Sentenza drew the gold cigar case from his pocket, opened the lid and set it on the table where Tuco could stare at the engraved name.
“Then this cigar case is part of the fake, too. It seems to me you went to a great deal of trouble and expense to build up the identity of a man who never existed.” His hands slapped down on the table and be bent forward, the pale eyes cold and deadly. “Carson was alive when you found him, wasn’t he? Alive and able to talk. What did he say? What did he tell you about two hundred thousand gold dollars? Where did he tell you he hid it?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Sentenza leaned back again, his pent breath hissing out through clenched teeth.
“Now, Wallace.”
The big corporal whirled, snatched open the door and poked his head out. “All right, you Rebs. Start the music—and make damn sure it’s good and loud.”
The band began to play raggedly and off-key but with tremendous volume.
CHAPTER 13
TUCO was no weakling. He made a valiant, if hopeless, effort to defend himself. He struck first, driving a left and a right with all his force into Wallace’s heavy middle. Tuco’s fists rebounded from a mass of iron-hard muscle.
The big man bellowed and sledged with a fist that almost tore Tuco’s head off. He flew backward, skidded across the table on his shoulders, taking the stew bowl with him. He crashed to the floor. Wallace was on him like a tiger, hitting, mauling, picking him up and slamming him to the floor. Blood began to pour from the bandit’s nostrils and a crimson trail ran down from one corner of his mouth.
Sentenza blew a cloud of smoke from the yellow meerschaum.
“Easy, Wallace. Take a breather.” He knocked the dottle from the pipe and stowed it away. “How’s the digestion now, Tuco? Does that music get on your nerves? We can stop it, you know, if you’d prefer to have it quiet while you tell me what I’m waiting to hear.”
Tuco stirred feebly and mumbled, “Nothing—to tell.”
Sentenra sighed.
“You’re a stubborn man, Tuco. But then, so is Wallace.”
The corporal opened the door, put out his head, yelled, “Play louder, you Reb bastards.”
He came back across the room, grinned and bent over the limp and battered figure. His huge hands reached for the bandit’s throat.
Suddenly the bundle of bloody rags on the floor exploded into life. Tuco’s bent legs straightened, lashing out and up to drive both heels full into Wallace’s meaty face. Wallace rocked back, blood spurting from his smashed nose and a long cut over one eye.
Tuco tried to roll over and scramble to his feet. He made it as far as his hands and knees before the agony of injured nbs arrested him. Wallace heaved to his knees and flung himself forward. His massive body hit Tuco, rolled him over and slammed down on him, driving the breath from Tuco’s lungs in a bubbling scream of pain.
Wallace straddled the squirming figure, trapping Tuco’s arms with his knees. His huge hand cupped the battered face, holding it in a vice while his thumbs clamped down on Tuco’s eyes.
“You’ll need two eye-patches when I’m through with you—”
Wallace pushed down with both thumbs.
Tuco screamed again.
Then he moaned, “I’ll talk—I’ll talk—”
“That’s enough, Wallace,” Sentenza said sharply. Slowly and reluctantly the big man took his thumbs from Tuco’s eyes and rose to his feet. He mopped his bloody face on his sleeve, swearing thickly under his breath.
Sentenza moved his chair around to face the figure on the floor, bending forward, resting his elbows on his knees.
“Now let’s hear everything Bill Carson told you about that money.”
“It’s—hidden—in a—grave.”
“Where?”
“Sad Hill—the Sad Hill—cemetery.”
“In which grave? What’s the name or number on it?”
“I don’t know.”
“Wallace,” Sentenza said.
The big man started forward, Tuco screamed again wordlessly.
Then: “No more.” Fear gave him the strength to sit up. He flung out a pleading hand. “Listen to me. I swear to heaven that I don’t know which grave. Whitey—Whitey knows the—the name on it. Whitey—the big white-haired man who was captured with me.”
Sentenza’s sharp gesture stopped Wallace in his tracks.
“You’d better explain that, Tuco, and tell it so it makes good sense. I don’t buy fairy tales.”
“Yes. Carson was dying. He told about the money and the cemetery but when he tried to name the grave he couldn’t get the words out. All he could do was croak for water. I ran to get the canteen from my saddle. When I got back Whitey was hanging over him and he was dead. But with his last breath he got out the name on the grave. That’s why we had to—stick together. Whitey knew the grave but not which cemetery. I knew the cemetery—but not the grave.”
Sentenza straightend, the sorrel eyes glittering. “I’ll be everlastingly damned.”
A guard found the bounty-hunter sitting by the barracks. He jerked a thumb by way of command. “The sergeant wants to see you right away. Come along.”