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Texan gave his animal free rein. The pursuit was dropping behind, a few yards at a time. Instead of buzzing around his ears now, the bullets were falling short, kicking up spurts of dust. The cries in angry Spanish grew fainter until they died into a confused hubbub. Kid Wolf had left the town behind him and was racing out
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over the level plain. Looking back, he could see a score or more of brown clouds--dirt stirred by the horsemen who were now almost lost from view. These dwindled. In an hour only half a dozen riders remained on his trail. Blizzard was still going strong. Out on the great Llano Estacado, The Kid managed, by superior horsemanship, to give
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the balance of his pursuers the slip. When he had succeeded in confusing them, he slowed his faithful mount down for a needed rest. And now where was the wagon train? Where was he to find it? A chill raced down his spine. Had The Terror already struck? The thought of the women and children in the hapless outfit filled
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him with a feeling akin to panic. He must find the wagon train. It might not yet be too late. Kid Wolf was a plainsman. He could locate water where none appeared to exist; he could discover game when older men failed; and he could follow a course on the limitless prairie as surely as a sailor could navigate the
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seas by means of his compass. By day or by night, he was "trailwise." Carefully Kid Wolf estimated the route the wagon train had been taking. Then he figured out the progress it had probably made since he had left it. In this way he fixed a point in his mind--an imaginary dot that he must reach if he meant
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to find the prairie schooners. If Modoc--the leader of the outfit--had kept to his original course, The Kid could not fail to meet them. Accordingly, Kid Wolf traveled all the rest of that day in a straight line, marking his course by the sun. He stopped only once at noon for water and a short rest, going on again until
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dusk. At nightfall, he made camp and lay awake, looking at the stars overhead. His thoughts were of The Terror and of his intended victims. Strangely enough, the face of Modoc came into his reflections, also. He could not dismiss him. Was he really insane, or was it just obstinacy? If the latter, what had he meant by his strange
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expression: "What color will the moon be to-night?" Kid Wolf thought for a long time and then gave it up. He did not fear any further pursuit by the Spanish soldiers. The trail he had left behind was too puzzling; he had taken care of that. Besides, he knew that the average Spaniard feared the Apache and the other Indian
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tribes that infested portions of the Staked Plains. If there were any danger during the night, Blizzard would give him warning. He was up with the dawn. At its first faint, pinkish glow, he was in the saddle again. The day promised to be hot. The midsummer sun had burned the grass to a crisp brown. By midday, mirages began
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to show in hollows. Heat flickered. Both horse and rider drank at a pool of yellow-brown water and pressed on. Late in the afternoon, Kid Wolf made out a faint white line on the far horizon. It was the wagon train! He sighed with relief. The Terror, then, had not yet raided it. For The Terror left only destruction in
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his wake. Had he already plundered it, he would have burned the wagons to the ground. Increasing his speed, Kid Wolf rapidly approached it. As he came nearer, he saw that the outfit was in the center of a field of alkali and making slow and painful progress. He did not see the beef herd. Plainly, something had happened during
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his absence. Kid Wolf rode in, waving his hat. Would he get a bullet for his pains? He kept his eyes open as he drummed in over the alkali flat. Modoc and three others were at the head of the outfit. They recognized him at once. Modoc started to raise his rifle. One of the others struck the weapon down.
