Winchester 1886 Read online

Page 22


  The barber from Sturgis had shown up, too, trading in his razor and strop for a Ballard No. 5 Pacific single-shot rifle and several boxes of .40-63 cartridges. The barber, Chase knew, had been one of those snake-in-the-grass sharpshooters under Hiram Berdan’s command during the Rebellion—back when his eyes and muscles had been thirty years younger. Even a couple of enlisted men and two officers from Fort Meade were in the competition.

  He saw an 1866 Springfield that had been modified into a .50-70 sporting rifle. Chase didn’t remember the shooter’s name, but he knew that gun. He had beaten it in the Fourth of July contest three years back.

  Turning his head right and left, he saw a Chaffee-Reese bolt action . . . a Howard .44 single-shot carbine . . . a .43-caliber Keene, the first bolt-action rifle Remington had produced . . . two Colt Lightnings, both probably in .32 caliber . . . even a few rifles Chase couldn’t identify.

  He shook his head, amazed at just how many people came out thinking that they could outshoot him. Well, it wasn’t every day that somebody put up a purse of $1,500, winner take all.

  No second place this go-round.

  He rode past the field they would be shooting across, starting at fifty yards. Colonel Tom C. Curtis had sure done his best, lining the shooting grounds with barbed wire that had been decorated with bunting. Buggies and wagons were parked all along the lakeshore, and corrals had been thrown up, with hay for the horses and mules to eat scattered across the ramshackle affairs.

  Chase smelled stew and bread. One tent appeared to be more popular than the rest, and he guessed Colonel Tom C. Curtis had hired a few beer-jerkers from the Sturgis saloons. Folks must have come from Deadwood . . . from Rapid City . . . maybe as far away as Pierre or even Montana or Wyoming.

  As he reined in his horse, Sergeant Jay Chase saw the woman.

  It never ceased to amaze her just how many men couldn’t shoot worth a hoot. Colonel Tom C. Curtis’s harebrained shooting championship started with paper targets at fifty yards, which was nothing more than a pot shot for Shirley Sweet.

  The day proved perfect for shooting. No wind. Not even cold, and the paper targets had been painted red to make them easier to spot. But plenty of men swore bitterly, blaming their rifles and not their own incompetence, when their shots missed the bull’s eyes, missed the circles, missed the entire bright red paper square.

  Shirley, of course, did not miss.

  She had brought along her No. 3 Remington Rolling Block Sporting Model.

  Colonel Curtis pleaded with her not to shoot so straight in the early rounds. Build up her odds. Make the bets higher. Nobody would bet on a woman to win, not in South Dakota. Not anywhere in the West. Probably not anywhere in the world.

  “I’m here to win,” Shirley said. “And nothing’s guaranteed.”

  “Just make it interesting, sweetie,” Curtis begged.

  She rammed a cleaning cloth down the Remington’s 30-inch barrel. “Do you have $1,500 to pay the winner?”

  “I will. Once all the bets have been collected, sweetie.” That was the colonel’s scam. The bets would pay for the bartenders he had hired and the whiskey and kegs of beer he had bought.

  Knowing Curtis the way she did, he also would be collecting a percentage of the take from the soiled doves in their cribs and from the church collection plate.

  Everyone bowed for the parson’s invocation and prayer and the passing of the plate, and then Shirley finished cleaning her rifle and waited for her turn in the firing line for the second round—iron discs, probably removed from plows at the Sturgis stores that catered to farmers, at a hundred yards.

  A steel target at one hundred yards was more to her liking. No spyglasses needed for the judges to announce where the bullets had hit. You just fired, and waited to hear the ping. Or not.

  She beat the gentleman with the bolt-action Keene, and he bowed graciously and kissed her hand. She liked him . . . and his Remington .43.

  But that cowboy with the dirty Henry that she beat in the next round, iron discs at two hundred and fifty yards? She didn’t care much for that louse. He cursed his luck, cursed Colonel Curtis, cursed his pards who heckled him so mercilessly, and cursed her as a man decked out in women’s garb. Then he stormed away to the tent saloons.

  Five hundred yards made things more interesting—shooting cracker boxes, also painted red with white bull’s eyes. Shirley used her tang sight for the round.

  And then there were three.

  Shirley Sweet. Libertino Adorante, a silver-headed barber from Sturgis who had a Ballard No. 5 Pacific .40-63. And a wiry sergeant from Fort Meade, who called himself Jay Chase. To her surprise, he was shooting a beat-up Winchester repeating rifle in .50 caliber that reminded her of Deputy U.S. Marshal Jimmy Mann.

