The Marshals take note, but Butch shoots both of them before they can draw their weapons. With Butch's back turned while urinating, Tonto gestures to the lawmen that "Butch has a gun". They unchain him and lead him to a chamber pot in the corner of the car. Butch hides the gun, and asks the Marshals if he can get up to urinate. In the prisoner car, Tonto watches Butch peel a wood plank out of the train car's floor, revealing a gun hidden in a compartment beneath the plank. When one of the missionaries asks John if he's a God-fearing man, John responds that he is a law-fearing man.
THE LONE RANGER THEME FULL
A few cars back, John Reid, the young, college-educated prosecutor, sits in a train car full of protestant missionaries who are singing church hymns. Cavendish will be hanged at the next stop, and the federal Marshals are along to make certain the execution takes place. In one car, Tonto sits shackled, next to the notorious outlaw Butch Cavendish (William Fichtner). 1869 - Colby, Texas Colby, Texas is a rest stop on the transcontinental railroad, where construction is underway at a rapid rate, overseen by rail magnate Latham Cole (Tom Wilkinson).
To explain the circumstances that led to this episode, Tonto goes back a little bit further in time. Back in 1930's San Francisco, Will can't believe what he's hearing, because the Lone Ranger was a hero, not a bank robber. They take over the town bank, order all of its occupants to put their hands in the air, and they proceed to carry out a heist. He declares that it's time, and they ride into town on their horses. His masked partner, The Lone Ranger (Armie Hammer), gallops up along-side him. Tonto sits astride a horse on a high bluff looking over the western desert. The boy wonders how Tonto came to be a mannequin in a traveling circus. The boy, Will, is a fan of the Lone Ranger and recognizes the name. The very old and mentally unstable Indian introduces himself as Tonto (Johnny Depp). As he gets closer to the wax figure, the Indian's eyes move. He pays for entry, and inside, sees stuffed buffaloes, cowboy mannequins, and walks up to a wax sculpture of an old Indian. The boy dressed in a costume similar to that of the Lone Ranger, walks past the carnival barkers and the concession stands to the Wild West Tent.