- Home
- William W. Johnstone
Better Off Dead
Better Off Dead Read online
SHAWN O’BRIEN BETTER OFF DEAD
William W. Johnstone
with J. A. Johnstone
PINNACLE BOOKS
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Title Page
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
CHAPTER FORTY
CHAPTER FORTY-ONE
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO
CHAPTER FORTY-THREE
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE
CHAPTER FORTY-SIX
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE
CHAPTER FIFTY
CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE
CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO
CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE
CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR
CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE
CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX
CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE
CHAPTER SIXTY
CHAPTER SIXTY-ONE
Teaser chapter
Teaser chapter
Teaser chapter
Teaser chapter
Teaser chapter
Teaser chapter
Teaser chapter
Copyright Page
CHAPTER ONE
“Mister, you were warned to mind your own business and stay away from the foundry and you ignored me,” the big man in the bowler hat said. “The gent you’re looking for isn’t here and it seems like we’ll need to beat that fact into you.”
Shawn O’Brien pushed himself off the saloon bar and faced four toughs, each armed with a hickory pickax handle. All wore bowler hats with goggles parked above the brims. Everyone who had cause to enter the Abaddon Cannon Foundry wore goggles.
“Maybe you will, Kilcoyn,” Shawn said, clearing his gun. “But you’ll step over your own dead to get to me.”
He stood with his legs slightly apart, his gun hand close to the Colt on his hip. At that moment, relaxed, confident, significant, he looked like nobody’s idea of a bargain. Tall, blond, his piercing blue eyes direct and unafraid, Shawn’s frock coat and linen showed dust and wear from the trail, but their quality was unmistakable. The labels said Bond Street, London, and his riding boots, handmade in Philadelphia on a narrow last, were sewn sixty-four stitches to the inch with an awl so fine that an accidental piercing of the boot-maker’s hand neither hurt nor drew blood. He wore a gold ring on the little finger of his left hand that bore the O’Brien family crest with its three lions and the motto, Lamh Laidir an Uachtar, “The Strong Hand From Above.”
Valentine Kilcoyn was no fool. He was handy with a gun but first and foremost, he was a skull, boot, and fist fighter. The new breed of sophisticated gambler draw fighter was alien to him. He’d suspected that a hideout could be concealed under the man’s frock coat, perhaps a derringer stuck in his waistband, but O’Brien had pulled back his coat and revealed an ivory-handled Colt and an expensive gun rig adorned with silver dragons that no ham-handed rube could afford. The bitterest lesson of all that Kilcoyn had learned in a past few moments was that this day might be his last. He could die with his beard in the sawdust because the man called the Town Tamer would be almighty sudden.
Kilcoyn had sand and there was no backup in him. He was primed and may have thrown down the ax handle and tried the draw. The kid beside him, a towhead with reckless eyes, seemed eager, but the other two company men held back and exchanged wary glances, wanting no part of what a fast gun like O’Brien could bring to a shoot-out.
The bartender put a stop to it. He leaned over the bar with a Greener scattergun in his hand and said, “Val, you and your boys back on out of here. I don’t want dead men messing up my place today.”
“You taking O’Brien’s part, Ambrose?” Kilcoyn said, his eyes ugly.
“I’m taking nobody’s part.” Ambrose Hellen’s anger flared. “You damn fool, Kilcoyn. You’d be dead afore your hand even touched your gun butt and the others with you. You’ve lost today, so git and run your head under a water pump and cool off.”
“Man gives good advice, Kilcoyn,” Shawn said. “Besides, my lunch is getting cold. Either get the hell out of here or have at it and let’s get our work in.”
Kilcoyn tried to save face. “Next time we meet, O’Brien, you won’t have a bartender with a shotgun to protect you.”
Suddenly Shawn O’Brien was done talking. He felt weary, used up, and more than a little angry. “Kilcoyn, get the hell out of here right now or I’ll drop you where you stand.”
Kilcoyn saw the writing on the wall. He knew if he even twitched a muscle he was in for a moment of hell-firing gunplay that would have him shaking hands with eternity. “Let’s get out of here, boys. Our time will come soon enough.”
After the Abaddon men left, Shawn picked up his plate of Irish stew and walked to the other end of the bar, away from the door. He forked a piece of potato into his mouth and made a face. “Damn, it’s gone cold. Didn’t I say that would happen?”
“Here, let me get you another plate,” Ambrose Hellen said. “There’s plenty in the pot.”
When the bartender returned with a steaming plate, he put it on the bar in front of Shawn. “How’s your brother Jacob?”