  Actually, she had hoped he might have been there. She even looked around for any sign of Danny Waco, but if he was at the competition, he was in the saloons or brothels. Probably not at the church tent, unless he was robbing it.

  “Children, ladies, and gentlemen!” Colonel Tom C. Curtis spoke through a red, white, and blue megaphone. “Our three finalists will be shooting at a target that has been posted on the far side of Lake George Washington.”

  Shirley figured that was not the name of the frozen pond out on the flats.

  “Its distance from here is one thousand yards—almost a full mile.”

  More like six-tenths, Shirley thought as the crowd oohed and ahhed.

  “The target is a church bell—”

  “That, Colonel, is sacrilegious!” the preacher bellowed.

  Curtis lowered the megaphone and found the parson. “It’s from an abandoned Catholic church, sir.”

  The preacher was Protestant, and he nodded his acceptance and withdrew his protest.

  “As I was saying . . .” Colonel Tom C. Curtis returned to his megaphone. “The bell has been painted red, white, and blue in honor of our glorious nation’s first president, on this, his . . . his . . . his . . . one hundredth birthday!”

  Applause. Shirley didn’t know exactly when George Washington was born, but she had to guess he would have been a bit older than a century mark, but she decided to stop listening to Colonel Curtis and focus on that target. If she could see it.

  “How will we know if we hit it?” the barber asked.

  “Why, my good man,” Colonel Curtis answered, “church bells ring, don’t they?”

  Laughter erupted. Even Sergeant Jay Chase chuckled. Shirley, who was trying her best not to listen to that blowhard and cheat she worked for, had to smile.

  “Shooters will fire from the prone position. Shooting sticks are allowed at this stage in this round.” The colonel waited as the Sicilian barber from Sturgis and Shirley went to their tables and grabbed their shooting sticks. The barber carried a fancy tripod. Shirley’s was just a couple old fire-hardened limbs tied together with rawhide, which she had been using since her childhood in Ohio.

  Sergeant Jay Chase just rubbed the front sight of his Winchester ’86.

  Of course, the colonel waited five more minutes to allow more bets to be placed before he returned to his megaphone.

  “After a random drawing of lots, our finalists will fire in this order. Liber . . . tin . . . o Adorante . . .” Curtis butchered the barber’s name. “Sergeant Chase of the finest cavalry in the world. And Shirley Sweet, second only to Annie Oakley among our nation’s shooters of the fairer sex.”

  Shirley had never met Annie Oakley, but figured she could give Buffalo Bill’s sharpshooter a run for her money. She shook her head at the colonel’s attempted compliment and whispered, “I’ve never shot one of the fairer sex. Not even a man, though I’m tempted right now.”

  “So am I,” she heard Sergeant Jay Chase say.

  She turned, saw the soldier, and smiled. He grinned back.

  Three minutes later, the crowd hushed as the barber stretched out on the ground and sighted down the Ballard. They waited. The rifle boomed.

  A moment later, the bell beyond the pond
chimed.

  Locals cheered, but fell silent as Jay Chase stepped to the line.

  “Sergeant,” Tom Curtis said as the soldier stretched out on his belly. “Would not you prefer to use shooting sticks?”

  “He may use mine,” the barber offered.

  “Thank you, no.” Chase levered the Winchester, waited, and fired.

  The crowd exploded in delight at the ping of the bell.

  Shirley Sweet allowed the Sturgis mayor to help her to the ground and braced the Remington’s stock against her shoulder. She drew a breath, let it out, found the bell in her sights, and squeezed the trigger. She didn’t hear the sound, but the crowd did. Everyone cheered, except those who had bet against her. They cursed.

  “What’s next?” the mayor asked. “Do we move the bell?”

  “Let’s put ’er atop Bear Butte!” someone joked.

  When the laughter died, Colonel Tom C. Curtis said, “I think it would be easier to have our shooters back up fifty yards than move that bell.” His head shook. “It weighs a ton.”

  So they moved back and fired again.

  Shirley went first. She knew she had hit it, and immediately moved back to her table to clean the Remington while the other two men shot. People slapped her on the back. A few ladies even deemed to compliment her. Most of them, however, looked at her as if she were some freak of nature.

  The sergeant fired.

  When she heard the chime, she stopped cleaning her rifle. She thought for sure that Jay Chase would miss. He was shooting a repeating rifle, for goodness sake.