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Obviously the train commander had lost some of his influence. Another of the pathfinders shouted for Kid Wolf to come on. A dozen of the travelers left their wagons and came forward. This time they seemed glad to see Kid Wolf. "Yuh was right, after all!" one of them cried. "Modoc led us out of the way. We're lost!" "I
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meant all right," Modoc grumbled. "I did my best--must have made a mistake somewhere. I'll find the trail, never worry. And if yuh take my advice, yuh'll drive this four-flusher away from here! He don't mean us any good. What business is it of his?" Kid Wolf sternly pointed back to the wagons. "Those women and children theah," he snapped,
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"is mah business." "Shut up, Modoc!" ordered one of the men. "We trust this man, and we believe he's our friend." He turned to the Texan. "Yuh can consider yoreself in command here now," he added. Modoc trembled with ungovernable anger, but, outnumbered as he was, he could say nothing. Sulkily he returned to his own wagon. From the drivers,
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Kid Wolf learned a story of hardship and semi starvation. Indians had driven away their beef herd, leaving them without food. All day they had had nothing to eat, and were at the point of killing and devouring prairie dogs. The water, too, was bad--so full of alkali as nearly to be undrinkable, and as bitter as gall. Kid Wolf
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lost no time in taking the situation in hand. His own provisions he turned over to the women and children of the outfit. Then he changed the course of the train so that it led toward civilization. At nightfall they made camp by a pool of fair drinking water. The outfit told him that as yet they had seen no
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sign of The Terror. "Probably we won't," said one. Kid Wolf was not so optimistic. That night he borrowed two . Colt revolvers from the wagon-train supplies. He selected them with extreme care, testing them by shooting at marks. So accurate was his shooting that the men of the outfit could not conceal their admiration. The first weapon he tried
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threw the shots an inch or two to one side, but he finally obtained a pair that worked perfectly. Then he sanded the wooden handles of the guns to roughen them slightly. "It nevah pays to have yo' hand slip when makin' a draw," he explained. The outfit's camp fire was shielded with canvas that night, at Kid's suggestion. On
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that wide plain a light showed for many miles, and it was poor policy to advertise one's position. Tired as he was, Kid Wolf rose at midnight, after sleeping a few hours. He wanted to be sure that everything was well. Making a tour of the wagon train, he suddenly stopped in his tracks and sniffed. There was no mistaking
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the delicious odor. It made Kid Wolf hungry. It was frying meat. The Texan quietly aroused some of the men and led them to one of the wagons. "I want yo'-all to see fo' yo'selves," he explained. The wagon was Modoc's own, and they entered it. The ex-wagon-train commander had a shielded lantern burning inside, and he was in the
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act of eating a big supper! When he saw that he had visitors, he tried to reach the gun belt he had hung up at one end of the wagon. Kid Wolf was too quick for him. "Yo' call yo'self a man!" he murmured in a voice filled with contempt. "Why, a low-down coyote is a gentleman alongside of yo'.
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I wondered why yo' looked so well fed, while the rest of the camp was starvin'. Men, search this wagon!" While Modoc swore, the search was made. It disclosed many pounds of dried beef and other provisions. It was Modoc's little private supply. "We'll divide it up with everybody in the mohnin'," suggested the Texan, "with a double allowance fo'
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the children and the women." The wagon men were so furious at Modoc's selfishness that they could have torn him to pieces. Kid Wolf, however, prevented the trouble that was brewing. "Every one to their blankets, men," he said. "We can't affohd to fight among ouahselves just now." When the camp was asleep again, he took up his lonely vigil.
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The night was pitch black, without moon or stars. A wind whispered softly across the great Llano. Suddenly The Kid's attention was attracted by something on the western horizon. It seemed to be in the sky--a faint red glow, across which shadows appeared to move like phantoms. Like a picture from the ghost world, it flickered for a few minutes
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like heat lightning, then disappeared, leaving the night as dark as before. It was a night mirage, and something more than an optical illusion. It was a rare thing on the plain. The Kid knew that it meant something. That glow was the reflection in the sky of a camp fire! Those shadows were men! The Texan quickly told his
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sentinels. "I'm ridin' out to see what it is," he said. "Keep a close watch while I'm gone. I'm on a little scoutin' pahty of mah own. It might be that Quiroz has followed me--which I doubt. And it might be--The Terror!" Mounting Blizzard, he was quickly swallowed up in the darkness. THE CAMP OF THE TERROR Kid Wolf knew
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that the camp fire was many miles away. He gave his horse just a touch of the spur--that was always enough for Blizzard--and they proceeded to split the wind. The horse was as sure-footed as a cat, and was not an animal to step into a prairie-dog hole, even on a black night. Blizzard had ample rest and water, and
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was never fresher. He ran like a greyhound. Kid Wolf never forgot that gallop across the Llano by night. It was like running full tilt against an ever-opening velvet curtain. He could hardly see his horse's head. Blizzard's hoofs pounded on and on across the level plateau. Miles disappeared under his flying feet, while Kid's keen eyes were fastened on