Shawn was puzzled. “How do you know—”
“I was bartending up El Paso way a few months back and he came into the saloon now and again to play the piano. I heard your name and put two and two together. But Jake don’t wear fancy duds like you. I’d maybe give a dollar for everything he wore and ten for his horse.”
“Jake is not one for sartorial splendor and he sits his ten-dollar horse like a sack of grain, never did learn to ride like a gentleman. Last I heard he was spending some time at Dromore, our father’s ranch in the New Mexico Territory. He goes home now and then to say a rosary at Ma’s grave. Other times, depending on where the wind blows him, he’s spending time in a monastery or out in the wilderness bounty hunting. A time or two, he’s gone on the scout after holding up a stage or a train. When Jake needs a grubstake, he’s not one to care about getting on the wrong side of the law.”
“He’s a rum one is Jacob and no mistake,” Hellen said. “He doesn’t take any sass and he’s mighty sudden with the iron.”
Shawn smiled. “If it had been Jake here instead of me today, he’d have gunned two of those boys then beaten the other two to death with their own pickax handles. As you say, he doesn�
�t take much sass.”
“Mister, I don’t think you take much sass either. How’s the stew?”
“Real good. I think maybe I tasted better at the Langham Hotel in London, but it’s a close-run thing.”
The bartender served another customer then returned to Shawn. “Val Kilcoyn called you the Town Tamer.”
Shawn nodded. “It’s a name I didn’t seek, but folks seem to have cottoned on to it so there it stands and I live with it.”
“What exactly do you want to tame in Big Fork? This town is the Abaddon Cannon Foundry and not much else.”
The saloon door opened and Hamp Sedley, dressed in his dusty gambler’s finery, stepped inside. He saw Shawn at the bar, stepped to his side, and ordered a beer. “Hell, there ain’t a woman in the town by the name Doña Elena Maria Cantrell. With a handle like that, she’d stick out in a burg like Big Buck. Well, she doesn’t stick out because she ain’t here.”
Shawn said to the bartender, “Ever hear that name around these parts?”
Hellen shook his head. “No, I haven’t. The women we get in here are females of a certain vocation. In Mexico, only noblewomen are addressed as Doña.”
“Yeah, well like I said, I didn’t see one of them.” Sedley tried his beer. “Warm.”
“You want cold beer, head for Alaska.” Hellen turned away as a couple customers stepped to the bar.
“You missed all the fun, Hamp,” Shawn said. “Valentine Kilcoyn and his toughs tried to warn me off again. For a minute there, I thought it might come to a shooting scrape.”
“What happened?”
“We had a nice little talk and then the bartender took a hand and Kilcoyn and his boys left.”
“I say we blow this burg, Shawn. Are you sure you read Jake’s letter right? He’s not one to ask favors.”
“Yeah, I’ve read it about twenty times and each time I read it right. He said Doña Maria was in Big Buck and that she thinks her runaway little brother is working in the cannon foundry. Jake wants me to find him . . . as a favor, one brother to another.”
“How well does Jake know this gal?” Sedley asked.
“He slept with her. Is that well enough?”
“Oh.”
“Yeah, Hamp, ‘Oh.’”
Sedley shook his head. “Well, we’ve reached a dead end, seems to me. What the hell are you eating?”
“Irish stew.”
“It looks like puke.”
“Don’t let the bartender hear you say that. He sets store by his stew and he’s got a handy Greener scattergun behind the bar.” Shawn laid his fork on his plate. “We’ll give it another couple days. If we don’t find Manuel Cantrell by then we’ll head back to Denver and I’ll write a letter of apology to Jake.”
A big, soot-stained mechanic dressed in a heavy leather jerkin and pants, goggles pushed up on his head, walked into the saloon and looked around. His stare alighted on a small man wearing a claw hammer coat and top hat who stood alone at the end of the bar.
“Hey, Dorian Steggles. We got one for you,” the big man said.
Steggles looked up. “In or out?”
“In.”
“What happened?”
“He was shoveling coke for one of the blast furnaces and just fell over. Heart give out, I guess.”
“But he’s in you say?”
“In.”
The undertaker took his goggles from the brim of his top hat and let them fall around his neck. “I hate it so much when it’s in.”
The big man shrugged. “I’m only a shift foreman. I can’t control where and when the trolls drop.”
Steggles sighed. “No, I suppose not, Mr. Breens. I’ll get my assistants and be there shortly.”
“Wait, Breens,” Shawn called. “What’s the dead man’s name?”
Breens had a sharp answer ready to go, but when he took a good look at the tall, handsome man at the bar with a Colt on his hip he changed his mind. “Hell, mister, I don’t know their names. He wasn’t a white man, if that sets your mind at rest.”
