When Jake Cahill and his gang take over the town of Ponderosa, sawmill magnate Fletcher Comstock sends for his friend and former town marshal Matt Stryker. When Stryker arrives though, Cahill is waiting. He gelds Stryker's fine Arabian stallion and beats Stryker terribly, disfiguring him for life. B
Stryker's Bounty (A Matt Stryker Western #3)
โ Scribed by Tyrell, Chuck
- Book ID
- 109301621
- Publisher
- Piccadilly Publishing
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 314 KB
- Series
- Matt Stryker Western 3
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Matt Stryker is a bounty hunter hot on the trail of a man running from justice when he comes across burnt-out stage station. The Ridges & Hale coach lies in ashes and the coach's passengers are shriveled black charcoal. But stationmaster Dodge Miller was alive. He'd played dead well enough to fool the perpetrators and then drag himself to the outhouse afterward. Molly, Dodge's wife, may also be alive, as the perpetrators took her with them. Dodge and Molly have often given Stryker of their hospitality and now it's his turn to pay them back. "Please. Please find my Molly," Dodge says, and Stryker promises that he will. But the perpetrators also took 250 pounds of gold, and soon half the county is riding in pursuit, including John Walker, the white Pima, and Taklishim, the Apache scout. But when push comes to shove, is Molly Miller more important that 250 pounds of gold.Charles T. Whipple is an international prize-winning author, uses the pen name of Chuck Tyrell for his Western novels.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Matt Stryker took it easy after taking lead from King Rennick, spending most of his time in a big chair leaned up against the wall of Charlie Clark's Kitchen. Then Deputy U.S. Marshal Ness Havelock rode in and asked Stryker to find Alfredo McLaws. Worth ten thousand dollars, Havelock said, alive. M
An Apache renegade named Yuyutsu raided freely across Arizona, New Mexico, and Old Mexico, plundering and killing as he went. But as usual, when the fighting went hard on the Apaches, they simply faded away. When the leadership of Sergeant Matt Stryker came to the attention of General George Washing