  It was the barber who missed. He bowed graciously, but Shirley saw the tears in his eyes as he accepted condolences and disappeared.

  “I guess,” Colonel Curtis said, “we should back up another fifty yards.”

  “Good,” a cowboy joked. “We’ll be closer to the whiskey.”

  “That’s a mighty fine rifle you got, lady,” Sergeant Jay Chase said as he cleaned his Winchester.

  “I’m impressed with yours as well, Sergeant,” Shirley told him. “I just got rid of a Model 1886 Winchester myself.”

  “What for?”

  She shrugged. “Honestly, I didn’t think that rifle would work in long-distance shooting. I must have been mistaken. It wasn’t a .50-caliber, of course.”

  “Of course.” Withdrawing the ramrod, Sergeant Chase winked at her. “Maybe you’d like to make things a might more interesting. I can give you a chance to win it.”

  “Are you wagering your rifle, Sergeant?”

  He nodded. “I’ve been admiring your Remington, lady.”

  She extended her hand. “Well, Sergeant, I think we have a bet.”

  “In this final—Well, I don’t know. Maybe it shall be our final round or perhaps our two shooters will be shooting from Montana, perhaps even Idaho, before long. At any rate, this round our two finalists will be shooting from standing positions.”

  Shirley tried not to listen to Curtis’s rambling. She tried to focus on the bell. After so many rounds, the Remington Rolling Block felt heavier than a mountain howitzer. She also felt the wind picking up just a little, blowing northwest to southeast. Her throat was parched, her lips cracked, and her heart pounded.

  She didn’t know why. She hadn’t felt a case of nerves shooting at targets in three or four years.

  “Sergeant Chase, you have the honor of firing first,” Curtis explained.

  Shirley drew a deep breath, let it out, and butted the Remington on the ground, turning to watch the soldier lift his Winchester to his shoulder.

  Sweating, Chase worked the lever, but lowered the hammer and the Winchester. He took a deep breath.

  So, Shirley thought, he’s nervous, too. Well, who wouldn’t be with fifteen hundred dollars and a rifle on the line? Not to mention, bragging rights in Meade County, South Dakota.

  After wiping his hands on his blue Army-issue trousers, Chase brought the ’86 back up. He slipped the crescent-shaped butt plate against his shoulder, thumbed back the hammer, and took a deliberate aim. The rifle spoke.

  People held their breath and waited. There was no chime. The crowd gasped, groaned, moaned, whistled then everyone was looking at Shirley, even Jay Chase, who stood shaking his head, amazed that he had missed.

  Eleven hundred yards. Could she even see that red, white, and blue bell?

  She set the sights for that distance and brought up the heavy rifle. It began to weave. She cursed her boss, the scalawag Tom Curtis. He had to eliminate shooting sticks in this round? He thought she could outshoot a career Army soldier who had probably fought against Indians? She wondered if the good citizens of Sturgis and the Black Hills would tar and feather her along with Colonel Tom C. Curtis when they realized he couldn’t pay off the winner or the bets.

  She sighted, wet her lips, and waited until her arms held the Rolling Block just slightly steady.

  Finally, Shirley inhaled deeply, exhaled slowly, and squeezed the trigger. The gun roared. Her shoulder ached. Lowering the rifle, she waited and listened.

  CHAPTER THIRTY

  For an eternity, there was no sound. And then . . .

  Ping.

  Shirley almost threw up. The crowd roared, and Colonel Tom C. Curtis mopped his brow with a polka-dotted bandana.

  Somebody clapped her back. Another tousled her hair. She stepped away from the congratulators and made herself take a deep breath, staring across the plains, across the pond or lake or whatever it was, and shook her head in disbelief.

  “Miss Sweet?”

  Slowly, she turned to see Sergeant Jay Chase standing beside her, holding out that Winchester rifle. “I believe that this belongs to you, ma’am. Nice shooting.”

  She glanced at her own rifle, before shaking her head. “Sergeant Chase, it was a silly bet. I couldn’t—”

  “No, ma’am.” The soldier cut her off. “A bet is a bet. I am a lot of things, Miss Sweet, but one thing I’m not is a welsher. Take it.” He grinned, lowering his voice into a conspiratorial whisper. “Besides, I bet on you.”

  That news made her straighten her posture. “Sergeant, are you saying . . .”