“I’m looking for a young Mexican man named Manuel Cantrell,” Shawn said. “Have you heard that name? He’s supposed to be working at Abaddon.”
“Mister, there are three shifts at Abaddon, a hundred men to a shift, and I don’t know any of their names. Try the front office.”
“I did. They told me they’d never heard of him.”
“Then he ain’t there.” Breens turned and walked out of the saloon.
“I want to take a look at that body,” Shawn said.
“When?” Sedley asked, still beside him.
“Come nightfall when the undertaker’s place is closed.”
Sedley grimaced. “Well, that’s something a man can look forward to.”
“Why aren’t you wearing your gun?”
“Don’t see much point, Shawn. I can’t hit anything with it.”
“You can hit just fine at spitting distance. Make sure you wear it tonight.”
CHAPTER TWO
Distracted by the flight of a hawk, Shawn O’Brien was looking skyward as he stepped off the boardwalk outside the saloon. At the last moment, Hamp Sedley grabbed his arm and yanked him back out of the path of a speeding horseless carriage. As the steam-powered monster flashed past, the handsome, middle-aged man in the backseat turned and glared at Shawn for having the audacity to get in his way.
Beside him a hard-faced but pretty blond woman yelled, “Watch where you walk, rube!”
By the time Shawn had recovered his balance, the steam car, trailing a billowing dust trail, swung in the direction of the foundry.
Shawn used his hat to pound dust off his coat and pants. “Who the hell was that? And what the hell was that?”
Another voice answered that question, but first, Mayor John Deakins stepped beside Shawn and introduced himself. “And according to what I was told by Ambrose Hellen, I’d say your name is Mr. Shawn O’Brien.”
Shawn nodded.
“To answer your question, Mr. O’Brien, that gentleman is the owner of the Abaddon Cannon Foundry, maker of the finest instruments of mass destruction in this country or in any other, and he was driving a steam-powered horseless carriage, the vehicle of the future.”
“What’s his name? I reckon I’ll tell him to slow down that contraption when he’s driving through town,” Shawn said.
“Ah yes, very commendable of you, I’m sure, but the owner is a man of mystery,” Deakins said. “Very few people in this town know his name because he never, ever puts it out.”
The mayor was a large-bellied, pompous man of impressive height, made more striking by his tall top hat with goggles above the brim. Shawn thought he looked like a more prosperous version of Mr. Dickens’s Wilkins Micawber.
“Those like myself who do know the gentleman’s name and have been invited to take a glimpse inside the foundry, a rare privilege, are sworn to secrecy,” Deakins said. “I must confess that to me the foundry looks like a fire and brimstone haunt of the damned. Naked, sweating men toil in the glare of enormous furnaces and massive boilers bang and hiss like steam locomotives. But then doesn’t every factory in our modern industrial age present such a fearsome aspect, even though its fortunate workers prosper like never before?”
“One of those prosperous workers died in there today,” Sedley said.
“Alas, accidents happen, especially when one casts iron cannons that weigh many tons,” the mayor said.
Shawn said, “The man dropped dead, or so his foreman told the undertaker.”
“The work is hard and now and then a weakling will perish, but none of them are white men, so their deaths are hardly worth getting concerned over.” The mayor took a magnificent gold skeleton watch from his vest pocket and consulted the time. “Well . . . Mr. O’Brien . . . I must be on my way. Business matters press me closely. But a word to the wise before I leave. The wealth of Abaddon trickles down to the people of Big Buck. Before the foundry arrived, we were just another dusty little cow town lost in the
wilderness of southwest Texas. Now we have a railroad, the stores and the saloon are thriving, and we no longer depend on cattle but on steam engineers, mechanics, cannon borers, tradesmen of all kinds, and railroaders. This is why we don’t pry too deeply into what goes on behind the walls of the foundry and neither should you.”
Mayor Deakins smiled and pointed to the goggles on his top hat. “You will see many people in Big Buck wearing these. We wear them to show our solidarity with the foundry owner and his workers. Now good day to you both, gentlemen—and I do hope you heed my advice.”
Shawn said, “Mayor, wait. We’re looking—”
Without turning, Deakins waved a hand as he stomped away. “I said good day to you, sir.”
Shawn ended his pursuit of Deakins when he bumped into an old lady who stood at the door of a hardware store. The woman wore a black shawl over her head and her face was lost in shadow.
He touched his hat. “I’m so sorry. That was clumsy of me.”
Without lifting her veiled face, the woman shoved a scrap of paper into Shawn’s hand and walked away, showing a brisk enough pace for such an old-timer.
