PAGE 25
Nightmare Town
by
“Don’t worry about them,” Larry said. “Take the girl and make Rymer’s place. I’ll take care of this pair and be over there with the car in fifteen minutes. Get going!”
Steve’s eyes narrowed and he studied the man in the doorway. He didn’t trust him, but since all Izzard seemed equally dangerous, one place would be as safe as another — and Larry Ormsby might be honest this time.
“All right,” he said, and turned to the girl. “Get a heavy coat. ”
Five minutes later they were hurrying through the same dark streets they had gone through on the previous night. Less than a block from the house, a muffled shot came to their ears, and then another. The girl glanced quickly at Steve but did not speak. He hoped she had not understood what the two shots meant.
They met nobody. Rymer had heard and recognised the girl’s footsteps on the sidewalk, and he opened the door before they could knock.
“Come in, Nora,” he welcomed her heartily, and then fumbled for Steve’s hand. “This is Mr. Threefall, isn’t it?”
He led them into the dark cabin, and then lighted the oil lamp on the table. Steve launched at once into a hurried summarising of what Larry Ormsby had told him. The girl listened with wide eyes and wan face; the blind man’s face lost its serenity, and he seemed to grow older and tired as he listened.
“Ormsby said he would come after us with his car,” Steve wound up. “If he does, you will go with us, of course, Mr. Rymer. If you’ll tell us what you want to take with you we’ll get it ready; so that there will be no delay when he comes—if he comes. ” He turned to the girl. “What do you think, Nora? Will he come? And can we trust him if he does?”
“I — I hope so —he’s not all bad, I think. ”
The blind man went to a wardrobe in the room’s other end.
“I’ve got nothing to take,” he said, “but I’ll get into warmer clothes. ”
He pulled the wardrobe door open, so that it screened a corner of the room for him to change in. Steve went to a window, and stood there looking between blind and frame, into the dark street where nothing moved. The girl stood close to him, between his arm and side, her fingers twined in his sleeve.
“Will we—? Will we—?”
He drew her closer and answered the whispered question she could not finish.
“We’ll make it,” he said, “if Larry plays square, or if he doesn’t. We’ll make it. ”
A rifle cracked somewhere in the direction of Main Street. A volley of pistol shots. The cream-colored Vauxhall came out of nowhere to settle on the sidewalk, two steps from the door. Larry Ormsby, hatless and with his shirt torn loose to expose a hole under one of his collar-bones, tumbled out of the car and through the door that Steve threw open for him.
Larry kicked the door shut behind him, and laughed.
“Izzard’s frying nicely!” he cried, and clapped his hands together. “Come, come! The desert awaits!”
Steve turned to call the blind man. Rymer stepped out from behind his screening door. In each of Rymer’s hands was a heavy revolver. The film was gone from Rymer’s eyes.
His eyes, cool and sharp now, held the two men and the girl.
“Put your hands up, all of you,” he ordered curtly.
Larry Ormsby laughed insanely.
“Did you ever see a damned fool do his stuff, Rymer?” he asked.
“Put your hands up!”
“Rymer,” Larry said, “I’m dying now. To hell with you!”
And without haste he took a black automatic pistol from an inside coat pocket.