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the horizon ahead. Finally he made out an orange glow--a light that changed to a redder and redder hue until it became a point of fire. The Texan approached it rapidly, more and more cautious. That was no small camp! Many men were around that flickering fire. Kid Wolf dismounted, whispering for Blizzard to remain where he was. Then, like
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a slinking Apache Indian, he approached on foot, making no sound. Not once did his high-heeled boots snap a weed or rustle the dried grass. He would not have been more silent had he been wearing moccasins. There were a hundred or more men in the camp. It was a small city. Kid Wolf could hear the champing and stamping
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of countless restless horses, and the men were thick around the fire. A conference of some kind was being held. The Texan approached closer and closer, all eyes and ears. If he could discover the identity of this band and something of their plans---- Suddenly a sentry rose up from the grass not a yard from him. His eyes fell
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upon the intruder, and his mouth flew open. In his hand was a short-barreled carbine. The Texan seized him, dodged under the half-raised weapon and cut off the man's cry with the pressure of a muscular hand. He fought noiselessly, and the sentry--a Mexican--was no match for him. Throwing him to the ground, Kid Wolf gagged him with the man's
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own gayly colored scarf. Then he bound him securely, using the sentry's sash and carbine strap. Kid Wolf exchanged his hat for the Mexican's steep-crowned sombrero and picked up the carbine. In this guise he could approach the camp with comparative safety. Pulling the sombrero over his eyes, he came in closer to the camp fire. As he did so,
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a trio of men--two white men and one half-breed--came into the camp from another direction. The Kid heard one of the other sentries hail the newcomers. "What color will the moon be to-night?" was the challenge. Thrills raced up Kid Wolf's spine. That was the question Modoc had asked him! What deep plot was behind that seemingly meaningless query? Then
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the Texan heard the response. "The moon will be red!" was the countersign, and the trio passed and approached the ring around the fire. There was no doubt now that he was in the camp of The Terror! The men outlined in the ruddy fire-light were desperadoes. Never had the Texan seen such a gathering. Some were American gunmen, evil-faced
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and heavily armed. Others were Mexicans and Indians. There was a tenseness in the very atmosphere. As Kid Wolf came closer to the fire, he was hailed in turn: "What color will the moon be to-night?" "The moon will be red," Kid Wolf replied softly. No one paid him any attention. All eyes were on a figure near the glowing
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fire. The man was talking and seemed to be in authority. He was dressed in a red Mexican coat, rich silver-trimmed pantaloons, and carried a brace of gold-mounted pistols. His face was covered with a mask of black velvet. Instinctively Kid Wolf knew that he was looking at the dread scourge of the Llano Estacado--The Terror of the Staked Plains!
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The bandit, then, kept himself masked even in front of his own men! Kid Wolf, as he listened, grew tense. His eyes were shining with snapping blue fire. The Terror was planning a raid upon the wagon train! His voice, cold and deadly, came to Kid Wolf's ears: "Everything, then, caballeros, is arranged. We strike at dawn and wipe them
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out, sparing nobody. If a man escapes, you are all running a risk, for some of you might be identified. Man, woman, and child, they must die! Our man, of course, you all know. Do not fire on him." Kid Wolf listened to that sinister voice and wondered what the face behind the mask looked like. The bandit leader had
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no more soul than a rattler, and one might expect more mercy from a wolf. And Kid Wolf already knew whom The Terror meant when he spoke of "our man." Anger shook the Texan from head to foot. He had learned enough. The bandits were already about to mount their horses in order that they might reach the wagon train
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at daybreak. There was no time to lose. He must get back to the helpless outfit ahead of them. Sauntering carelessly, he slipped out of the circle about the fire and made his way out of the camp without being noticed. Once out of the range of the firelight, he raced into the darkness for his horse. Blizzard was waiting
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patiently. He had not moved from his tracks. An ordinary animal might have nickered upon scenting other horses, but Blizzard had been trained otherwise. Kid Wolf leaped into the saddle, slapped his mount gently on the neck, and was swallowed up in the night as Blizzard answered the summons. The east was a pale line against the dark of the
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prairie night when Blizzard drummed up to the sleeping wagon train with his rider. It still lacked a half hour until the dawn. The Texan sent the sentries to arouse every available fighting man in the wagon train. "Is it The Terror?" one of them questioned, paling. "It is," replied Kid Wolf. "We must act quickly." In a few minutes
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men were pouring out of the wagons, weapons in their hands. It was just light enough now to see. Modoc ran out of his wagon, strapping on his Colt . as he came. He advanced toward the Texan sneeringly. The others gathered about to see what would happen. Something in Kid Wolf's eyes warned them of impending trouble. "What's the
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idea now?" Modoc snarled, showing his stained teeth like a wolf. "Has this four-flusher been up to his tricks again?" Kid Wolf's voice came cool and calm. "Modoc," he drawled, "what color will the moon be to-night?" Modoc's face went the color of putty. Like a flash, the insolence had gone out of his eyes, to be replaced with fear.
