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    Betrayal of the Mountain Man
   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
   Teaser chapter
   Copyright Page
   Chapter One
   Smoke Jensen saw the calf struggling through a snowdrift. The little creature had separated from its mother and the rest of the herd, and was bawling now in fear and confusion. He also saw the wolves, two of them, about twenty-five yards behind the calf. They were inching up slowly, quietly, hunkered down on their bellies to reduce their presence.
   Smoke snaked his Winchester from the saddle sheath, then jacked a round into the chamber. He hooked his leg across the saddle horn, rested his elbow on his knee, then raised the rifle to his shoulder and sighted on the lead wolf. He was about 150 yards away from the two wolves, and he was looking down on them so it would be a difficult shot. But he figured that even if he didn’t kill them, he might at least be able to drive them away from the calf.
   Smoke squeezed the trigger. The rifle kicked back against his shoulder as smoke bellowed from the end of the barrel. When the smoke rolled away, he saw the lead wolf lying on its side, a spreading pool of red staining the snow.
   The other wolf turned and ran quickly toward the trees, kicking up little puffs of snow as it did so. Smoke jacked another round into the chamber and aimed at the second wolf. His finger tightened on the trigger; then he eased the pressure, and lowered his rifle.
   “Don’t reckon I should shoot you for doing what your instinct tells you to do,” Smoke said quietly. “I just don’t want you doin’ it to my cows. Specially not this year.”
   Smoke rode down to the wolf he had killed, then dismounted. His bullet had hit the animal just behind his left foreleg, penetrated the heart, and killed it instantly. The wolf’s eyes were still open, his tongue still hanging out of his mouth. Strangely, Smoke felt a sense of sadness.
   “I’m sorry I had to do this, fella, but you didn’t leave me any choice,” Smoke said. “At least it was quick for you.”
   Smoke remounted, then rode on toward the calf. He looped his rope around the calf, then half-led and half-dragged it back to the herd. There, he removed the rope and watched as the calf hurried to join his mother.
   What had once been a large herd was now pitifully small, having come through what they were calling the “Great Winter Kill.” Hundreds of thousands of cattle had died out throughout the West this winter, and Smoke’s Sugarloaf Ranch was no exception. He had started the winter with fifteen thousand head; he was now down to less than two thousand.
   Smoke’s only hope to save what remained of his herd was to push them into a box canyon and hope that it would shield them from any further winter blasts. He, Cal, and Pearlie were doing that very thing when he came across the wolves.
   Looking up, Smoke saw Cal approaching him from the north end of the canyon opening, while at the same time Pearlie was approaching from the south. Even if he had not been able to see them, he would know they were coming toward him, because each of them was leaving a long, black trail in the snow.
   Cal reached him first.
   “What was the shootin’?”
   “Wolves,” Smoke answered.
   “Yeah,” Cal said. “Well, you can’t much blame ’em, I guess. They’re probably havin’ as hard a winter as we are. Same with all the other creatures, which is why they’re goin’ after cattle, rather than deer.”
   “Wolves?” Pearlie asked, arriving then.
   “Yes, they were after a calf,” Smoke said.
   “Too bad you didn’t see them a little earlier.”
   “What do you mean?”
   Pearlie twisted in his saddle and pointed back down the black smear that marked his path through the snow. “Three calves back there, or what’s left of ’em. Killed by wolves.”
   “Maybe we ought to put out some poisoned meat,” Cal suggested.
   Smoke shook his head. “I don’t care to do that. Besides, there are enough animals around, frozen to death, that they probably wouldn’t take the bait.”
   “You’d think they’d go after the dead ones, and leave the live ones alone,” Pearlie said.
   “The dead ones are frozen hard as a rock. They want something alive because it’s warmer, and easier to eat,” Smoke said.
   “Speaking of something warm and easy to eat, you think maybe Miss Sally fixed us up any bear claws?” Pearlie asked.
   “Does the sun come up in the east?” Cal asked.
   Smoke chuckled. “I expect she did,” he said. He stood in his stirrups and looked down toward the small herd. “We’ve got them in the canyon now; that’s about all we can do for them. Let’s head for the house.”
   The three started back toward the house, which was some five miles distant. A ride that, in good weather, would take no more than thirty minutes stretched into an hour because of the heavy fall of snow. The horses labored to cut through the drifts, which were sometimes chest high, and their heavy breathing formed clouds of vapor that drifted away into the fading light.
   The three riders said nothing, lost in their own thoughts as they rode back toward the main house.
   The oldest of the three, and the ranch owner, was Kirby “Smoke” Jensen. Smoke stood just over six feet tall, and had shoulders as wide as an ax handle and biceps as thick as most men’s thighs. He had never really known his mother, and when he was barely in his teens, he went with his father into the mountains to follow the fur trade. The father and son teamed up with a legendary mountain man called Preacher. For some reason, unknown even to Preacher, the mountain man took to the boy and began to teach him the ways of the mountains: how to live when others would die, how to be a man of your word, and how to fear no other living creature. On the first day they met, Preacher, whose real name was Art, gave Kirby a new name. That name, Smoke, would one day become a legend in the West, and after a while, even Kirby thought of himself as Smoke Jensen.
