Fire Wolf - Michael George - E-Book

Fire Wolf E-Book

Michael George

0,0
2,99 €

oder
-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

The deadly hired killer Fire Wolf is heading to a remote settlement in answer to a telegraph message. On the way there he tangles with three wanted outlaws in the ghost town known as Gold Strike. When the remaining two outlaws show up they vow vengeance and trail the emotionless Fire Wolf. Upon arriving in Jamesburg to find the man he thinks has hired his lethal services, it seems that no one is expecting him. No one apart from the actual man who has hired Fire Wolf.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB
Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



Fire Wolf

The deadly hired killer Fire Wolf is heading to a remote settlement in answer to a telegraph message. On the way there he tangles with three wanted outlaws in the ghost town known as Gold Strike. When the remaining two outlaws show up they vow vengeance and trail the emotionless Fire Wolf.

Upon arriving in Jamesburg to find the man he thinks has hired his lethal services, it seems that no one is expecting him. No one apart from the actual man who has hired Fire Wolf.

By the same author

The Valko Kid

Kid Palomino

The Guns of Trask

The Shadow of Valko

Palomino Rider

The Spurs of Palomino

South of the Badlands

The Masked Man

Palomino Showdown

Return of the Valko Kid

The Trail of Trask

Kid Dynamite

War Smoke

The Sunset Kid

The Venom of Valko

The Mark of Trask

Fortress Palomino

To Kill the Valko Kid

Kid Fury

Stagecoach To Waco Wells

The Ghosts of War Smoke

The Wizard of War Smoke

Kid Palomino, Outlaws

Bury them deep in War Smoke

Fire Wolf

Michael D. George

ROBERT HALE

© Michael D. George 2018

First published in Great Britain 2018

ISBN 978-0-7198-2843-0

The Crowood Press

The Stable Block

Crowood Lane

Ramsbury

Marlborough

Wiltshire SN8 2HR

www.bhwesterns.com

Robert Hale is an imprint of The Crowood Press

The right of Michael D. George to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him

in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

All rights reserved. This e-book is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

Contents

Prologue

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

Finale

PROLOGUE

Some might have called it a ghost town for it sure had the look of something only the dead might care to dwell within. A hundred buildings had crumbled beneath the merciless desert sun until only a mere handful still remained standing. The constant wind that came across the vast plains continued to batter what was left of Gold Strike. For nature has a way of reclaiming the land which men abandon and return it back to its genesis.

Gold Strike had had a brief yet lucrative history that ended as swiftly as it had begun. Some said a fortune in precious gold dust had been scattered across the desert by the incessant wind and the people who had originally been lured there simply followed it like mindless lemmings.

For more than a decade since the last of the town’s inhabitants had left Gold Strike, the elements had relentlessly worked hard to destroy any evidence that the town had existed at all. Few men came to the desert settlement any longer and those that did were either lost or seeking a refuge from the law. No posse ever rode within a hundred miles of what remained of Gold Strike. The town had a reputation of being a good place to die and many had discovered the reality of that simple statement.

Yet as the blistering windswept sand kept eroding the handful of remaining structures beneath the brutal sun, a lone rider came out of the shimmering haze and steered his high-shouldered stallion straight at Gold Strike.

This was no ordinary horseman though. He was neither lost nor trying to avoid a hangman’s knot. His journey to the remote settlement was quite deliberate. Unlike most drifters who rode across the perilous plains, the man in black knew exactly where he was and why he was there.

The rider was well aware that the abandoned town still had a dozen or more deep wells filled with precious water. A commodity that was far more valuable than a mountain of golden ore in this arid landscape.

The horseman had travelled this deadly route many times and knew that in total contrast to its appearance, Gold Strike had the purest water beneath its crumbling facades.

That was all he wanted. He would allow his mount to drink its fill and replenish his canteens before continuing his journey on to Jamesburg.

The ominous reputation that Gold Strike had for being a good place to die meant nothing to the expressionless rider as he neared the abandoned town. His trade was killing and death held no fear to him. His eyes narrowed as he cleared an outcrop of bleached white dead trees that resembled skeletons as they somehow remained upright.

His left hand drew back on his long leathers and stopped the grey stallion beside the lifeless trees as his keen eyes spotted three dishevelled horses tied up at the rear of what had once been a saloon. The saloon was one of the remaining buildings that had not been reduced to rubble.

Anger swelled up within the rider. He realized that the only men you ever met in this part of the desert were usually outlaws who tended to shoot at anything which moved. He exhaled and shook his head.