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He moistened his lips feverishly. "I--I don't know what yo're talkin' about," he stammered. "Are yo' sure," said Kid Wolf with deadly quietness, "that the moon won't be red?" Modoc began to tremble like a leaf. His gun hand moved part way to his hip, then stopped. Beads of perspiration stood out on his clammy forehead. "Afraid to draw like
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a man?" the Texan drawled. "I wouldn't doubt it. Men, this man is a betrayah. He is one of The Terror's bandits. That's why he led yo' off the track. He brought yo' here to die like rats." Modoc's face was blue-white as Kid Wolf continued: "When I first showed up, Modoc thought I might be one of The Terror's
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messengahs. I didn't come through with the password, and he learned different. I didn't know what he meant, then, but I know now!" The wagon men surged around Modoc threateningly. Fury was written over the faces of them all. There were cries of "Kill him!" "Hang the traitor!" Kid Wolf still faced the fear-frozen Modoc, smiling coolly. There was quiet
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menace in that easy smile. "I usually shoot the head off a rattlesnake when I see one," he said softly. "One day, yeahs ago, a rattlah killed a favorite dawg of mine. I blew that snake apart, bit by bit. Modoc, that snake was a gentleman alongside of yo'. I'm givin' yo' an even chance to kill me. Fill yo'
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hand!" Modoc, with a wheezing, gasping breath, decided upon action. His hand streaked for his hip. But Kid Wolf had drawn a split second later and more than a split second faster. The fingers of his right hand closed upon the handle of one of his twin Colts. In the same instant, fire flew! With the first explosion, Modoc grunted
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with pain, dropping his gun. The bullet had caught him squarely in the wrist, rendering his fingers useless. But Kid Wolf kept firing, although he did not aim for Modoc's head or body. His gun flashed and stuttered twice, three times, four--five--six! Dust flew from Modoc's coat sleeve as the bullets landed with a series of terrific smashes. As he
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had torn the rattlesnake bit by bit, Kid Wolf ripped Modoc's gun arm. Each bullet took effect, and Modoc staggered from the impacts, knees slumping to the ground. The traitor would never use that gun arm again. It dangled from his body, broken and useless. The others would have literally torn Modoc limb from limb had not the Texan ordered
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otherwise. "He doesn't deserve hangin'," he said, "so let him be. We've got work to do. The Terror and his gang will be here at any minute. Now listen carefully to what I say." Quietly he gave his orders, and just as carefully, the wagon men carried them out. Under Kid Wolf's masterly leadership they had regained their nerve. Panic
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left them, and they became grim and determined. The Kid learned that there were thirty-four men in the outfit. Thirty-four against at least a hundred! The odds were great, but the Texan had faced greater ones alone. With the train in the hands of Modoc--one of their own men--the marauders expected to take the outfit by surprise. Thanks to the
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Texan, all that was changed now. He gave orders that the wagons be shifted into a circle, with the children and women on the inside behind shelter. The men were posted in the wagons and behind them, Kid Wolf giving each man his station. "Do not fiah until I give the coyote yell," he said. "And then keep yo' sights
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down. Shoot low!" Kid Wolf himself took a position between two of the covered wagons, his horse Blizzard within quick call. In the narrow chink, just wide enough for him to ride his horse through, he placed three loaded Sharps .-caliber rifles, ready for quick use. They had not long to wait. Only a few minutes had elapsed after the
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wagons had been shifted when Kid Wolf saw a body of horsemen approaching from the west. It was The Terror's band! Dust stirred by the hoofs of a hundred galloping horses rose in the air like brown thunderclouds. As the grim defenders watched, the band split up, divided into two rapidly moving lines, and began to surround the train in
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a sweeping circle. The circle formed, began to close in. Kid Wolf peered along the barrel of one of the Sharps rifles. Then, after what seemed minutes, he uttered his coyote cry: "Yip, yip, yip-ee!" It was followed by a terrific burst of fire from the wagon train. The signal had been given at the opportune time. The bandits faltered.