The old dear’s action involved secrecy of some sort and Shawn didn’t look at the paper until he and Sedley sought the privacy of an alley between a general store and a bakery. The note was short and to the point.
That was it. There was no signature.
“No signature,” Sedley said with his usual knack of stating the obvious. “Maybe the old woman has some information on Manuel Cantrell. Or somebody paid her a few dollars to bait a trap.”
Shawn agreed. “There’s only one way to find out.”
“You’ll go?”
“Sure I will, once I know where the hangman’s tree is located. Stroll with me, Hamp. I want to take another look at the foundry.”
CHAPTER THREE
The Abaddon Cannon Foundry was a massive, rectangular building with a steeply angled roof dominated by three tall chimney stacks that constantly belched black smoke. The steel frame structure was sheathed with sheets of corrugated iron that had once been painted red but then faded to a dirty brown color, blackened with streaks of soot. There were a dozen outbuildings. The two largest were the dormitory and the adjoining canteen. Railroad tracks lay on the west side of the building where a loading dock was located and the line headed all the way into Old Mexico. Abaddon cannons cast in iron and bronze were considered the best in the world and served in the artilleries of all the European powers as well as the Chinese Imperial Army and many South American republics.

Riding Shotgun
Bloodthirsty
Bullets Don't Argue
Frontier America
Hang Them Slowly
Live by the West, Die by the West
The Black Hills
Torture of the Mountain Man
Preacher's Rage
Stranglehold
Cutthroats
The Range Detectives
A Jensen Family Christmas
Have Brides, Will Travel
Dig Your Own Grave
Burning Daylight
Blood for Blood
Winter Kill
Mankiller, Colorado
Preacher's Massacre
The Doomsday Bunker
Treason in the Ashes
MacCallister, The Eagles Legacy: The Killing
Wolfsbane
Danger in the Ashes
Gut-Shot
Rimfire
Hatred in the Ashes
Day of Rage
Dreams of Eagles
Out of the Ashes
The Return Of Dog Team
Better Off Dead
Betrayal of the Mountain Man
Rattlesnake Wells, Wyoming
A Crying Shame
The Devil's Touch
Courage In The Ashes
The Jackals
Preacher's Blood Hunt
Luke Jensen Bounty Hunter Dead Shot
A Good Day to Die
Winchester 1886
Massacre of Eagles
A Colorado Christmas
Carnage of Eagles
The Family Jensen # 1
Sidewinders#2 Massacre At Whiskey Flats
Suicide Mission
Preacher and the Mountain Caesar
Sawbones
Preacher's Hell Storm
The Last Gunfighter: Hell Town
Hell's Gate
Monahan's Massacre
Code of the Mountain Man
The Trail West
Buckhorn
A Rocky Mountain Christmas
Darkly The Thunder
Pride of Eagles
Vengeance Is Mine
Trapped in the Ashes
Twelve Dead Men
Legion of Fire
Honor of the Mountain Man
Massacre Canyon
Smoke Jensen, the Beginning
Song of Eagles
Slaughter of Eagles
Dead Man Walking
The Frontiersman
Brutal Night of the Mountain Man
Battle in the Ashes
Chaos in the Ashes
MacCallister Kingdom Come
Cat's Eye
Butchery of the Mountain Man
Dead Before Sundown
Tyranny in the Ashes
Snake River Slaughter
A Time to Slaughter
The Last of the Dogteam
Massacre at Powder River
Sidewinders
Night Mask
Preacher's Slaughter
Invasion USA
Defiance of Eagles
The Jensen Brand
Frontier of Violence
Bleeding Texas
The Lawless
Blood Bond
MacCallister: The Eagles Legacy: The Killing
Showdown
The Legend of Perley Gates
Pursuit Of The Mountain Man
Scream of Eagles
Preacher's Showdown
Ordeal of the Mountain Man
The Last Gunfighter: The Drifter
Ride the Savage Land
Ghost Valley
Fire in the Ashes
Matt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man The Eyes of Texas
Deadly Trail
Rage of Eagles
Moonshine Massacre
Destiny in the Ashes
Violent Sunday
Alone in the Ashes ta-5
Preacher's Peace
Preacher's Pursuit (The First Mountain Man)
Preacher's Quest
The Darkest Winter
A Reason to Die
Bloodshed of Eagles
The Last Gunfighter: Ghost Valley
A Big Sky Christmas
