“You serve notice, do you?”
“You’re right, I do.”
“But not legal notice, Mr. Healy.”
At sight of his enemy standing there so easy and undisturbed, facing death so steadily and so alertly, Brill’s passion seethed up and overflowed. Fury filmed his eyes. He saw red. With a jerk, his revolver was out and smoking. A stop watch could scarce have registered the time before Keller’s weapon was answering.
But that tenth part of a second made all the difference. For the first heavy bullet from Healy’s .44 had crashed into the shoulder of his foe. The shock of it unsteadied the nester’s aim. When the smoke cleared it showed the Bear Creek man sinking to the ground, and the right arm of the other hanging limply at his side.
At the first sound of exploding revolvers, Phyllis had grown rigid, but the fusillade had not died away before she was flying along the hall to the porch.
Brill Healy’s voice, cold and cruel, came to her in even tones:
“I reckon I’ve done this job right, boys. If he hadn’t winged me, and if Jim hadn’t butted in, I’d a-done it more thorough, though.”
Yeager was bending over the man lying on the ground. He looked up now and spoke bitterly: “You’ve murdered an innocent man. Ain’t that thorough enough for you?”
Then, catching sight of Cuffs on the porch of the house, Yeager issued orders sharply: “Get on my horse and ride like hell for Doc Brown! Bob, you and Luke help me carry him into the house. What room, Phyl?”
“My room, Jim. Oh, Cuffs, hurry, please!” With that she was gone into the house to make ready the bed for the wounded man.
Healy picked up the revolver that had fallen from his hand, and slid it back into the holster.
“That’s right, boys. Take him in and let Phyl patch up the coyote if she can. I reckon this time, she’ll have her hands plumb full. Beats all how a decent girl can take up with a ruffian and a scoundrel.”
“That will be enough from you, seh,” Yeager told him sharply.
Purdy nodded. “Jim’s right, Brill. This man has got what was coming to him. It ain’t proper to jump him right now, when he’s down and out.”
“Awful tender-hearted you boys are. Come to that, I’ve got a pill in me, too, but of course that don’t matter,” Healy retorted.
“If he dies you’ll have another in you, seh,” Yeager told him quietly, meeting his eyes steadily for an instant. “Steady, Bob. You take his feet. That’s right.”
They carried the nester to the bedroom of Phyllis and laid him down gently on the bed. His eyes opened and he looked about him as if to ask where he was. He seemed to understand what had happened, for presently he smiled faintly at his friend and said:
“Beat me to it, Jim. I’m bust up proper this time.”
“He shot without giving warning.”
Keller moved his head weakly in dissent. “No, I knew just when he was going to draw, but I had to wait for him.”