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They hadn't expected this! The Terror had hoped to find the wagon train still asleep and defenseless. The rolling powder smoke cleared away somewhat, and it could be seen that a dozen or more of the attackers had melted out of their saddles, like butter on a hot stove. But the raiders, outnumbering the defenders and realizing it, still came
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on. Kid Wolf threw aside the rifle and drew his twin .45s. Deliberately stepping out into the open, he fanned the hammers from the level of his hip. His waistline, as he swung the thundering Colts from side to side, seemed to be alive with sputtering red sparks. Smoke rolled around him. The bandits in front of him dropped by
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twos and threes. Holes appeared in this side of the bandits' circle--holes that did not close up. Riderless mounts dashed about frantically, their reins trailing; wounded horses added to the uproar with their death screams. It was a battle! Seeing that the force of the charge had been broken on this flank, Kid Wolf ran across to reenforce the other
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sides of the circle. At one point the outlaws had already broken through the circle of wagons. Kid Wolf sent three screaming slugs toward them, and they fell back in disorder, leaving one desperado stretched out behind them. Reloading his guns, Kid Wolf climbed upon one of the wagons and again opened fire; this time with such an effect that
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all sides of the attacking circle began to break and fall back to safety. Mere force of numbers does not always count in a gun fight. Not more than half a dozen of the defenders had been hit. The survivors raised a hearty cheer. Kid Wolf's generalship had beaten back the first outlaw charge! It was then that Modoc played
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his final card. Hoping to gain the protection of the outlaws, and fearing the wagon train's vengeance, he slipped out of the circle of covered wagons and, on foot, began running. His goal was ahead of him, but he never reached it. His late comrades--the bandits--evidently thought he had played the traitor with them, for they fired on him relentlessly.
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He fell, then rose again to scramble on. Bullets kicked up the sod around him. Others plumped into his body. Again he fell, this time to stay. His body was riddled with scores of bullets. So died the traitor. Kid Wolf knew that a certain advantage always lies with the offensive. Defenders haven't the power of attackers. The Texan decided
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to risk a counter-charge. He knew that it might break down the courage of the bandit band. At least it would be a surprise. He called for volunteers. "I want a dozen men who can shoot straight from the back of a runnin' hoss," he said. "It'll be dangerous. Who's with me?" Immediately more men than he wanted spoke up.
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Quickly choosing twelve, he gave them their orders. "At the next chahge," the Texan drawled, "we'll ride out theah and give 'em somethin' to think about. If I'm right, I think they'll scattah. If I'm wrong--well, they'll probably wipe us out. Are yo' game?" The men were game, as the Texan soon found out. They were fighting for their families,
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as well as their own lives and possessions. Again the attacking line of horsemen formed, and in a cloud of dust, they came at the wagon train. Their bullets cut slashes in the covered-wagon tops, smashed into wheels and wagon trees, and kicked up geysers of sand. They would be hard to stop this time! But Kid Wolf gave the
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word for his own charge. He had several reasons for doing this. It amounted to folly in the eyes of some, but the Texan knew the value of a countercharge. And if he could bring down The Terror himself, he knew the battle was as good as won. Out of the wagon circle they came, saddle leather creaking and guns
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blazing! The Kid, on his snow-white charger, was in the lead. A lane opened in the bandit ranks as if by magic. Kid Wolf pressed his quick advantage. His movement had taken the outlaw band by surprise. The utter recklessness of it shook their nerve. Two of the wagon men fell. The others kept on, clearing a swathe with their
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sputtering Colts. The bandits hesitated. The defenders who had remained behind the wagons kept up their deadly barrage. They were dropping accurately placed shots where they would be sure to do the most good. Then The Terror's band retreated, broke formation. The retreat became a rout--a mad get-away with every man for himself. Outnumbered as they were, the defenders were
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making more than a good account of themselves. Kid Wolf's eyes sought for The Terror himself--and found him. His red coat and gay trappings were easy to locate, even in that mad stampede. The bandit chief was attempting to make his get-away. The Texan, however, cut him off after a hard, furious ride. Separated from his men, The Terror turned