  Again, he stopped her and thrust the gun toward her. “No, ma’am. I tried my best. My bet won’t match that fifteen hundred bucks you’re about to get . . .”

  Fat chance, she thought, of me ever seeing a dime of that purse.

  “But it’ll tide me over for a few months.”

  She took the rifle.

  “Besides, on a sergeant’s pay, just keeping this .50-caliber cannon in cartridges will leave me busted.”

  She knew he was lying. A man like Sergeant Jay Chase would never bet against himself, but she thanked him and watched him bow graciously in defeat and then walk away, leaving her alone with her victory. Well, not alone. People still clapped her back with their massive hands. One shoved a bottle of bourbon at her, but took it back and drank greedily before staggering away.

  After a while—she wasn’t sure how long—she found herself standing alone on the plains of South Dakota, feeling the wind begin to pick up, still hearing the cheers and curses, songs and celebrations. But the ruckus was coming from the tent saloons.

  She held a Remington Rolling Block in her left hand, butted against the ground, and a Winchester 1886 in .50-100-450 in her right, the still-warm barrel aimed at the earth.

  Deadwood, South Dakota

  Spring 1895

  “Well, Mann, I hate to see ye go,” the boss said in his Irish brogue as he slid the envelope across the table. “Ye makes a bloody fine miner.”

  “Another month,” Jimmy Mann said, “and I’d be a bloody fine mole.”

  The boss laughed, then tapped the envelope. “Took out, of course, what ye owed the bloody company.”

  Jimmy stared hard through the barred windows that separated the boss and the payroll from the line of employees.

  “Don’t fret, Mann. Ye ain’t like most of ’ese blokes. Keeps to yeself, ye does. Don’t drink, don’t fight, just read bloody newspaper a
fter bloody newspaper. An’ the only time I ever seen ye at the sheriff’s office was when ye was readin’ dodgers an’ the like.” His hand lifted, and Jimmy dragged the envelope, opened it, and seemed satisfied at the cash.

  Behind him, another miner grumbled, cursed, and told him to hurry along.

  Ignoring the rudeness and impatience, Jimmy nodded at the boss. “Thanks for everything.”

  It wasn’t something a mine boss heard often in a place like Deadwood. He actually appeared taken aback. “Well, Mann, as long as I’m here, ye’ll have a job waitin’ for ye.”

  Jimmy nodded again and left the payroll line for the last time. He had bought a horse—a blue roan with some thoroughbred in her—a new saddle, and plenty of cartridges for his Colt and his Winchester .45-70. He had money, new clothes, some grub, and a full stomach, having splurged on breakfast at the café closest to his hotel. He had seen everything he needed to see in Deadwood, including—on a whim—Wild Bill Hickok’s grave. All he wanted to see was Danny Waco, in the sights of his Winchester ’86 short rifle.

  The question was, where was Danny Waco?

  Jimmy had almost gone blind reading every issue of every newspaper that arrived by stagecoach in Deadwood and every issue that the local newspapers had exchanges with. No newspaper had mentioned his name. Nothing. Maybe Waco had gotten caught in a blizzard. Or killed by some road agent. But Jimmy did not believe that.

  He ruled out riding east. Pierre, Sioux Falls, and even Yankton just didn’t seem to be towns that would have appealed to Waco. And if the outlaw had had enough of winter, the way Jimmy had, he didn’t think Waco would ride up into North Dakota or Canada, either.

  So . . . Montana? Miles City or Billings or even farther west into the mountains and gold camps there? Wyoming? Sheridan or Buffalo or maybe start heading south and find Cheyenne or Laramie? He wouldn’t want to risk Nebraska, especially not after that fracas in Ogallala and the robbery in Chadron.

 