He bit his lower lip thoughtfully and then pushed the tails of his black topcoat over the grips of his holstered .45s. He could hear the raised voices of the horses’ masters echoing from the interior of the saloon.

Without taking his intense stare off the sun-bleached building, he drew a long thin cigar from his inside pocket and bit off a half inch of its length and spat it at the white sand before him.

He knew that when Gold Strike had been abandoned it had been fast. So fast that its inhabitants had left practically everything within the structures. The saloon still had at least half its stock of hard liquor stacked upon its shelves beneath several inches of dust.

With the thought of getting his hands on just one of the whiskey bottles and downing its fiery contents, he struck a match and inhaled the strong smoke until his lungs were full of the toxic brew. He savoured its flavour for a few moments and then allowed it to seep between his gritted teeth as he tossed the spent match at the sand.

The cigar gripped firmly in his teeth, he leaned over the neck of the grey stallion and patted its lathered-up neck with his gloved land.

‘I sure hope them varmints don’t start shooting before I got time to kill them, Ghost,’ he said drily before tapping his spurs against the sides of his horse.

The stallion proceeded on toward the remaining standing structures as the horseman flicked the safety leather loops off his gun hammers in anticipation of the forthcoming encounter.

There was an eerie silence as the handsome stallion moved between the piles of colourless rubble and headed into the wide street. His unblinking eyes scanned every one of the remaining structures as his spurs repeatedly nudged the flesh of the tall stallion. He glanced at the water trough outside the saloon and gave a muted chuckle. He relished the thought of encountering the three men that were still unaware of his arrival in Gold Strike. His sharp eyes did not blink as he continued to watch the open saloon door and listen to the drunken voices which filled his ears.

It had been over a year since he had last paid Gold Strike a visit and he noted the obvious changes. The saloon sign had fallen from its perch on the porch overhang and lay in countless fragments on the street sand.

The man in black glanced from beneath the black brim of his Stetson to where he was steering the tall grey. One of the original swing doors remained but was hanging by its hinge like a dead man on the gallows. The other had succumbed long ago to the elements and was nowhere to be seen.

The sound of the men’s voices grew louder as the horseman turned his horse’s head by a slight tug of his reins and headed straight at the water trough positioned directly outside the saloons still intact main window. As he pulled the long leathers up to his chest and stopped the animal, he heard the voices fade into silence.

A smirk etched his otherwise emotionless features.

‘Reckon they seen us, Ghost,’ he muttered as he threw his long right leg over the tail of his horse and slowly descended to the sand.

His left hand was still resting upon the saddle horn when he heard the hefty footsteps echoing through the saloon. They were moving toward the blazing sun-drenched street to see who Gold Strike’s latest visitor was.

As smoke drifted up from the cigar between his teeth he caught sight of the trio of men as they stepped out beneath the porch overhang and paused on the boardwalk. They were a rough looking bunch who obviously by their appearance, and the stench which hung around them, had ridden hard to reach Gold Strike and the sanctuary the remote settlement offered.

The largest of the trio pushed between his cohorts.

‘Who the hell are you, stranger?’ Bart Hagen growled as he jabbed at the air with a stout finger. ‘What you doing in these parts?’

The black-clad loner lowered his arm from the neck of the stallion, ignored the question and wrapped his reins around the water pump. He then gave the three men a brief glance and then started to prime the pump at the end of the trough. To the annoyance of the men standing on the boardwalk, he gave an amused smile and then felt the steel lever grow cold as water was drawn up from the depths and started to pour into the trough.

Another of the men edged closer to the lip of the boardwalk.

‘Bart asked you a question, stranger,’ Lex Smith shouted down at the man in black. ‘Who are you?’

The youngest of the three, Cole Carver inched to Hagen’s right and seemed less confident than his companions as he remained half hidden by his pal.

‘And what in tarnation is you doing in these parts?’ he chipped in sheepishly. ‘Is you the law?’

The loner released his grip on the metal lever when he was satisfied that there was enough water in the trough to quench the stallion’s thirst. He then slowly turned his tall frame and faced the three men.

‘My name’s Fire Wolf,’ he uttered.

The faces of the three men seemed to drain of colour as the name sank into each of their minds. They had all heard of the last of the Mandan, but had never believed that he actually existed. Bart Hagen twitched as he bravely stepped forward until the toes of his boots poked out over the edge of the boardwalk.