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in his saddle, wildly attempting to get the drop on Kid Wolf as he came in. One of his gold-mounted pistols flashed. The bullet hissed over the Texan's head. He had dropped low in the saddle. The Terror whirled his horse at Kid Wolf's. He realized that it was a fight to the end. He fired his other weapon almost
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in the Texan's face. The Kid, however, had pulled the trigger of his own gun just a fraction of a second before. The Terror's aim was spoiled just enough so that the bullet whined wide. The bandit chief collapsed in his saddle. He had been hit in the shoulder. The Texan closed in. There was a violent shock as Blizzard
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thudded into the bandit's horse. The Terror, eyes glittering wickedly through the openings in his velvet mask, slid from his horse, landing feet first. With a glittering knife in his unwounded hand, he made a spring toward Kid Wolf. The blade would have buried itself in the Texan's thigh had not The Kid whirled his horse just in time. "All
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right," said the Texan coolly. "We have it out with ouah hands." Holstering his guns, he leaped from his horse. He scorned even to use his bowie knife, as he advanced toward the bandit at a half crouch. The Terror thought he had the advantage. The Kid's hands were bare of any weapons. With a snarl, the bandit chief leaped
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forward, knife swishing aloft. Never had Kid Wolf struck so hard a blow as he struck then! Added to the power of his own tremendous strength and leverage was The Terror's own speed as he lunged in. Fist met jaw with a sickening thud. The Terror was a big and heavy man. His weight was added to Kid Wolf's as
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both men came together. There was a snap as his head went back--went back at too great an angle. His neck was broken instantly. Without a moan, the bandit chief dropped limply to the sand, dead before he ever reached it! Kid Wolf took a deep breath. Then he bent over the fallen man and jerked the velvet mask from
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his features. He gasped in amazement. It was Quiroz! For a moment the Texan could not believe his eyes. Then the truth began to dawn on him. The Terror and the tyrannical governor of Santa Fe were one and the same! Quiroz had led a double life for years, and had covered his tracks well. So powerful had he become
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that he had received the appointment as governor. No wonder he had refused Kid Wolf aid! And no wonder he had sought his life! "Well, I guess his account is paid," said Kid Wolf grimly. "The Terror of the Staked Plains is no more." He looked about him. The remainder of the bandits had made a thorough retreat, leaving a
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large number of their companions on the plain behind them. Their defeat had been complete and decisive. "_Bueno_," said Kid Wolf. "Oh, the cows stampede on the Rio Grande! The Rio! The sand do blow, and the winds do wail, But I want to be wheah the cactus stands! The Rio! And the rattlesnake shakes his ornery tail!" The buckskin-clad
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singer raised his hat in happy farewell. The people of the wagon train answered his shout: "Shore yo' won't go on with us?" "We shore thank yuh for what yuh done, Kid!" Others took up the cry. They hated to lose this smiling young Texan's company. He had saved them from death--and worse. Not only that, but they had learned
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to like him and depend on him. The Texan, however, declined to stay longer. Nor would he listen to any thanks. "Adios," he called, "and good luck! Wheahevah the weakah side needs a champion, theah yo'll find Kid Wolf. Somehow I always find lots to do. Heah's hopin' yo' won't evah need mah services again." He caught sight of a
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golden-haired child beaming at him from one of the wagons. "Good-by, Jimmy Lee!" he called. He whirled in his saddle, touched Blizzard with the reins, and rode away at a long lope. ON THE CHISHOLM TRAIL From the sweeps of high country bordering close upon Santa Fe, it was no easy journey to the Chisholm Trail, even for a trail-eating
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horse of Blizzard's caliber. But The Kid had taken his time. His ultimate destination, unless fate altered his plans, was his own homeland--the sandy Rio Grande country. More than anything else, it was the thirst for adventure that led the buckskin-clad rider to the beaten cattle road which cut through wilderness and prairie from Austin to the western Kansas beef