    Riding Shotgun Read onlineRiding ShotgunBloodthirsty Read onlineBloodthirstyBullets Don't Argue Read onlineBullets Don't ArgueFrontier America Read onlineFrontier AmericaHang Them Slowly Read onlineHang Them SlowlyLive by the West, Die by the West Read onlineLive by the West, Die by the WestThe Black Hills Read onlineThe Black HillsTorture of the Mountain Man Read onlineTorture of the Mountain ManPreacher's Rage Read onlinePreacher's RageStranglehold Read onlineStrangleholdCutthroats Read onlineCutthroatsThe Range Detectives Read onlineThe Range DetectivesA Jensen Family Christmas Read onlineA Jensen Family ChristmasHave Brides, Will Travel Read onlineHave Brides, Will TravelDig Your Own Grave Read onlineDig Your Own GraveBurning Daylight Read onlineBurning DaylightBlood for Blood Read onlineBlood for BloodWinter Kill Read onlineWinter KillMankiller, Colorado Read onlineMankiller, ColoradoPreacher's Massacre Read onlinePreacher's MassacreThe Doomsday Bunker Read onlineThe Doomsday BunkerTreason in the Ashes Read onlineTreason in the AshesMacCallister, The Eagles Legacy: The Killing Read onlineMacCallister, The Eagles Legacy: The KillingWolfsbane Read onlineWolfsbaneDanger in the Ashes Read onlineDanger in the AshesGut-Shot Read onlineGut-ShotRimfire Read onlineRimfireHatred in the Ashes Read onlineHatred in the AshesDay of Rage Read onlineDay of RageDreams of Eagles Read onlineDreams of EaglesOut of the Ashes Read onlineOut of the AshesThe Return Of Dog Team Read onlineThe Return Of Dog TeamBetter Off Dead Read onlineBetter Off DeadBetrayal of the Mountain Man Read onlineBetrayal of the Mountain ManRattlesnake Wells, Wyoming Read onlineRattlesnake Wells, WyomingA Crying Shame Read onlineA Crying ShameThe Devil's Touch Read onlineThe Devil's TouchCourage In The Ashes Read onlineCourage In The AshesThe Jackals Read onlineThe JackalsPreacher's Blood Hunt Read onlinePreacher's Blood HuntLuke Jensen Bounty Hunter Dead Shot Read onlineLuke Jensen Bounty Hunter Dead ShotA Good Day to Die Read onlineA Good Day to DieWinchester 1886 Read onlineWinchester 1886Massacre of Eagles Read onlineMassacre of EaglesA Colorado Christmas Read onlineA Colorado ChristmasCarnage of Eagles Read onlineCarnage of EaglesThe Family Jensen # 1 Read onlineThe Family Jensen # 1Sidewinders#2 Massacre At Whiskey Flats Read onlineSidewinders#2 Massacre At Whiskey FlatsSuicide Mission Read onlineSuicide MissionPreacher and the Mountain Caesar Read onlinePreacher and the Mountain CaesarSawbones Read onlineSawbonesPreacher's Hell Storm Read onlinePreacher's Hell StormThe Last Gunfighter: Hell Town Read onlineThe Last Gunfighter: Hell TownHell's Gate Read onlineHell's GateMonahan's Massacre Read onlineMonahan's MassacreCode of the Mountain Man Read onlineCode of the Mountain ManThe Trail West Read onlineThe Trail WestBuckhorn Read onlineBuckhornA Rocky Mountain Christmas Read onlineA Rocky Mountain ChristmasDarkly The Thunder Read onlineDarkly The ThunderPride of Eagles Read onlinePride of EaglesVengeance Is Mine Read onlineVengeance Is MineTrapped in the Ashes Read onlineTrapped in the AshesTwelve Dead Men Read onlineTwelve Dead MenLegion of Fire Read onlineLegion of FireHonor of the Mountain Man Read onlineHonor of the Mountain ManMassacre Canyon Read onlineMassacre CanyonSmoke Jensen, the Beginning Read onlineSmoke Jensen, the BeginningSong of Eagles Read onlineSong of EaglesSlaughter of Eagles Read onlineSlaughter of EaglesDead Man Walking Read onlineDead Man WalkingThe Frontiersman Read onlineThe FrontiersmanBrutal Night of the Mountain Man Read onlineBrutal Night of the Mountain ManBattle in the Ashes Read onlineBattle in the AshesChaos in the Ashes Read onlineChaos in the AshesMacCallister Kingdom Come Read onlineMacCallister Kingdom ComeCat's Eye Read onlineCat's EyeButchery of the Mountain Man Read onlineButchery of the Mountain ManDead Before Sundown Read onlineDead Before SundownTyranny in