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WILLIAM W. JOHNSTONE
with J. A. Johnstone
The Mountain Man
Preacher: The First Mountain Man
Matt Jensen, the Last Mountain Man
Luke Jensen, Bounty Hunter
Those Jensen Boys!
The Family Jensen
MacCallister
Flintlock
The Brothers O’Brien
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Sixkiller, U.S. Marshal
Hell’s Half Acre
Texas John Slaughter
Will Tanner, U.S. Deputy Marshal
Eagles
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AVAILABLE FROM PINNACLE BOOKS
REMINGTON 1894
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
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
CHAPTER 36
Teaser chapter
PINNACLE BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2017 J. A. Johnstone
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE
Following the death of William W. Johnstone, the Johnstone family is working with a carefully selected writer to organize and complete Mr. Johnstone’s outlines and many unfinished manuscripts to create additional novels in all of his series like The Last Gunfighter, Mountain Man, and Eagles, among others. This novel was inspired by Mr. Johnstone’s superb storytelling.
If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
PINNACLE BOOKS, the Pinnacle logo, and the WWJ steer head logo, are Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
ISBN: 978-0-7860-4040-7
First Pinnacle mass market printing: November 2017
First electronic edition: November 2017
ISBN-13: 978-0-7860-4075-9
ISBN-10: 0-7860-4075-0
CHAPTER 1
“Hola . . . hombre?”
Jerking awake, John McMasters opened his eyes and inwardly cursed himself for falling asleep. He wet his cracked lips, and glanced at his right thigh. Blood-soaked . . . even though he’d tied his bandanna over the wound, secured the frayed piece of cotton to the barrel of his Colt .45-caliber Peacemaker and twisted the long barrel to tighten his makeshift tourniquet. How long had he been asleep? He wasn’t certain. Sweat stung his eyes and he blinked before he turned the revolver with his left hand, loosening the bandanna, letting blood flow a little more freely.
He remembered that from what the sawbones had told him more than thirty years earlier.
* * *
“Blood has to flow, else it destroys the tissue, leads to moist gangrene.” The doctor took a long pull from a bottle, shook his head, and laughed. “Problem is, you slow the blood too much, and that can lead to dry gangrene. Your sergeant, well, he don’t have to worry about moist or dry. Hold ’em down, boy, as I saw off his leg.”
* * *
The Mexican’s voice made the image of that Union doctor vanish. “Hombre? Are you alive?”
McMasters almost laughed. Had the Mexican kept quiet, he likely could have climbed right up the ridge, planted a revolver barrel against McMasters’s temple, and blown his head off.
“Yeah.” His own voice was barely audible. He coughed, wiped away more sweat, tried to swallow, and attempted to speak again. “Still here.”
“Bueno,” the Mexican said. “Buenos tardes. We . . . ah. . . Negociar. Parley. Me and you. I speak for Butcher.”
The name made McMasters stiffen. He fought down the bile. Moses Butcher. Shaking his head to clear his thoughts, McMasters looked down at his leg again and next tried to find the sun, but had no luck. The air turned cooler in those tree-studded hills near Bisbee, not far from the Mexican border. He looked at the blood pouring out of the hole in his woolen trousers, grimaced, and twisted the barrel of the Colt until the blood stopped flowing and his leg resumed an intense throbbing.
Straightening, he gathered his shotgun and found the bandit—more of a blur than an actual target. McMasters had lost his eyeglasses scrambling up the hill.
“Hombre?” the Mexican called once more.
What was the bandit’s name? Again, John McMasters shook his head. He studied the rugged terrain, the only way out of the canyon that McMasters now guarded. The sweat hampered his view . . . which did not help his lousy eyesight to begin with.
“You are alone, hombre,” the Mexican said, “and have fought a good fight. But now . . . we think it is best that you quit. Señor, you are foolish to have come here alone. You should have brought a posse with you.”
“Yeah,” McMasters said with a bitter laugh, though too softly for the bandit to hear him. “I had a posse. A posse straight out of hell.” He had hired them to help him track down Moses Butcher and his killers, then, at the last moment, had turned them loose. Sent them away. Well, it wasn’t like he could have stopped them anyway. Besides, he wanted to kill Moses Butcher himself. Not with the Colt, though. The .45 had a more important job—keeping McMasters from bleeding to death. And the .45 was empty.
“Hombre?”
McMasters found the strength from somewhere and managed to push himself up against the boulder he leaned against. He had to catch his breath. Blinking away more sweat, he turned his head. His left hand held the handle of the empty revolver. His right hand moved the other weapon, bracing it against the twisted branch of a dead juniper. The shotgun weighed just less than eight pounds. It felt like eight hundred.