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markets. And now, after following the trail for one uneventful day, Kid Wolf had left it--in search of water. A line of lofty cottonwoods on the eastern horizon marked the course of a meandering stream and The Kid had been glad of the chance to turn Blizzard's head toward it. Horse and rider, framed in the intense blue of the
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western sky, formed a picture of beauty and grace as they drummed through the unmarked wastes. The Kid, riding "light" in his saddle, his supple body rising and falling with the rhythm of his loping mount and yet firm in his seat, dominated that picture. His face was tanned to the color of the buckskin shirt he wore, and a
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vast experience, born of hardship and danger on desert and mountain, was in his eyes--eyes that were sometimes gray and sometimes steely blue. Just now they were as carefree as the skies above. A stranger might have wondered just what Kid Wolf's business was. He did not appear to be a cow-puncher, or a trapper or an army scout. A
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reata was coiled at his saddle, and two big Colts swung from a beaded Indian belt. No matter how curious the stranger might be, he would have thought twice before asking questions. The horse, in color like snow with the sun on it, was splitting the breeze--and yet the stride was easy and tireless. Blizzard, big and immensely strong, was
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as fast as the winds that swept the Panhandle. The stream, Kid Wolf discovered, was a fairly large creek bordered with a wild tangle of bushes, vines, and creeper-infested trees. It was no easy matter to force one's way through the choked growth, especially without making a great deal of noise. But The Kid never believed in advertising his presence
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unnecessarily. He had the uncanny Apache trick of slipping silently through underbrush, even while on horseback. The country of the Indian Nations, at that time, was a territory infested with peril. And even now, although he seemed to be alone on the prairie, he was cautious. Some distance before he reached it, he saw the creek, swollen and brown from
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rains above. So quiet was his approach that even a water moccasin, sunning itself on the river bank, did not see him. Suddenly the white horse pricked up its ears. Kid Wolf, too, had heard the sound, and he pulled up his mount to watch and listen, still as a statue. Splash! Splash! A rider was bringing his horse down
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to the creek at a walk. The sounds came from above and from across the stream. The water on that side had overflowed its bank and lay across the sand in blue puddles. In a few minutes Kid Wolf caught sight of a man on a strawberry roan, coming at a leisurely gait. As it was a white man, and
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apparently a cattleman, The Kid's vigilance relaxed a little. In another moment, though, his heart gave a jump. And then, even before his quick muscles could act in time to save the newcomer it had happened. From behind a bush clump, a figure had popped up, rifle leveled. A thin jet of flame spat out of the rusty gun barrel,
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followed by a cracking report and a little burst of steaming smoke. The man on the strawberry roan lurched wildly, groaned, and pitched headlong from his saddle, landing in the creek edge with a loud splash. One foot still stuck in a stirrup, and for a few yards the frightened pony dragged him through the muddied water. Then something gave
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way, and the murdered man plumped into the water and disappeared. The killer stood on his feet, upright. He laughed--a chilling, mirthless rattle--and began to reload his old-pattern rifle. He was a half-breed Indian. The dying sun glistened on his coppery, strongly muscled flesh, for he was stripped to the waist. He wore trousers and a hat, but his hair
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hung nearly to his shoulders in a coarse snarl, and his feet were shod with dirty moccasins. Kid Wolf's eyes crackled. He had seen deliberate murder committed, an unsuspecting man shot down from ambush. His voice rang out: "Drop that rifle and put up yo' hands!" The soft drawl of the South was in his accents, but there was nothing
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soft about his tone. The half-breed whirled about, then slowly loosened his hold on his gun. It thudded to the grass. On a line with his bare chest was one of Kid Wolf's big-framed .45s. The snaky eyes of the half-breed were filled with panic, but as The Kid did not shoot or seem to be about to do so,
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they began to glitter with mockery. Kid Wolf dismounted, keeping his gun leveled. "Why did yo' shoot that man?" he demanded. The half-breed was sullenly silent for a long moment. "What yuh do about it?" he sneered finally. Kid Wolf's smile was deadly. His answer took the murderer by surprise. The half-breed suddenly found his throat grasped in a grip
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