Hang Him Twice
Blood Bond 3
Seven Days to Hell
MacCallister, the Eagles Legacy: Dry Gulch Ambush
The Last Gunfighter
Brotherhood of the Gun
Code of the Mountain Man tlmm-8
Prey
MacAllister
Thunder of Eagles
Rampage of the Mountain Man
Ambush in the Ashes
Texas Bloodshed s-6
Savage Texas: The Stampeders
Sixkiller, U.S. Marshal
Shootout of the Mountain Man
Damnation Valley
Renegades
The Family Jensen
The Last Rebel: Survivor
Guns of the Mountain Man
Blood in the Ashes ta-4
A Time for Vultures
Savage Guns
Terror of the Mountain Man
Phoenix Rising:
Savage Country
River of Blood
Bloody Sunday
Vengeance in the Ashes
Butch Cassidy the Lost Years
The First Mountain Man
Preacher
Heart of the Mountain Man
Destiny of Eagles
Evil Never Sleeps
The Devil's Legion
Forty Times a Killer
Slaughter
Day of Independence
Betrayal in the Ashes
Jack-in-the-Box
Will Tanner
This Violent Land
Behind the Iron
Blood in the Ashes
Warpath of the Mountain Man
Deadly Day in Tombstone
Blackfoot Messiah
Pitchfork Pass
Reprisal
The Great Train Massacre
A Town Called Fury
Rescue
A High Sierra Christmas
Quest of the Mountain Man
Blood Bond 5
The Drifter
Survivor (The Ashes Book 36)
Terror in the Ashes
Blood of the Mountain Man
Blood Bond 7
Cheyenne Challenge
Kill Crazy
Ten Guns from Texas
Preacher's Fortune
Preacher's Kill
Right between the Eyes
Destiny Of The Mountain Man
Rockabilly Hell
Forty Guns West
Hour of Death
The Devil's Cat
Triumph of the Mountain Man
Fury in the Ashes
Stand Your Ground
The Devil's Heart
Brotherhood of Evil
Smoke from the Ashes
Firebase Freedom
The Edge of Hell
Bats
Remington 1894
Devil's Kiss d-1
Watchers in the Woods
Devil's Heart
A Dangerous Man
No Man's Land
War of the Mountain Man
Hunted
Survival in the Ashes
The Forbidden
Rage of the Mountain Man
Anarchy in the Ashes
Those Jensen Boys!
Matt Jensen: The Last Mountain Man Purgatory
Bad Men Die
Blood Valley
Carnival
The Last Mountain Man
Talons of Eagles
Bounty Hunter lj-1
Rockabilly Limbo
The Blood of Patriots
A Texas Hill Country Christmas
Torture Town
The Bleeding Edge
Gunsmoke and Gold
Revenge of the Dog Team
Flintlock
Devil's Kiss
Rebel Yell
Eight Hours to Die
Hell's Half Acre
Revenge of the Mountain Man
Battle of the Mountain Man
Trek of the Mountain Man
Cry of Eagles
Blood on the Divide
Triumph in the Ashes
The Butcher of Baxter Pass
Sweet Dreams
Preacher's Assault
Vengeance of the Mountain Man
MacCallister: The Eagles Legacy
Rockinghorse
From The Ashes: America Reborn
Hate Thy Neighbor
A Frontier Christmas
Justice of the Mountain Man
Law of the Mountain Man
Matt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man
Burning
Wyoming Slaughter
Return of the Mountain Man
Ambush of the Mountain Man
Anarchy in the Ashes ta-3
Absaroka Ambush
Texas Bloodshed
The Chuckwagon Trail
The Violent Land
Assault of the Mountain Man
Ride for Vengeance
Preacher's Justice
Manhunt
Cat's Cradle
Power of the Mountain Man
Flames from the Ashes
A Stranger in Town
Powder Burn
Trail of the Mountain Man
Toy Cemetery
Sandman
Escape from the Ashes
Winchester 1887
Shawn O'Brien Manslaughter
Home Invasion
Hell Town
D-Day in the Ashes
The Devil's Laughter
An Arizona Christmas
Paid in Blood
Crisis in the Ashes
Imposter
Dakota Ambush
The Edge of Violence
Arizona Ambush
Texas John Slaughter
Valor in the Ashes
Tyranny
Slaughter in the Ashes
Warriors from the Ashes
Venom of the Mountain Man
Alone in the Ashes
Matt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man Savage Territory
Death in the Ashes
Savagery of The Mountain Man
A Lone Star Christmas
Black Friday
Montana Gundown
Journey into Violence
Colter's Journey
Eyes of Eagles
Blood Bond 9
Avenger
Black Ops #1
Shot in the Back
The Last Gunfighter: Killing Ground
Preacher's Fire
Day of Reckoning
Phoenix Rising pr-1
Blood of Eagles
Trigger Warning
Absaroka Ambush (first Mt Man)/Courage Of The Mt Man
Strike of the Mountain Man