   Smoke was in his thirties, a happily married landowner whose ranch, Sugarloaf, had the potential to be one of the finest ranches in the state. For the last three or four years, Sugarloaf had lived up to its potential, so much so that Smoke had borrowed money to expand the ranch. He bought more land, built a new barn and bunkhouse, added onto the big house, and bought more cattle.
   Then the winter hit. Blizzard followed blizzard as the temperature plummeted to record lows. All across the West cattle died in record numbers. Tens of thousands of cattle froze to death, thousands more died of starvation because they couldn’t get to the food, while nearly as many died of thirst because the streams and creeks were frozen solid under several feet of snow.
   Ironically, the smaller ranchers were better able to ride it out than the bigger ranchers, who had more land, more cattle, and much more to lose. In one terrible wi
nter, Smoke Jensen had gone from being one of the wealthiest ranchers in Colorado to a man who was struggling to hang onto his ranch.
   “Smoke, if you want, I’ll take the lead . . . let my horse break trail for a while,” Pearlie called up to him. The three men were riding in single file, the two behind the leader taking advantage of the lead horse breaking a trail through the snow.
   “Sure, come on up,” Smoke invited, moving to one side of the trail to let Pearlie pass.
   A few years earlier, Pearlie had been a gunman, hired by a man who wanted to run Smoke off the land so he could ride roughshod over those who were left. But Pearlie didn’t take to killing and looting from innocent people, so he quit his job. He had stopped by to tell Smoke that he was leaving when Smoke offered to hire him.
   Since that time Pearlie had worked for Smoke and Sally. He stood just a shade less than six feet tall, was lean as a willow branch, had a face tanned the color of an old saddle, and a head of wild, unruly black hair. His eyes were mischievous and he was quick to smile and joke, but underneath his friendly demeanor was a man that was as hard as iron and as loyal to his friends as they come.
   “I’ll ride second,” Cal said, passing with Pearlie. “That way I can take the lead in a few minutes.”
   Not too long after Pearlie had joined the ranch, a starving and destitute Cal, who was barely in his teens at the time, made the mistake of trying to rob Sally. Instead of turning him over to the sheriff, Sally brought him home and made him one of the family, along with Pearlie. Now Calvin Woods was Pearlie’s young friend and protégé in the cowboy life.
   The three men rode on in silence for the next fifteen minutes, frequently changing the lead so that one horse wouldn’t be tired out. Finally they crested a hill, then started down a long slope. There, half a mile in front of them, the ranch compound spread out over three acres, consisting of the main house, bunkhouse, barn, corral, and toolshed.
   In the setting sun the snow took on a golden glow, and the scene could have been a Currier and Ives painting come to life.
   The main house, or “big” house as the cowboys called it, was a rather large, two-story Victorian edifice, white, with red shutters and a gray-painted porch that ran across the front and wrapped around to one side. The bunkhouse, which was also white with red shutters, sat halfway between the big house and the barn. The barn was red.
   A wisp of smoke curled up from the kitchen chimney, and as the three approached, they could smell the aroma of baking.
   “Yep! She made some,” Pearlie said happily. “I tell you the truth, if Miss Sally don’t make the best bear claws in Colorado, then I’ll eat my hat.”
   “Hell, that ain’t no big promise, Pearlie,” Cal said. “The kind of appetite you got, you eat anything that gets in your way. I wouldn’t be that surprised if you hadn’t already et your hat a time or two.”
   Smoke laughed.
   “That ain’t no ways funny,” Pearlie complained. “I ain’t never et none of my hats.”
   “But there ain’t no danger of you eatin’ your hat anyhow ’cause you’re right,” Cal said. “Miss Sally does make the best bear claws in Colorado.”
   Sally was a schoolteacher when Smoke met her, but she was far from the demure schoolmarm one most often thought of when picturing a schoolteacher. Sally could ride, rope, and shoot better than just about any man, and yet none of that detracted from her feminine charms. She was exceptionally pretty and her kitchen skills matched any woman and surpassed most.
   The bear claws that Pearlie was referring to were sweet, sugar-coated doughnuts. They were famous throughout the county, and some men had been known to ride ten miles out of their way to drop by the Sugarloaf just on the off chance she’d have a platter of them made up and cooling on the windowsill.
   The three men rode straight to the barn, where they unsaddled their horses, then turned them into warm stalls with hay and water. They took off their coats, hats, and boots on the enclosed back porch, dumping the snow and cleaning their boots before they went inside.
   The house was warm and cozy, and it smelled of coffee, roast beef, fresh-baked bread, bear claws, and wood burning in the fireplace. Sally greeted Smoke with a kiss and the other two with affectionate hugs.
   Around the dinner table the four talked, joked, and laughed over the meal. And yet, as Sally studied her husband’s face, she knew that, just beneath his laughing demeanor, he was a worried man. It wasn’t so much what he said, as what was left unsaid. Smoke had always been a man filled with optimism and plans for the future. It had been a long time since she had heard him mention any of his plans for improving and expanding the ranch.
