<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/lrr-241.png" width-obs="250" height-obs="221" alt="" /></div>
<h2><SPAN name="Chapter_XXVII" id="Chapter_XXVII"></SPAN>Chapter XXVII</h2>
<p class="center extraspacebot2">GUNS TALK BACK</p>
<p>The murder-bent quintet went up the stairs like
Indians stalking single file through wooded land. Each
man carried his gun in his left hand and braced himself
with his right against the wall. They stayed as close to
that wall as possible to minimize the creaking of the
stairs. The only sound was a faint, leathery whisper
from the dusty boots. Wallie cursed inwardly at his lack
of foresight in not having his men go stocking-footed to
the double murder.</p>
<p>Wallie was in the lead, Vince in the rear. In this order
they gained the upstairs hall. Any apprehensions Wallie
might have had about the squeaking boots were dispelled
as he drew close to Bryant's door. A resonant voice, undoubtedly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></SPAN></span>
that of the masked man, was speaking. Wallie
felt no qualms of guilt or conscience at the cold-blooded
ruthlessness of his plans. He hadn't the slightest intention
of giving the men who were marked for execution a
chance to defend themselves. The code of Western fair
play was missing from Wallie's personality. This was to
be no duel, but simply the extinction of two men whose
deaths had become essential to his plans.</p>
<p>Wallie halted at the closed but unlocked door and
motioned Lonergan and Lombard past him. As the leader
faced the door those two were on his left, while Vince
and Sawtell, guns now shifted to their right hands, stood
upon his right. All but Wallie were balanced on the balls
of their feet, tense and ready to charge through the door,
but Wallie hesitated. He could hear the masked man's
voice, with a vibrant quality carrying through the door.
He could hear, distinctly, each word that was said. The
masked man was scolding old Bryant Cavendish.</p>
<p>Wallie crouched and placed one eye close to the keyhole.
The room, he saw, was dimly lighted. It was difficult
to see details. The blankets were mounded on the
bed as if they'd been pulled over Bryant's big body. On
the far side of the bed Wallie could make out a white
sombrero, and judged that to be where the masked man
sat while he conducted the one-sided conversation.</p>
<p>Wallie now knew just where he should direct his men
to fire when he threw open the door. He hesitated, listening
to what was being said inside.</p>
<p>"You're the most unreasonably stubborn old fool I've
ever known, Cavendish." It was the masked man speaking.
"It's high time for you to drop this false pride of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></SPAN></span>
yours; admit you've grown old, let someone help you.</p>
<p>"Cavendish, all these murders are yours. I know you
aren't the killer, personally, but none of them could possibly
have happened if you hadn't been so foolishly stubborn!
You'd never admit that you found it hard to walk.
You thought you hid that fact, but you didn't! You didn't
fool anyone at all. Then when your eyes began to fail
you, you tried to hide that fact too. Why, right now,
you're so nearly blind that you have to <i>feel</i> your way."</p>
<p>Wallie heard a low-toned response from his uncle.
Then the masked man continued.</p>
<p>"All of those nephews of yours realized that you not
only were incapable of getting about, but that you
couldn't even see what went on. They felt secure in
doing whatever they pleased, so they organized a regular
crime ring here in the Basin. They replaced all of your
former hands with crooks whom they selected. They let
it be known in the right places that this Basin would be
a safe hideout for men the law was looking for. You
couldn't see what your cowhands looked like, so you had
no cause to distrust them. You wouldn't go to a doctor
and have your eyes treated and your sight improved, because
you wanted to conceal your condition."</p>
<p>Wallie reasoned that inasmuch as neither of the two
beyond the door was to survive much longer, he might as
well hear what else this incalculable masked man knew.</p>
<p>"Penelope tried her best to find reasons for your unconcern
over the ways things were going here. She
thought more of you than you deserved. She tried to convince
herself that you were not aware of things, and
tried to find out if blindness was the reason. She defended<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></SPAN></span>
you when Yuma turned against you; and what
was her reward for that loyalty? You turned against her,
the same as you did against those graceless cousins. She
was made to sign away her rights just as they were.
Don't interrupt, Cavendish—I've more to say. Yuma felt
that as long as you were alive, that girl would be guarded
and protected. How wrong he was! But that was what he
thought, and when I captured him he tried to convince
me that he was the leader of these Basin killers. He was
ready to spend the rest of his life as a fugitive in hiding,
and keep the law off your neck. When I showed him the
document that Penelope had been made to sign, he realized
that he'd made a mistake. He saw then that the
girl he loved could look for little enough happiness or
security through you. Who, in the name of Heaven, is
this Andrew Munson? What do you owe him that you'd
deprive Penelope of any future comfort, in his favor?"</p>
<p>Wallie strained to hear what Bryant's reply would be,
but there was none. In the brief pause, he heard the
heavy, emotional breathing of the masked man.</p>
<p>"It wasn't until this morning that I learned some
truths," the masked man continued. "I knew that someone
had slipped into this Basin and murdered Gimlet, because
the killer rode within ten yards of me, but I didn't
know who he was. Tonto was halfway up Thunder Mountain
when this same man went by. It was too dark there
for the Indian to identify him when he killed Rangoon.
Then he went on to Red Oak, where he let Mort out of
jail with instructions to kill you in your hotel room.
You know what happened there. I told you how I shot<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></SPAN></span>
him in the leg, and how he was later stabbed to death.
