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Winchester 1886
Winchester 1886 Read online
WINCHESTER
–1886–
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
P ROLOGUE
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
EPILOGUE
Copyright Page
P ROLOGUE
Fort Smith, Arkansas
Spring 1899
When he was older, though still a young man, serving as a deputy marshal for the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, James Mann would ignore irritating questions.
“Why do you carry that cannon of a rifle?”
“You got some prejudice against short guns?”
“Reckon you’ll run into any elephants down in the Winding Stair Mountains?”
He seldom carried a revolver on his hip, and when he did, Mann hardly ever pulled that Colt from its holster. Yet always—always—he had that Winchester 1886 rifle. It chambered the .50-100-450 round and .50 calibers favored by a few old buffalo hunters in single-shot rifles, but rarely found in lever-action repeaters.
Mann’s Winchester ’86 looked older than it actually was, the stock and forestock battered and badly scratched, the barrel losing some of its bluing. Yet it was always clean.
Always loaded.
And quite often cocked.
A drummer who had traveled all the way from North Haven, Connecticut, once offered Mann a Marlin ’89 . . . free, with a year’s supply of ammunition. Mann turned him down cold.
When Mann won a turkey shoot, Buffalo Bill Cody said he would pay $1,500 for that rifle and give Mann a brand-spanking new one in return. Mann thanked Colonel Cody for the offer, but said he liked his rifle just fine. He was used to it. It was like family.
Truth was, that rifle was family. Blood kin.
He did, however, answer one question. After testifying in one of Judge Rogers’s trials—Rogers having replaced Isaac Parker a few years back—Mann had retired to the Texas Corner Saloon on Garrison Avenue. Alone. The rifle lay on the table next to a pitcher of beer.
The owner of that watering hole, Katie Crockett, dropped into the seat across from Mann. “Rough day at the courthouse?”
“No more than usual.”
By that time, practically everybody from western Arkansas to the Chickasaw Nation had heard about the trial, how the defense attorney had accused Mann of abusing his power, using a .50-caliber weapon on a seventeen-year-old kid, forcing the doctor to saw off the boy’s right leg, which had been shattered by two shots from Mann’s Winchester. Never mind that that boy had killed five people in cold blood and had been trying to make Mann number six.
Katie drew a long finger down the Winchester’s barrel. “You and this gun . . .”
He poured her some of the beer.
She shook her head. “I don’t see how it’s all worth it.”
“What?”
“The abuse you get for carrying it.”
He lifted his stein in salute. “It’s worth it.”
“Why?” Katie asked.
He drank some beer, and she figured he would just shrug off her question the way he always did when anyone asked him what made that beat-up rifle so special.
But he put the stein on the table, wiped his mouth, and locked his eyes on Katie’s for a moment, before falling onto that well-used, often-criticized Winchester. “My uncle,” Deputy Marshal James Mann said softly, “went a long way to get this rifle. For me.”
CHAPTER ONE
Randall County, Texas
Late summer 1894
“Kris,” James said to his sister, shaking his head. “I’m too old to play that game.”
“You’re yeller!” his kid brother Jacob said with a challenging sneer.
Beside him, his twelve-year-old sister dangled the Montgomery Ward & Co. catalog, showing off imported China fruit plates like she was clerking at the mercantile in McAdam, which passed for a town in the Texas Panhandle.
Eight-year-old Jacob lost his sneer. “Please,” he begged.
James Mann stared at him then at Kris, before dropping his gaze to the McGuffey’s Sixth Eclectic Reader. He was making his way through the book for the fourth time, and, honestly, how many times did his ma and pa expect him to read a scene from George Coleman’s The Poor Gentleman? Besides, Ma was shopping in McAdam, and Pa was working on the Fort Worth-Denver City Railroad up around Amarillo. The Potter County seat wasn’t much more than a speck of dust on a map, but Amarillo boasted a bigger population than McAdam.
Since James had finished his chores and had been assigned the grim duty of keeping his younger siblings out of trouble, that child’s game seemed a whole lot more appealing than reading McGuffey’s.
He slammed the book shut, hearing Jacob’s squeal of delight as he slid the Reader across the desktop, and pushed himself to his feet. “No whining when you don’t get what you want!”
Following Kris and Jacob, he pushed his way through the curtain that separated what Ma and Pa called the parlor, and into what they called the dining room. Another curtain separated the winter kitchen, and beyond that lay his parents’ bedroom and finally the room he shared with his brother and sister. All were separated by rugs or blankets that Ma called curtains and Pa called walls.
The Mann home, a long rectangle built with three-inch siding and three-inch roof boards, stretched thirty-four feet one inch long and eight feet, nine inches wide, while the ceiling rose nine feet from the floor. The only heat came from the Windsor steel range in the kitchen. The only air came from the front door, which slid open, and the windows Pa had cut into the northeast corner of the parlor and the southwest corner of Ma and Pa’s bedroom. At one time, the home had hauled railroad supplies from Fort Worth. The wheelbase and carriage had been removed from the boxcar, although the freight’s handbrake wheel and grab irons remained on the outside . . . in case someone needed to climb up on the roof to set the brake and keep the Mann home from blowing away.