   Sally had no idea what time it was when she rolled over in bed, still in that warm and comfortable state of half-sleep. She reached out to touch Smoke, but when she didn’t feel him in bed with her, the remaining vestige of sleep abandoned her and she woke up, wondering where he was.
   Outside, the snow glistened under the bright full moon so that, even though it was the middle of the night, the bedroom was well lit in varying degrees of silver and black. A nearby aspen tree waved in a gentle night breeze and as it did so, it projected its restless shadow onto the softly glowing wall. Smoke’s shadow was there as well, for he was standing at that very window, looking out into the yard.
   “Smoke?” Sally called out in a soft, concerned voice.
   “I’m sorry, darlin’,” Smoke replied. “Did I wake you?”
   Sally sat up, then brushed a fall of blond hair back from her face. “Are you all right?” she asked.
   “I’m fine.”
   “You’re worried, aren’t you?”
   Smoke paused for a long moment before he answered. Then, with a sigh, he nodded.
   “I won’t lie to you, Sally,” he said. “We may lose everything.”
   Sally got out of bed and padded across the room. Then, wrapping her arms around him, she leaned into him.
   “No,” she said. “As long as we have each other, we won’t lose everything.”
   Chapter Two
   The banker leaned back in his chair and put his hands together, making a steeple of his fingers. He listened intently as Smoke made his case.
   “I’m sure I’m not the only one coming to you with problems,” Smoke said. “I reckon this winter has affected just about everyone.”
   Joel Matthews nodded. “It has indeed,” he said. “Right now our bank has over one hundred fifty thousand dollars in bad debt. I’ll tell you the truth, Smoke. We are in danger of going under ourselves.”
   Smoke sighed. “Then it could be that I’m just wasting my time talking to you.”
   Matthews drummed his fingers on the desk for a moment, then looked down at Smoke’s account.
   “You have a two-thousand-dollar note due in thirty days,” he said.
   “Yes.”
   “What, exactly, are you asking?”
   “I’m asking for a sixty-day extension of that note.”
   The banker turned at his desk and looked at the calendar on the wall behind him. The picture was an idealized night scene in the mountains. Below a full moon a train was crossing a trestle, its headlight beam stretching forward and every car window glowing unrealistically.
   “Your note is due on April 30th,” he said. “A sixty-day extension would take you to June 30th. Do you really think you can come up with the two thousand dollars by then?”
   “I know that I cannot by April 30th, and I’ll be honest with you, Joel. I don’t know if I will have the money by June 30th either. But if any of my cattle survive the rest of this winter, I will at least have a chance.”
   “Smoke, can you make a two-hundred-dollar payment on your note? That would be ten percent.”
   Smoke shook his head. “Maybe a hundred,” he said.
   “A hundred?”
   “That’s about the best I can do right now.”
   Matthews sighed. “I’ll never be able to convince the board to go along with it, unless you can at least pay ten percent on the loan.”
 />   Smoke nodded. “I understand,” he said. He started to stand, but Matthews held out his hand.
   “Wait a minute,” he said.
   Smoke hesitated.
   “I know how you can come up with a hundred fifty dollars, if you are willing to do a job for me.”
   “A job for you?”
   “Well, for the bank, actually,” Matthews said. “It will take you about three days.”
   “Three days work for a hundred fifty dollars? I’ll do it,” Smoke said.
   “Don’t you even want to know what it is?”
   “Is it honest work?”
   “Oh, yes, it’s honest all right. It might also be dangerous.”
   “I’ll do it,” Smoke said.
   “Yes, I didn’t think you would be a person who would be deterred by the possibility of danger. But just so that you know what you are letting yourself in for, we have a rather substantial money shipment coming by stagecoach from Sulphur Springs. If you would ride as a special guard during the time of the shipment, I will pay you one hundred fifty dollars.”
   Smoke gasped. “One hundred fifty dollars just to ride shotgun? It’s not that I’m looking a gift horse in the mouth, Joel, but shotgun guards make about twenty dollars a month, don’t they?”
   “Yes.”
   “So why would you be willing to pay me so much?”
   “We are bringing in over twenty thousand dollars,” Matthews said. He sighed, then opened the drawer of his desk and pulled out a newspaper. “And the damn fool editor over at Sulphur Springs has seen fit to run a front page story about it.”
   Matthews turned the paper around so Smoke could see the headlines of the lead story.
   HUGE MONEY SHIPMENT!
   $20,000 In Greenbacks
   TO BE TRANSPORTED
   by Sulphur Springs Express Company
   to BIG ROCK.
   “Why in the world would he publish something like this?” Smoke asked.
   “Well, if you asked the editor, I’m sure he would tell us that he is merely exercising his freedom of the press,” Matthews said. “But I would call it idiocy. Anyway, the cat is out of the bag, and no doubt every outlaw in three states knows about the shipment now. Do you know Frank Simmons?”
   

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