The Red Sombrero (14 page)

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Authors: Nelson Nye

Tags: #Mystery, #Detective, #Western

BOOK: The Red Sombrero
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A bitter twisting fury was in him but he couldn’t leave this fellow loose to rouse the camp. Especially with no way of guessing how long it might take him to locate Linda. Even with that graying strip of sky in the east — perhaps because of it, the starlight was tricky, and in the deeper gloom of the whooshing cottonwoods he thought for a moment he had lost that elusive shape. Half panicked, gun tightly clenched in the grip of his fist, he abandoned caution and cut directly for the shack.

Almost running, he ducked around the bole of the grove’s thickest tree and the shape was abruptly in front of him, blackly limned against the grayness, whirling with a sharp inhalation of breath even as Reno lunged to bring that lifted gun smashing down.

Some belated combination of intuition and awareness caused him to deflect the heavy barrel. They crashed into each other, struggling and gasping in a welter of arms and legs. “Quit it, Linda — ” he panted, and she cried: “Reno!” and clung to him, sobbing and shaken.

He held her so for a long precious moment with the scent of her hair biting into his nostrils and the goodness of the feeling like a coming home deep inside him. A sharp challenge from the gate fetched them back to reality. “Quien es? Who is it?” a voice cried, and crashing over it and through it came the tumult of guns. A horse screamed and there was shouting and muzzle light winked from a forward corner of the house.

“Quick!” Reno growled in her ear — “the stables!” They broke and ran for it.

They were less than forty seconds from the entrance when gunflame belched from the black of its maw. No shriek of lead whined past them but Reno swerved the girl and they ran toward the blotch of the horse he’d seen earlier, the one before the house that stood hitched to the ground. It was shaking its head and trembling with fright but it didn’t shy away and Reno saw, inwardly groaning, that all the run was beaten out of it.

He caught Linda’s arm and shoved her panting toward the door, blackly cursing the bitter fate which had forced them back to the very place he wanted her away from. He snarled when they found the massive door was bolted shut. He caught her about the waist and rushed her breathless toward the kitchen with bullets knocking adobe from the plastered wall behind them.

Luck found the kitchen door unlatched and they burst into the room with the uproar still raging. “You all right?” Reno gruffed.

He saw the bob of her head against the gray rectangle of the window. She gripped his arm. “I was on my way to see if I — ” and broke off, conscious of the quiet; they both caught the flutter of departing hoofs. Reno brushed her aside, bending to peer out the window, the shape of his eyes narrowing down as he watched.

“Whatever it was,” he grunted, “it’s finished. Those gents got all they wanted of that stuff.”

“It must have been the Tadpole vaqueros,” Linda thought. “It couldn’t have been anyone else unless rustlers …” She looked at him doubtfully. “Why are you smiling?”

“Aren’t they one and the same?” Reno’s lifting hand pointed. “They’ve got back their gold — Sierra’s bunch. That one’s Tuerto. See — there comes Felipe. Guess he was doing that shooting from the stables.”

“What will he do now? Sierra, I mean.” She told him what had happened after he’d gone, about Columbus and Palomas, of Perron hanging in the plaza.

“Go back to the brush, I reckon. Back to being plain bandit. Kind of too bad in a way. He’s pretty violent but …”

“Don Luis — ”

“Yeah,” he said, turning. “That reminds me.”

Sudden fright looked out of her eyes. “Reno — No!”

“I’ve got a little bone to pick with that gentleman.” He considered her a moment, wholly grave yet somewhat wistful. His nod was brusque almost to curtness. Pulling open the door he stepped into the hall, pistol in hand, eyes hard as glass.

The low growl of Sierra’s voice came to Reno and Reno’s score against Cordray, in the light of problems posed by Sierra, appeared extravagantly childish. Sierra would take care of Tadpole’s owner as he undoubtedly intended to take care of a certain gringo colonel, but there might yet be a chance to get Linda clear.

The pale gleam of a lamp shining out of the dining-room cast a pattern of shadow across the floor and opposite wall. It was Sierra’s abrupt mention of Cordray’s stabled horses which suddenly inspired Reno and he was turning, thinking to rejoin Linda, when the pattern of shadow changed, assuming deadly significance.

Two strides carried Reno into the arch. Sierra was still talking. He had his head thrust out of a window. It was Don Luis whose shape had changed the pattern of shadow. He was crouched with a lifted pistol, and as Sierra brought his head back inside the room the barrel tipped to grim focus.

There was no time for finesse, for the niceties. “Cordray!” Reno shouted. The ranchman spun, face twisted, furious. Both guns spoke at once but Reno’s aim was true.

Sierra stared at the fallen man and then looked fishily at Reno. He brushed past the American, quitting the room without a word, spurs harshly jangling. He was back in less than a minute, shoving Linda ahead of him. Black eyes bored into Reno’s with a glare that was like hot coals, and swept a look at the frightened girl. “This is your man?”

“Yes,” she said clearly, defiantly. “Yes.”

Sierra, suddenly chuckling, shouted: “Tuerto! Fetch the priest!”

THE END

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Copyright © 1954 by Nelson Nye. Copyright © renewed 1982 by Nelson Nye.
Published by arrangement with Golden West Literary Agency. All rights reserved.

Cover Images ©
www.123rf.com

This is a work of fiction.

Names, characters, corporations, institutions, organizations, events, or locales in this novel are either the product of the author’s imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. The resemblance of any character to actual persons (living or dead) is entirely coincidental.

ISBN 10: 1-4405-4886-2
ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-4886-4
eISBN 10: 1-4405-4884-6
eISBN 13: 978-1-4405-4884-0

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