“Yeah.” He remembered the name of the bandit, or at least, the name on the wanted dodgers. “What do you want, Greaser?” Greaser. Greaser Gomez. John McMasters had never cared much for that derogatory name many Arizona whites called Mexicans. Greasers. Bean-eaters. Hell, the Mexicans had been in this country long before the white men. So had the Apaches, but most of those were long gone. Greasers. The term reviled a Wisconsin-born Yankee like him. But Greaser Gomez sickened McMasters even more. Especially now t
hat he saw the outlaw had tied a scarf around the barrel of his Winchester repeater. He could not see the killer so distinctly, but the scarf . . . that came to him clearer than his memories or his dreams. Gomez kept waving that barrel back and forth, the whiteness of the silk showing brilliantly in the sun shining from a clearing. It illuminated the killer. Mostly, it turned the silk scarf into a beacon.
John McMasters could not take his eyes off the waving cloth.
“Listen, hombre, you are tough to kill.”
“I’m alive,” McMasters whispered, more to himself.
“That is what Butcher says,” the bandit went on. “You are tough, hombre. And I agree.” The carbine stopped waving, and Gomez’s right hand moved away from the holstered revolver on his hip, reached over the big sugarloaf sombrero, and began pointing. “This is what we call”—he grinned—“a Mexican standoff.” He laughed at his joke . . . or what he thought was a joke. “You cannot go anywhere. We cannot go anywhere.” The hand returned to its perch on the pearl handle of the revolver. “There is no point.”
“Isn’t there?” McMasters called out. He strained, trying to guess how far away Gomez stood, while silently cursing his vision. Forty yards? Fifty? Maybe as far away as sixty. He looked at the shotgun, the barrels still perched on the dead branch, the stock braced against Gomez’s right shoulder. Fifty, McMasters finally guessed. A long way for a shotgun, and pushing the accuracy of a revolver, although everyone said Greaser Gomez rarely missed. The outlaw also held that Winchester repeater in his left hand.
“We don’t even know who you are . . . or why you chase us.”
“Don’t you?” McMasters wet his lips and looked beyond Gomez.
The Mexican stepped closer.
Was that a trick? McMasters listened with intent for anything out of the ordinary—the clattering of a stone, the snapping of a branch. Nothing. No animals, not even birds, not even flies made a noise, and the wind no longer blew. The silk scarf hung limp along the barrel of Gomez’s carbine.
“No, hombre. You tell us. You want money? Dinero? We might be able to work out a deal. Butcher, he has some gold, some greenbacks.”
“No deal.”
The Mexican shook his head. “But why? For what reason do you chase us? Digame. You have trailed us a long time. But even those men who were with you earlier, back in the Superstitions and at that boom town, they realized that there was no point. They left you, hombre.” Beneath that ugly beard, Gomez grinned again, a vile, evil, despicable smile that did not require the eyesight of a twenty-year-old to detect. “They left you . . . alone.”
“Like you said, you have nowhere to go . . . as long as I’m here.”
“You won’t be here long, hombre.” The humor had left Gomez’s voice, and his grips tightened on both the revolver and the Winchester. “We are many. You are one.”
“You aren’t as many as you were earlier.”
Again, Gomez shook his head. “This parley . . . it works on my throat. I have a flask in my back pocket.” The right hand left the revolver, and a finger pointed behind him. “Is it all right with you, hombre, if I wet my windpipe?”
Trying to get at me, McMasters thought. Drink some tequila, or mescal, or whiskey, or even water. Water would be better. Remind me of how they have water, and my canteen is on the saddle of a dead horse out there . . . in the open . . . unreachable without catching lead.
“Salud,” he said.
Laughing, Gomez found the flask, twisted off the cap, and brought the engraved pewter container to his lips. His Adam’s apple bobbed, and the laughter returned to the killer’s dark eyes.
McMasters glanced at his thigh, loosened the barrel of the Colt, let the blood flow a little more, and then tightened the bandanna again when he heard Gomez sighing with pleasure.
The flask returned to the rear pocket of the killer’s denim britches. The right hand found its rest on the butt of the holstered revolver, and he stepped still closer. Closer to being able to kill John McMasters.
Yet also closer to McMasters and his shotgun.
“It is many hours before sunset, amigo,” the outlaw said.
So we’re friends now, McMasters thought.
“I would like to take my siesta, but I would rather take it with a puta”—he grinned once more—“in Bisbee.”
“Bisbee?” McMasters said with skepticism.
The Mexican laughed. “Well, no, not Bisbee. There is law in Bisbee. You norteamericanos frown upon men of mi honestidad. But south of Bisbee. In the country where my father and mother were born. In the country where I was born. My homeland.”
McMasters did not reply. He kept listening, but did not want to take his eyes off Greaser Gomez. Do that, make that one mistake, and the killer would try to kill him.