the Ashes Read onlineTyranny in the AshesSnake River Slaughter Read onlineSnake River SlaughterA Time to Slaughter Read onlineA Time to SlaughterThe Last of the Dogteam Read onlineThe Last of the DogteamMassacre at Powder River Read onlineMassacre at Powder RiverSidewinders Read onlineSidewindersNight Mask Read onlineNight MaskPreacher's Slaughter Read onlinePreacher's SlaughterInvasion USA Read onlineInvasion USADefiance of Eagles Read onlineDefiance of EaglesThe Jensen Brand Read onlineThe Jensen BrandFrontier of Violence Read onlineFrontier of ViolenceBleeding Texas Read onlineBleeding TexasThe Lawless Read onlineThe LawlessBlood Bond Read onlineBlood BondMacCallister: The Eagles Legacy: The Killing Read onlineMacCallister: The Eagles Legacy: The KillingShowdown Read onlineShowdownThe Legend of Perley Gates Read onlineThe Legend of Perley GatesPursuit Of The Mountain Man Read onlinePursuit Of The Mountain ManScream of Eagles Read onlineScream of EaglesPreacher's Showdown Read onlinePreacher's ShowdownOrdeal of the Mountain Man Read onlineOrdeal of the Mountain ManThe Last Gunfighter: The Drifter Read onlineThe Last Gunfighter: The DrifterRide the Savage Land Read onlineRide the Savage LandGhost Valley Read onlineGhost ValleyFire in the Ashes Read onlineFire in the AshesMatt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man The Eyes of Texas Read onlineMatt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man The Eyes of TexasDeadly Trail Read onlineDeadly TrailRage of Eagles Read onlineRage of EaglesMoonshine Massacre Read onlineMoonshine MassacreDestiny in the Ashes Read onlineDestiny in the AshesViolent Sunday Read onlineViolent SundayAlone in the Ashes ta-5 Read onlineAlone in the Ashes ta-5Preacher's Peace Read onlinePreacher's PeacePreacher's Pursuit (The First Mountain Man) Read onlinePreacher's Pursuit (The First Mountain Man)Preacher's Quest Read onlinePreacher's QuestThe Darkest Winter Read onlineThe Darkest WinterA Reason to Die Read onlineA Reason to DieBloodshed of Eagles Read onlineBloodshed of EaglesThe Last Gunfighter: Ghost Valley Read onlineThe Last Gunfighter: Ghost ValleyA Big Sky Christmas Read onlineA Big Sky ChristmasHang Him Twice Read onlineHang Him TwiceBlood Bond 3 Read onlineBlood Bond 3Seven Days to Hell Read onlineSeven Days to HellMacCallister, the Eagles Legacy: Dry Gulch Ambush Read onlineMacCallister, the Eagles Legacy: Dry Gulch AmbushThe Last Gunfighter Read onlineThe Last GunfighterBrotherhood of the Gun Read onlineBrotherhood of the GunCode of the Mountain Man tlmm-8 Read onlineCode of the Mountain Man tlmm-8Prey Read onlinePreyMacAllister Read onlineMacAllisterThunder of Eagles Read onlineThunder of EaglesRampage of the Mountain Man Read onlineRampage of the Mountain ManAmbush in the Ashes Read onlineAmbush in the AshesTexas Bloodshed s-6 Read onlineTexas Bloodshed s-6Savage Texas: The Stampeders Read onlineSavage Texas: The StampedersSixkiller, U.S. Marshal Read onlineSixkiller, U.S. MarshalShootout of the Mountain Man Read onlineShootout of the Mountain ManDamnation Valley Read onlineDamnation ValleyRenegades Read onlineRenegadesThe Family Jensen Read onlineThe Family JensenThe Last Rebel: Survivor Read onlineThe Last Rebel: SurvivorGuns of the Mountain Man Read onlineGuns of the Mountain ManBlood in the Ashes ta-4 Read onlineBlood in the Ashes ta-4A Time for Vultures Read onlineA Time for VulturesSavage Guns Read onlineSavage GunsTerror of the Mountain Man Read onlineTerror of the Mountain ManPhoenix Rising: Read onlinePhoenix Rising:Savage Country Read onlineSavage CountryRiver of Blood Read onlineRiver of BloodBloody Sunday Read onlineBloody SundayVengeance in the Ashes Read onlineVengeance in the AshesButch Cassidy the Lost Years Read onlineButch Cassidy the Lost YearsThe First Mountain Man Read onlineThe First Mountain ManPreacher Read onlinePreacherHeart of the Mountain Man Read onlineHeart of the Mountain ManDestiny