Jacob was young enough to still find living in a converted boxcar an adventure. At sixteen, James Mann had outgrown such silly thoughts, although he was about to take part in a game he hadn’t played with Kris and Jacob in years.
The door had been left open to allow a breeze, for the Texas Panhandle turned into a furnace in August, and the nearest shade trees could be found in the Palo Duro country, a hard day’s ride southwest.
Kris and Jacob already sat at the roughhewn table, the thick Montgome
ry Ward catalog in front of them. James took his seat across from them, giving his younger siblings the advantage. He would be looking at the catalog pages upside down, but, well, he didn’t plan on winning anything. It wasn’t like anything they allegedly won would actually show up on Christmas morning. It was simply a kid’s game.
They called the game “My Page.” Shortly after Ma picked up the winter catalog at the nearest mercantile wherever they were living, the Mann children would sit at the table, and see what they might ask Santa Claus to bring them. They’d open the book, slap a hand on a page, shout out, “My page!” and pick something they might want.
It had worked a lot better, or at least a little fairer, before Jacob had been born, when either Kris or James would actually get a page. By the time Jacob became old enough to play, James figured he had grown too old to play. Besides, his reflexes had always been quick—almost as fast as his namesake uncle’s—so he had left the child’s game to Kris and Jacob. And let them complain and argue and eventually get into a brother-sister fight because Kris had slammed her hand on the page with the Kipling books on purpose, knowing how much Jacob loved Kipling even if Ma was already reading to him.
“You only get five gifts,” Kris explained, “so you better watch what you go for.”
Like anyone really wanted to find a turkey feather duster or whitewash brush under the tree on Christmas Day.
James turned in his seat, looking through the open door at the flat expanse of nothingness that was the Texas Panhandle. Out there, you could see forever, to tomorrow, to the day after tomorrow, to Canada, it felt like. He wanted desperately to light out for himself, but Ma wouldn’t have any of that. She wanted her oldest son to go to college, maybe wind up teaching school. She certainly didn’t want him to wind up in that fading but still wild town called Tascosa, north of Amarillo, and work cattle for thirty a month and found. Nor did she want James to follow in his Uncle Borden’s boot steps, serving as an express agent, risking his life riding the rails with payrolls and letters and such. Borden, the oldest, worked for the Adams Express Company and usually found himself on Missouri-Kansas-Texas trains, but he had gotten James’s father, Millard, the job on the Fort Worth and Denver before Jacob were born.
James could remember little of Wichita Falls, the town near Fort Worth, other than it had been poorly named. It usually had little water to begin with, let alone enough to make a waterfall.
Three years later, the line had stretched out to Harold, just some thirty-four miles. In ’86, when Millard had been promoted to assistant foreman, the line had grown to Chillicothe. A year later, it had reached the Canadian River, and the Manns had made themselves a home out of a boxcar five miles from the town of McAdam. Eventually, the rail line had moved into New Mexico Territory and joined up with the crews laying track from Denver and Millard bossed a crew working on a new spur line.
James would not have minded working for the railroad one bit, even if he had to swing a sixteen-pound sledgehammer in the Texas heat. Yet what he really wanted was to follow his Uncle Jimmy’s line of work. Riding for Judge Isaac Parker’s deputy marshals in Arkansas and the Indian Nations, bringing bad men to justice, seeing some wild country. It sounded a lot more promising, a lot more adventurous, than rocking along in a locked express car as a train sped through the night. It certainly held more promise than bossing a bunch of thick-skulled Irishmen who sweated out the whiskey they had consumed the night before at some hell-on-wheels while lugging two hundred-pound crossties for the rail pullers and gandy dancers.
But there he was, practically a man, babysitting and about to play “My Page.”
“I go first,” Kris said.
“No,” Jacob whined. “I wanna.”
“Too bad.”
“But . . . Ja-aaames!”
Shaking his head, wishing he had stayed in the parlor with his Reader, James refrained from muttering an oath. “Let Jacob go first.”
Kris frowned. “How come?”
“He’s the youngest.”
“You’re just saying that because he’s a boy. Like you.”
“I’m a man,” James declared.
Jacob and Kris giggled, and Jacob pulled the book closer to him. Kris relented, and Jacob opened the catalog. He went deep, probably toward the tables and such, if James remembered correctly, let the pages flutter, and released his hold.
It fell open to two pages of baby carriages. Jacob was ready, hand about to slam down, but he stopped himself from making a critical mistake and risk winding up with a canopy top baby carriage with brushed carpet and matching steel wheels.
No one moved. James was about to slide the catalog toward his sister, when Kris’s hand slammed down on the page without the advertisement in the corner.
“My page!” she yelled.
“You want a baby carriage?” Jacob turned up his nose.
