The Night Horseman by Max Brand
page 92 of 353 (26%)
page 92 of 353 (26%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
"A gun." And Langley saw the danger that was coming even before Mac Strann moved. He gave a shrill yelp of terror and whirled and sprang for the open. But Mac Strann sprang after him and reached. His whole body seemed to stretch like an elastic thing, and his arm grew longer. The hand fastened on the back of Langley, plucked him up, and jammed him against the wall. Haw-Haw crumpled to the floor. He gasped: "It weren't me, Mac. For Gawd's sake, it weren't me!" His face was a study. There was abject terror in it, and yet there was also a sort of grisly joy, and his eyes feasted on the silent agony of Mac Strann. "Where?" asked Mac Strann. "Mac," pleaded the vulture who cringed on the floor, "gimme your word you ain't goin' to hold it agin me." "Tell me," said the other, and he framed the face of the vulture between his large hands. If he pressed the heels of those hands together bones would snap, and Haw-Haw Langley knew it. And yet nothing but a wild delight could have set that glitter in his little eyes, just as nothing but a palsy of terror could have set his limbs twitching so. "Who shot him from behind?" demanded the giant. "It wasn't from behind," croaked the bearer of ill-tidings. "It was from |
|