Since then, I've learned <i>who the killer is</i>!</p>
<p>"I told you about Tonto. He was here, waiting for the
riders to come back from Red Oak. The trail from Red
Oak is on hard ground, as you know. The trail over
Thunder Mountain is marshy in a lot of places. The loam
there is soft and black, and different from anything that
could be found on the trail through the Gap. Well, Tonto
watched when each horse came into the corral. He found
one, just one horse, Cavendish, that had black loam
caked to the fetlocks. He gave me the name of the man
who rode and owned that horse, in a note which he left
at the cave. <i>That man is your nephew, Wallie!</i>"</p>
<p>Wallie, listening, frowned heavily, and thanked his
lucky stars that this man with such a keen and logical
mind was to be killed. He would prove a dangerous adversary
if left alive.</p>
<p>"You don't believe me," the masked man said, "you
won't let yourself believe, or trust anyone, but I'll <i>prove</i>
Wallie is what I've told you. If I can prove that, will
you talk?"</p>
<p>Wallie had heard enough. "Come on!" he cried, and
threw the door wide open.</p>
<p>Lombard and Sawtell plunged into the room, and
dropped to one knee while they opened fire. Lonergan
and Vince were close behind, firing over them, while
Wallie remained in back. Guns crashed deafeningly in
the confines of the room. The white hat near the bed
became a thing alive, leaping across the room in crazy
circles. The mound of blankets on the bed became a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></SPAN></span>
shaking mass as bullet after bullet bored deep. A score
of shots roared in the blink of an eye.</p>
<p>Then, back talk, in the voices of six-shooters, came
from a corner of the room.</p>
<p>Sawtell's gun jumped from his hand as if by magic.
His fingers were suddenly a bloody mass, at which the
killer stared in stupefaction. More flames lanced from
the corner, and Lombard's extended gun arm snapped
as a forty-five slug tore through flesh and bone between
the wrist and elbow. Sawtell felt no pain in the heat of
battle. Instinctive gunman that he was, he fell flat upon
his belly, jerking out a second revolver with his left
hand. Loud snarls and curses came from pain-maddened
Lombard, while Sawtell took careful aim. He steadied
his weapon at a point directly between the eyeslits of the
mask. His finger tensed upon the trigger.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly, his arm dropped, his gun unfired. He
went limp and slumped. In his forehead there was a tiny
hole, but the back of his head was an awful sight where
a soft-nosed bullet had gouged out his skull.</p>
<p>Half-blind Bryant Cavendish fired at sounds with an
instinct that was supersensitive. Somehow the old man
had found one of his guns, and cried aloud in savage
hate as he rocketed shot after shot toward the doorway.
"They're all ag'in me," he cried out. "I'll show 'em I
don't need sight! I can locate skunks by smell." His
gun whammed again, and death spat at the doorway.</p>
<p>Wallie screamed his orders. "In the corner—shoot 'em—drill
'em!" He pushed from behind at the instant that
the lawyer Lonergan took a bullet from the masked man's
gun on the hand, and one from Bryant's big revolver in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></SPAN></span>
the belly. He pitched forward, and fell across the writhing
form of Lombard. Shrill yells and cries of pain rose
far above Wallie's livid curses.</p>
<p>The Lone Ranger snatched the gun from Bryant's
hand. "No more shooting," he cried.</p>
<p>He leaped toward the doorway, head low, and charged.
Vince had swung to face the surprise counterattack. His
gun blazed, but the Lone Ranger was beneath the slug.
He crashed into Vince with such force that the runty
killer was fairly lifted off his feet and tossed across the
room, while his gun was jarred out of his hand.</p>
<p>Wallie, knowing his life depended on the fight, scrambled
up from the floor. The thought of losing made him
frantic as he swung his empty gun in a vicious blow at
the Lone Ranger. The blow struck the Lone Ranger on
the bandaged shoulder. A sudden stab of pain like a
white-hot iron gripped his side as Wallie followed up his
advantage. Still clutching the heavy revolver, he rammed
it muzzle first into the masked man's chest.</p>
<p>The Lone Ranger couldn't breathe. The blow must
have broken at least one rib, possibly more. He felt his
legs caving beneath him, while his brain fought valiantly
against the dizziness that threatened to engulf him. He
threw both arms about Wallie and locked his hands behind
his adversary's neck. He was falling, and helpless
to prevent it. He was barely conscious of the fact that
Wallie kept driving more blows to his stomach; blows
that were too short to have much power behind them.
Close to his ear, he heard the other's voice as a meaningless
jumble of hissing syllables.</p>
<p>Somehow the Lone Ranger's weight threw Wallie off<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></SPAN></span>
his balance too. The masked man had the fighter's heart
that dictates action after the mind has ceased functioning.
A mighty heave—a wrench that split the half-healed
wound wide open. Still falling—it seemed that time stood
still—and split seconds were like hours—and then a
crash.</p>
<p>The masked man's fall was padded by the body of
the man he fell on. His superhuman effort had thrown
Wallie beneath him as the two went down. Wallie's head
smacked hard against the floor.</p>
<p>Now Vince had a gun, was on his feet and coming
close. His ugly face looked like a leering demon's as he
raised his gun. The Lone Ranger rolled, and as he did so,
drew his extra weapon. Two guns spoke as one, their muzzles
so close that the flames were intermingled. To the
Lone Ranger, close to acrid fumes and scorching flame,
it seemed that hell had burst into the room. And then—oblivion.</p>
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