed keen interest.

  “Who was that there friend?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Where was he at?”

  “I don’t know that either. I’ve told you all I know, Rangoon.”

  The man shook his head slowly, “’Tain’t enough. I got tuh know the rest.”

  Penny was defiant. “I’ve told you all I know and now I’m starting back for the Basin. If I’m not there Uncle Bryant will wonder why, and I’ll tell him why I was delayed. You ought to know him pretty well, Rangoon. He won’t take this sort of behavior from you!”

  Rangoon threw back his head and laughed hard at this.

  “Yer uncle won’t hurt me,” he said between two roars of laughter.

  Penny made a sudden dive for the knotted reins. Again Rangoon was quicker. He caught her in strong hands.

  “Yuh ain’t leavin’,” he said, “till yuh tell who the redskin’s friend is, an’ where he’s hidin’.”

  “I tell you I don’t know.” Penny struggled to free herself.

  “I’ll wring it out of yuh,” Rangoon bellowed as he wrapped his long arms completely around the girl and nearly cut off her wind in a bearlike grip.

  “L-let m-me g-go,” gasped Penny.

  Rangoon’s grip was tighter. His arms were crushing the slim girl to him, bending her back until it hurt frightfully. His ugly face was close to her, his breath, foul with alcohol and half-rotted teeth, was hot. Penny felt nauseated, violently ill.

  Contact with the girl made Rangoon reckless. He seemed to forget any fear he might have had.

  His voice was hoarse as he shouted to Penny, “Who is that Indian’s friend?”

  His repeated question was simply an excuse to hold the girl. H
is voice was hoarse. “Who is that Indian’s friend?”

  “I am!”

  It was a new voice, a deeply resonant one that spoke from behind Rangoon.

  “Stand back,” the same voice snapped.

  Rangoon swore and whirled as he snatched out his gun with catlike speed and agility. The releasing of the girl, the turning, the drawing, and the firing, all seemed part of one smooth flowing movement that came from instinct.

  Wide-eyed, Penny saw Rangoon’s gun jump as it lashed flame and smoke toward the newcomer. The gun seemed a thing alive—it leaped free of Rangoon’s hand and flew in an arc across the clearing. Rangoon screamed a livid curse of pain as he gripped his gun hand.

  The stranger, standing ten feet away, had his own weapon back in its holster. Penny saw that the man was tall; his hat was white and clean, and his face was masked.

  Rangoon’s hand must have hurt terribly, to judge from his violent cursing. Penny had a dazed, detached feeling as she watched the two men. Rangoon, still cursing, held a hand that stung from the force of the bullet that had knocked his own gun away.

  The stranger with the mask stepped forward and slapped Rangoon on the face. The blow did not appear to be hard-swung, but it sent Rangoon sprawling on the ground.

  “That’s enough of that talk,” the stranger said in his crisp but nonetheless pleasant voice. Penny heard another sound, and turned as Tonto came from behind the trees.

  The masked man spoke again. “You’re not hurt badly. My bullet struck your gun, not your hand.”

  “You’ll pay fer this,” Rangoon cried. “I’ll see yuh shot up, a little at a time—I’ll have my men git yuh, you wait.”

  The Lone Ranger turned to Tonto. “You’d better gag him, Tonto,” he said. “It’s going to be hard to talk above that noise.”

  Tonto grinned and leaped astride Rangoon, who made no attempt to rise from the ground. What the killer said was muffled as Tonto jammed a knotted cloth into his mouth.

  “When he’s gagged, rope him.”

  Tonto nodded and his expression said, “Gladly.”

  Penny watched with interest. She knew she should mount and ride at once for the Basin, but there was something about the masked man that held her, and there were things she wanted to ask. Who was this stranger whose chin was so well shaped? Why was he masked? She instinctively liked him, aside from the help he’d given her. She liked his efficient manner of handling Rangoon.

  Beyond the trees she caught a glimpse of Silver. This, then, was the man to whom she had sent food. The man for whom Tonto had asked help. This was the owner of the magnificent stallion.

  “Friend,” she thought. “That’s who he is. Tonto’s friend.” She remembered the way Tonto had spoken of him, then understood the tone the Indian had used when he said, “My friend.”

  CHAPTER XIV

  The Trail Leads Down

  When Rangoon was tied, the Lone Ranger dragged him across the clearing and placed him with his back propped against a tree.

  “You’ll probably be here for some time,” he said. “I’ll take that gag out of your mouth if you can keep quiet.”

  The gag removed, the masked man studied Rangoon’s face for fully a minute. “What’s your name?” he asked.

  Rangoon glared darkly from beneath the connected eyebrows. His mouth, already distorted somewhat by the scar on his cheek, was drawn even further back when he said in a slow voice that fairly dripped with hate, “You go tuh hell.”

  Penny spoke. “He calls himself Rangoon.”

  The Lone Ranger nodded. “It seems to me that I’ve seen him when he had another name.” He turned to Penelope. “You, of course, are Penelope Cavendish,” he said, more as a statement than a question.