of Eagles Read onlineDestiny of EaglesEvil Never Sleeps Read onlineEvil Never SleepsThe Devil's Legion Read onlineThe Devil's LegionForty Times a Killer Read onlineForty Times a KillerSlaughter Read onlineSlaughterDay of Independence Read onlineDay of IndependenceBetrayal in the Ashes Read onlineBetrayal in the AshesJack-in-the-Box Read onlineJack-in-the-BoxWill Tanner Read onlineWill TannerThis Violent Land Read onlineThis Violent LandBehind the Iron Read onlineBehind the IronBlood in the Ashes Read onlineBlood in the AshesWarpath of the Mountain Man Read onlineWarpath of the Mountain ManDeadly Day in Tombstone Read onlineDeadly Day in TombstoneBlackfoot Messiah Read onlineBlackfoot MessiahPitchfork Pass Read onlinePitchfork PassReprisal Read onlineReprisalThe Great Train Massacre Read onlineThe Great Train MassacreA Town Called Fury Read onlineA Town Called FuryRescue Read onlineRescueA High Sierra Christmas Read onlineA High Sierra ChristmasQuest of the Mountain Man Read onlineQuest of the Mountain ManBlood Bond 5 Read onlineBlood Bond 5The Drifter Read onlineThe DrifterSurvivor (The Ashes Book 36) Read onlineSurvivor (The Ashes Book 36)Terror in the Ashes Read onlineTerror in the AshesBlood of the Mountain Man Read onlineBlood of the Mountain ManBlood Bond 7 Read onlineBlood Bond 7Cheyenne Challenge Read onlineCheyenne ChallengeKill Crazy Read onlineKill CrazyTen Guns from Texas Read onlineTen Guns from TexasPreacher's Fortune Read onlinePreacher's FortunePreacher's Kill Read onlinePreacher's KillRight between the Eyes Read onlineRight between the EyesDestiny Of The Mountain Man Read onlineDestiny Of The Mountain ManRockabilly Hell Read onlineRockabilly HellForty Guns West Read onlineForty Guns WestHour of Death Read onlineHour of DeathThe Devil's Cat Read onlineThe Devil's CatTriumph of the Mountain Man Read onlineTriumph of the Mountain ManFury in the Ashes Read onlineFury in the AshesStand Your Ground Read onlineStand Your GroundThe Devil's Heart Read onlineThe Devil's HeartBrotherhood of Evil Read onlineBrotherhood of EvilSmoke from the Ashes Read onlineSmoke from the AshesFirebase Freedom Read onlineFirebase FreedomThe Edge of Hell Read onlineThe Edge of HellBats Read onlineBatsRemington 1894 Read onlineRemington 1894Devil's Kiss d-1 Read onlineDevil's Kiss d-1Watchers in the Woods Read onlineWatchers in the WoodsDevil's Heart Read onlineDevil's HeartA Dangerous Man Read onlineA Dangerous ManNo Man's Land Read onlineNo Man's LandWar of the Mountain Man Read onlineWar of the Mountain ManHunted Read onlineHuntedSurvival in the Ashes Read onlineSurvival in the AshesThe Forbidden Read onlineThe ForbiddenRage of the Mountain Man Read onlineRage of the Mountain ManAnarchy in the Ashes Read onlineAnarchy in the AshesThose Jensen Boys! Read onlineThose Jensen Boys!Matt Jensen: The Last Mountain Man Purgatory Read onlineMatt Jensen: The Last Mountain Man PurgatoryBad Men Die Read onlineBad Men DieBlood Valley Read onlineBlood ValleyCarnival Read onlineCarnivalThe Last Mountain Man Read onlineThe Last Mountain ManTalons of Eagles Read onlineTalons of EaglesBounty Hunter lj-1 Read onlineBounty Hunter lj-1Rockabilly Limbo Read onlineRockabilly LimboThe Blood of Patriots Read onlineThe Blood of PatriotsA Texas Hill Country Christmas Read onlineA Texas Hill Country ChristmasTorture Town Read onlineTorture TownThe Bleeding Edge Read onlineThe Bleeding EdgeGunsmoke and Gold Read onlineGunsmoke and GoldRevenge of the Dog Team Read onlineRevenge of the Dog TeamFlintlock Read onlineFlintlockDevil's Kiss Read onlineDevil's KissRebel Yell Read onlineRebel YellEight Hours to Die Read onlineEight Hours to DieHell's Half Acre Read onlineHell's Half AcreRevenge of the Mountain Man Read onlineRevenge of the Mountain ManBattle of the Mountain Man Read onlineBattle of the Mountain ManTrek of the Mountain Man Read onlineTrek of the Mountain ManCry of Eagles Read onlineCry of EaglesBlood