The shotgun, despite braced against the tree and partially by the boulder, felt even heavier. McMasters’s leg pounded, and he wished he had not let Gomez drink from that flask, for his throat felt raw, drier than it had. His stomach began to rebel, a bullet was lodged in his thigh, and he had lost a lot of blood. He had no water. No food. Nothing but an empty .45 revolver and a double-barrel shotgun. And resolve.
And . . .
The Winchester began swaying again, making the silk scarf wave.
And . . . memories. McMaster’s heart ached. He bit his bottom lip to keep it from quavering.
“There is something you should know, hombre,” Greaser Gomez said.
“Yeah.” Speaking that one syllable hurt.
“I told you that it was time for my siesta. That is an important thing in my country, with my people. But”—the Winchester stopped waving, and his right hand lifted to point in McMaster’s direction—“I . . . Moses Butcher . . . the others . . . well, we can take a little siesta. We can sleep all day. All night. But you, amigo, you must stay awake.”
I was sleeping just before you started talking, you damned idiot. McMasters knew Gomez spoke the truth and did not need to explain his veiled threat.
John McMasters was alone, wounded, weak . . . and growing weaker with every passing second.
He counted what he knew of Butcher’s men. He had more than just Greaser Gomez. Five more. Total of seven, including Butcher and Gomez.
He shook his head. No. No, only six. The seventh lay spread-eagled near his bloating horse.
And maybe not even six. McMasters had emptied his Colt as he ran for shelter in the rocks and trees. He had heard a shot before starting the last gunfight, and knew one of Butcher’s men had been wounded earlier. So maybe that man was out of commission, even dead, and maybe McMasters had killed some others.
Maybe . . . If . . . He sighed. Even if he had killed or wounded one or two others, there would still be too many. At some point, he would fall asleep again. His leg throbbed even worse than earlier, and he loosened the tourniquet for only a moment.
Another thought numbed him. Or I’ll just bleed to death.
“So”—Greaser Gomez waved the scarf briefly—“hombre, here is our . . . how do you call it? Moses, he told me. A truce. Sí. Tregua. Truce. Sí. We will ride away. I tell Moses. I say, ‘Vámonos, que me muero de hambre. ’ ” Gomez laughed at his joke. “Moses, he tells me to come up and parley with you. So this is how it will be.” The smile seemed to disappear in Gomez’s thick, matted, black beard. “We ride out down this trail. One at a time. If you break our tregua . . . our . . . um . . . truce . . . then we kill you. And you will not enjoy your death for it will be a long time before it comes to you, amigo. Savvy?”
A breeze kicked up, and the scarf began waving again without any help from Greaser Gomez. McMasters watched it, remembering, and did not look at the killer. Clearly, he studied that flag of truce.
“When we are gone—all gone and all alive—we leave you in peace. That is our proposal. Do you find the terms acceptable?”
Just as quickly as it had started, the wind died, and the white fabric fell again, wrapping around the Winchester’s barrel.
McMasters’s cold blue e
yes locked on Greaser Gomez. “No,” he answered flatly.
With a sigh, Gomez shook his head. “I am sorry, hombre, for I am truly hungry and wanted to leave here, and leave you alive. A man like you, so tough, so full of valor, I will not enjoy killing you. But . . . now one of us, perhaps it will be me, will have to kill you.”
“It won’t be you,” McMasters said.
Gomez’s face went taut. “What—?”
McMasters cut him off. “Butcher was smart, not coming up here by himself. He sent you. You weren’t smart, Gomez.”
Beneath that black beard, the outlaw’s darkened face seemed to pale. He stepped back, waving the carbine frantically, pointing to it with his right hand. “Señor . . . hombre . . . amigo . . . do you not recognize this? What this means? Por Díos, it is ”
“It was,” McMasters corrected, not letting the killer answer. “It was a Christmas gift. Last December. I gave it to my oldest daughter, Rosalee.” He tightened the shotgun’s stock against his shoulder. “Before you, Butcher, and the rest of you black-hearted sons of bitches cut her down . . . and the rest of my family.”
The Winchester dropped. So did Gomez’s right hand, and he sang out some curse, or perhaps a prayer, in Spanish. As the carbine clanged against the rocks, soiling that white piece of silk, the revolver jerked out of the Mexican’s holster. McMasters did not have time to think why Gomez would go for his short gun when a carbine seemed the wiser choice.
McMasters turned his focus on aiming his shotgun. There were no hammers to cock on that model. It would be a chancy shot, especially for a fifty-year-old man who needed spectacles to see far. Greaser Gomez had been more blur than features. It was why John McMasters carried the Remington Model 1894 twelve-gauge shotgun with him.
It was why he had loaded both barrels with buckshot.
Remembering Rosalee, remembering his wife, his sons, his youngest daughter . . . remembering the life he had once enjoyed . . . and seeing clearly—or so it seemed—Greaser Gomez thumbing back the hammer of his pistol, John McMasters squeezed both triggers.

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