  The girl nodded while her eyes remained fixed on the face beneath the mask, and the mask itself. She hadn’t noticed the slight limp when the Lone Ranger walked; the shoulder bandage was covered by his shirt. Her feeling was one of admiration and gratitude, but most of all resentment. She felt that Tonto had misled her. It was inconceivable that the man before her could so recently have been desperately in need of food. He didn’t look helpless. He certainly hadn’t acted helpless when he saw Rangoon. Yet Tonto had implied that his plight was serious. Perhaps need of concealment, not starvation, had kept the masked man hidden while Tonto sought food. Though Penny liked his voice and manner and the way he’d handled Rangoon, she could judge him only by facts and circumstances. He had come to the clearing—Rangoon was in the clearing. Wasn’t it obvious that they came there to meet? Rangoon, known as an outlaw—the newcomer masked. True, the masked man had fired at Rangoon while Rangoon fired at him, but wasn’t this perhaps an act for her benefit? Neither man was injured. These were the facts.

  To Tonto, Penny said, “I didn’t know your friend was an outlaw.”

  Tonto began to speak, but Penny continued. “If I had, I certainly wouldn’t have brought food for you to take to him.”

  The Lone Ranger spoke quickly, “Are you the one who brought Tonto that food?”

  “Of course. Didn’t he tell you?”

  “No,” said the masked man, glancing at Tonto, “he did not.”

  Tonto was highly uncomfortable.

  “If I had known where that food came from,” the Lone Ranger said, “I might not have—”

  “I suppose,” interrupted Penny, “the fact that you had food from the Cavendish family complicates things for you.”

  The Lone Ranger looked at the girl somewhat surprised. She went on, speaking slowly and significantly. “It must make it a trifle difficult for you to go ahead with your plans.”

  Could Penelope know his plans and suspicions? The masked man tried to fathom the enigmatic expression in the girl’s face. Did she know that he felt a strong suspicion that her uncle was hiring crooks to bring stolen cattle to the Basin? Did she realize that his purpose was to fix the guilt of murder on Basin killers?

  He said, “It might make everything more complicated than you realize, Miss Cavendish.” He took a step toward her. “I want you to understand one thing.”

  “Oh, please.” There was annoyance in the girl’s tone. “Don’t let’s talk any further. You’ve helped me, and if you feel that I helped you, we’re square. I’d sooner let it go at that and start for home.”

  “It can’t go at that,” the Lone Ranger said decisively. “The fact that you’ve saved my life puts me in a peculiar position.” He drew a cartridge from his belt. “Take this,” he said offering the bullet, “and if there is any man in the world whose life means a great deal to you, tell him to carry it at all times.”

  Penny looked at the silver bullet in the palm of the masked man’s hand.

  “Silver?” she asked curiously, in spite of herself.

  “Yes.”

  “So you want to repay me by agreeing to spare one life.” She drew up proudly. “Keep your bullet. We are quite able to defend ourselves against you.”

  Turning abruptly, she mounted Las Vegas and rode quickly away.

  As Penelope guided Las Vegas downhill she felt as if a buoyant hope had been punctured to sink into a black sea of despair. Her confidence in Tonto had been great, and despite what she had heard about the murder of the Texas Rangers, some tiny voice far deep inside her kept whispering that she should count on the man whom the Indian called “friend.” She had to count on someone. Yuma thought that her uncle was a leader of killers. Penny felt otherwise. She had hoped somehow to find a strong, stanch friend who would feel as she did. Seeing Tonto’s friend, she saw a masked man. A man who offered to spare the life of the one she loved most, in order to repay her for food.

  Now she had no one to turn to but Bryant Cavendish. Stubborn, bitter, unreasonable old man that he was, he’d have to listen to her. He must be made to understand the forces that were piling up in his own home. He must be shown that Mort and Vince were scheming with Rangoon, perhaps with others; taking orders from an unknown chief; ambushing Texas Rangers; murdering and Heaven only knew what
else. Bryant must be made to understand that his own life was probably in danger and must send word out for law men, many law men, to come and help. Becky had got word to the Texas Rangers. Bryant must find and use the same means, but this time they must reach the Basin without being ambushed.

  Bryant would be hard to talk to, but the time for diplomacy in handling him was past. She rode on, not knowing that old Gimlet was waiting for her with stunning news.

  Meanwhile, instead of replacing the silver bullet in his cartridge belt, the Lone Ranger put it in his pocket. He drew the Indian aside, out of hearing of Rangoon.

  “Don’t you see the spot we’re in now, Tonto? If Bryant Cavendish is in charge of the Basin, as he’s always been, he’s the man we want. I’m alive to get him, only because of what his niece did for me. She may have given me a life that I’ve dedicated to the hanging of the man she cares for. I’ve got to know her feelings.”

  Tonto nodded his agreement, looking quite dejected.

  “I don’t think Bryant himself did the killing, Tonto, but unless things have changed since the last reports came out of Bryant’s Basin, he rules his little kingdom with a mailed fist and there isn’t a thing that goes on there that he doesn’t order. If killers are there, he brought them there. The Texas Rangers must have died because Bryant Cavendish sent men out to kill them.”

  Tonto studied the tall man’s eyes and noted that there was a new intensity in the gray depths.

  “Maybe now,” he said, “we make-um camp. You need rest.”

  “There isn’t time to rest now. Penelope Cavendish believes I’m one of the outlaws. If she thinks Bryant is on the level and tells him about seeing me, he’ll make things too hot. We’ve got to strike before he can act. It’ll soon be dark enough to get to the Cavendish house without being seen, and I’m going there.

  “Cavendish is an old man. At best he hasn’t many years to live. His niece, if she loves him, can keep him. But we’re going to take the killers that work for him and he’s going to give us the evidence that will hang them.”

  The Lone Ranger spoke softly, but with a calm determination that told Tonto there was little use in trying to persuade him to postpone a meeting in a murderers’ retreat.

 

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