on the Divide Read onlineBlood on the DivideTriumph in the Ashes Read onlineTriumph in the AshesThe Butcher of Baxter Pass Read onlineThe Butcher of Baxter PassSweet Dreams Read onlineSweet DreamsPreacher's Assault Read onlinePreacher's AssaultVengeance of the Mountain Man Read onlineVengeance of the Mountain ManMacCallister: The Eagles Legacy Read onlineMacCallister: The Eagles LegacyRockinghorse Read onlineRockinghorseFrom The Ashes: America Reborn Read onlineFrom The Ashes: America RebornHate Thy Neighbor Read onlineHate Thy NeighborA Frontier Christmas Read onlineA Frontier ChristmasJustice of the Mountain Man Read onlineJustice of the Mountain ManLaw of the Mountain Man Read onlineLaw of the Mountain ManMatt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man Read onlineMatt Jensen, The Last Mountain ManBurning Read onlineBurningWyoming Slaughter Read onlineWyoming SlaughterReturn of the Mountain Man Read onlineReturn of the Mountain ManAmbush of the Mountain Man Read onlineAmbush of the Mountain ManAnarchy in the Ashes ta-3 Read onlineAnarchy in the Ashes ta-3Absaroka Ambush Read onlineAbsaroka AmbushTexas Bloodshed Read onlineTexas BloodshedThe Chuckwagon Trail Read onlineThe Chuckwagon TrailThe Violent Land Read onlineThe Violent LandAssault of the Mountain Man Read onlineAssault of the Mountain ManRide for Vengeance Read onlineRide for VengeancePreacher's Justice Read onlinePreacher's JusticeManhunt Read onlineManhuntCat's Cradle Read onlineCat's CradlePower of the Mountain Man Read onlinePower of the Mountain ManFlames from the Ashes Read onlineFlames from the AshesA Stranger in Town Read onlineA Stranger in TownPowder Burn Read onlinePowder BurnTrail of the Mountain Man Read onlineTrail of the Mountain ManToy Cemetery Read onlineToy CemeterySandman Read onlineSandmanEscape from the Ashes Read onlineEscape from the AshesWinchester 1887 Read onlineWinchester 1887Shawn O'Brien Manslaughter Read onlineShawn O'Brien ManslaughterHome Invasion Read onlineHome InvasionHell Town Read onlineHell TownD-Day in the Ashes Read onlineD-Day in the AshesThe Devil's Laughter Read onlineThe Devil's LaughterAn Arizona Christmas Read onlineAn Arizona ChristmasPaid in Blood Read onlinePaid in BloodCrisis in the Ashes Read onlineCrisis in the AshesImposter Read onlineImposterDakota Ambush Read onlineDakota AmbushThe Edge of Violence Read onlineThe Edge of ViolenceArizona Ambush Read onlineArizona AmbushTexas John Slaughter Read onlineTexas John SlaughterValor in the Ashes Read onlineValor in the AshesTyranny Read onlineTyrannySlaughter in the Ashes Read onlineSlaughter in the AshesWarriors from the Ashes Read onlineWarriors from the AshesVenom of the Mountain Man Read onlineVenom of the Mountain ManAlone in the Ashes Read onlineAlone in the AshesMatt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man Savage Territory Read onlineMatt Jensen, The Last Mountain Man Savage TerritoryDeath in the Ashes Read onlineDeath in the AshesSavagery of The Mountain Man Read onlineSavagery of The Mountain ManA Lone Star Christmas Read onlineA Lone Star ChristmasBlack Friday Read onlineBlack FridayMontana Gundown Read onlineMontana GundownJourney into Violence Read onlineJourney into ViolenceColter's Journey Read onlineColter's JourneyEyes of Eagles Read onlineEyes of EaglesBlood Bond 9 Read onlineBlood Bond 9Avenger Read onlineAvengerBlack Ops #1 Read onlineBlack Ops #1Shot in the Back Read onlineShot in the BackThe Last Gunfighter: Killing Ground Read onlineThe Last Gunfighter: Killing GroundPreacher's Fire Read onlinePreacher's FireDay of Reckoning Read onlineDay of ReckoningPhoenix Rising pr-1 Read onlinePhoenix Rising pr-1Blood of Eagles Read onlineBlood of EaglesTrigger Warning Read onlineTrigger WarningAbsaroka Ambush (first Mt Man)/Courage Of The Mt Man Read onlineAbsaroka Ambush (first Mt Man)/Courage Of The Mt ManStrike of the Mountain Man Read onlineStrike of the Mountain Man