“For my doll.” She pulled the catalog closer, whispering, “Let’s see.” She studied the three rows of offerings, before pointing to one at the bottom corner.
Jacob shook his head, but James pulled the catalog toward him, turned it around, and studied it . . . like old times, when he was a boy. “Twelve dollars and fifty cents?” He smiled.
“It’s silk laced,” Kris said.
“For a doll?” Jacob sighed. “Girls!”
“Well . . .” James slid the catalog back to his sister.
She quickly turned it around, opened it, let some pages fall, and dropped the corner. Capes and cloaks. No one made a move. August came too hot for anyone to think about winter clothing, although they had seen just how harsh Panhandle winters could be.
It was James’s turn. Purposely, he let his pages open to the index.
“Aw, c’mon!” Jacob pulled the book to him. Collars and suspenders. No interest.
Kris’s turn. James saw what he was looking for and made a quick grasp, laughing when Jacob’s hand landed on page 131 as James moved his hand to his hair, and scratched his head.
“My page!” Jacob shouted. He lifted his hand, realizing where his hand had dropped. “Dang it!” He glared at his brother. “That’s not fair.”
Kris was laughing so hard, tears formed in her eyes. “What are you going to ask for, Jacob, the rose sprays or the straw hats?”
“But them is girls hats!”
“You’ll look good in that one.” She pointed to one with fancy edges and trimmings. Available in white, ecru, brown, navy blue, and cardinal.
“Fine.” Jacob said. “I’ll take the orange blossoms.”
“You getting married?” James asked.
Kris pulled the catalog, opened the pages, let one end fall. James decided he might as well play along, so he wound up asking for a dozen packages of Rochelle salts—which made Jacob feel better.
So the game went. Jacob wound up with a Waltham watch, and it did not matter to him that Kris said it was a ladies watch. He liked the stars on the hunter’s case, anyway. Kris got a roman charm shaped like a heart with a ruby, pearl, and sapphire. Jacob picked a leather-covered trunk—Sultan according to Montgomery Ward & Co.—He could use it as a fort or place to hide. Kris chose a ladies saddle, just beating Jacob to the page.
“You ain’t even trying!” Jacob complained to James.
“I’m trying,” James protested. “You two are just too fast for me.”
“All you got is some salts.”
“I like salt.”
The next round, James wound up with a Cheviot suit. He opted for the round cornered sack suit in gray plaid made of wool cassimere. He let Jacob beat him to one of the pages of saddles, and exploded in laughter, as did Jacob, when Kris tried to get a piece of wallpaper, thinking it was fancy lace, but the breeze came in strong and flipped the pages to where Kris wound up with a Spanish curb bit.
“You can use it with your saddle,” James told her.
“You just need a horse,” Jacob added.
It was James’s turn. He stood the book up on its spine and just pulled his hands away,
watching the catalog pages spread, flutter, and fall. It landed open. Jacob’s hand headed for one of the pages as James saw the muzzle-loading shotguns on one upper page. He spotted the Winchester repeaters on the facing page and couldn’t help himself. His hand shot out, barely landing on the page just ahead of Jacob’s hand, and he heard himself calling out, “My page!”
“Dang it!” Jacob pulled his hand back. “I wanted that rifle!”
“You’re too young to have a rifle,” Kris said.
James withdrew his hand, and stared at where his hand had fallen. He felt guilty, but only slightly. “I’ll let you shoot it,” he offered.
“Which one?” Kris asked, even though she had no use for guns.
James’s finger tapped on the bottom of the page, and Jacob pulled the catalog toward him, leaned forward, and read, “Winchester Repeating Rifles—Model 1886.”
Kris leaned over. “That’s twenty-one dollars,” she sang out. “And you scold me for wanting a twelve dollar baby carriage?”
“That’s the factory price,” James corrected. “The catalog doesn’t charge that much.” He pointed to the second row of numbers. “Fourteen dollars and eighteen cents.” He had been studying that catalog, poring over that page, since Ma had brought the book home from McAdam Mercantile a week ago.
Reaching for the catalog, wanting to see, to dream some more, he thought of what it must be like to hold a rifle like that in his hands. All Pa owned were a Jenks carbine in .54 caliber that his father had carried during the Civil War and a Colt hammerless double-barrel shotgun in twelve gauge. Pa had let him fire the shotgun, even let him go hunting for rabbits and quail, but never the rifle. Pa didn’t own a short gun, but Uncle Jimmy did, preferring the 1873 model Winchester.
“Promise I can shoot it?” Jacob demanded.
James choked off a laugh. He had as much chance of getting a large-caliber repeating rifle at Christmas as Kris had of getting a $12.50 baby carriage for her doll. Besides, she was getting too old to play dolls. And he was too old to play that silly game.
“They’s lots of models.” Jacob put his elbows on the table, chin atop his fingers, and studied the catalog page. Only one illustration but about a dozen typed descriptions. “Which one you want?”

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