‘I heard about you,’ he stammered.

Carver grabbed Hagen’s sleeve and tugged it like a child trying to get its parent’s attention. ‘What is this varmint, Bart? Is he a bounty hunter?’

‘I heard he was an Injun,’ Hagen answered. ‘But he don’t look much like an Injun to me.’

‘Me neither,’ Smith agreed.

The face of the loner went grim as though he had just been insulted by their ignorance. His eyes narrowed until his entire face tightened.

‘I ain’t no stinking bounty hunter,’ he hissed like a rattler and rested his hands on his holstered guns. ‘I take exception to being called a bounty hunter. I’m Fire Wolf, the last of the Mandan.’

‘What the hell is a Mandan?’ Smith growled as his fingers slowly curled around his holstered six-shooter and he stared in disbelief at the disinterested man in black.

‘He’s come here after the bounty money on our heads, boys,’ Carver said frantically. ‘He’s a blasted bounty hunter I tell you.’

Fire Wolf simply listened and watched.

Bart Hagen suddenly recalled the tales he had heard about the stranger in their midst. He wiped the sweat from his face and stared down at Fire Wolf in growing terror.

‘You’re wrong. He ain’t no bounty hunter, Cole,’ Hagen ventured as he placed his hand on his gun grip. ‘He’s a hired gun. A killer. I’ve heard about him and what I’ve heard ain’t exactly settling.’

There was a long silence as the three men under the overhang gathered their courage and stared down at the man in black who glared back at them. Finally, Cole Carver shuffled slightly forward and opened his mouth and spoke for what would be the last time.

‘What kinda name is Fire Wolf?’ he chuckled. ‘I ain’t no idea what a Mandan is, but is you a stinking Injun? Nothing I hates Injuns more than bounty hunters.’

Fire Wolf raised up to his full height as the outlaw’s statement burned into him like a branding iron. His nostrils flared as he flexed his fingers above the ivory grips of his weapons.

‘You shouldn’t have said that,’ Fire Wolf growled through the cigar smoke as his piercing stare burned across the distance between himself and the three wanted men.

Carver’s expression suddenly altered. The mocking smile vanished as he realized that Hagen had not been exaggerating when he spoke about the man clad in black.

Fire Wolf spat his cigar at them and swiftly snatched both his weapons. With expert precision the hired gunman cocked the hammers of both weapons as they cleared the holsters and then aimed them straight at the dumbfounded outlaws.

They scrambled desperately for their guns, yet the trio of wanted men were no match for the infamous Fire Wolf. The ghost town shook as Fire Wolf squeezed his triggers with deadly determination. Blinding flashes spewed from the barrels of the guns. One of Fire Wolf’s bullets hit Carver between the eyes and sent him flying backward through the saloon window. A thousand shards of glass splintered around the lifeless carcass of the outlaw’s body as he hit the floorboards inside the saloon. Hagen fared little better as two shots carved a path into him. A plume of scarlet gore erupted from his chest, lifted him off his boot leather and punched him through the open doorway behind his wide back. No sooner had Hagen skidded to a halt beside the body of Carver than Lex Smith rocked on his feet as he held on to his Colt. His glassy eyes stared down in disbelief at the massive holes in his belly. Smith staggered and then toppled off the boardwalk toward the street. A plume of dust rose from the ground as the outlaw crashed face first into the sand before his executioner.

Fire Wolf stared at his bloody handiwork. There was no hint of emotion in his expression as he holstered his guns and glanced at the drinking horse. The animal had not even flinched during the deafening yet brief slaughter. It continued to drink from the trough beside its master. Fire Wolf ascended the saloon steps and entered the drinking hole through the gunsmoke cloud that hung over the bodies.

He moved across the vast empty expanse, where once bargirls plied their trade amid countless willing patrons, and moved behind the dust-covered bar counter. He glanced at the shelves of bottles hidden by years of dust and cobwebs and plucked a bottle of whiskey. He turned and placed the bottle on the counter and looked to where the outlaws still lay as pools of blood grew larger around them.

‘They shouldn’t have called me a stinking bounty hunter,’ he muttered to himself as he located a whiskey glass and cleaned it with the tails of his bandanna. His teeth extracted the cork from the neck of the bottle and spat it across at the tables and chairs across the room. The aroma of the bottle’s amber contents filled his nostrils as he poured. He downed the whiskey and stared out at his handiwork coldly before admitting to himself. ‘I probably would have killed them anyway.’