Accused of stagecoach robbery, Duke Benedict and Hank Brazos had no choice but to run for their lives. It was just plain bad fortune that in so doing they ran smack into a wagon train heading across the desert for a mining town called Tarbuck. The wagon train was no ordinary outfit. It was made up
The Killing Ground (Benedict and Brazos 33)
โ Scribed by E. Jefferson Clay
- Book ID
- 110736654
- Publisher
- Piccadilly
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 156 KB
- Series
- Benedict and Brazos
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780463978283
- ASIN
- B098NY6QK4
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
He was a dead man walking.
He staggered into the hotel lobby with a knife sticking out of one ear, and when he hit the floor the blade finally penetrated his brain and finished him off once and for all.
Unfortunately, there was no shortage of suspects. A lot of men had reason to hate Harvey Yardigan. But then a witness came forward to say that the murder had been committed by none other than Duke Benedict.
Benedict and his partner, Hank Brazos, were in the town of Mirage on secret business. Midwest Territory was a hotbed of crime, murder and rustling. Things were so bad that folks had started calling it "The Killing Ground" instead. The fancy gambler and his big cowboy friend were sent in to clean the territory up ... but it seemed that someone else was already onto them โ and would stop at nothing to make sure they failed in their mission!
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Back East, Duke Benedict's wealthy family believed he was a prominent lawyer who moved among the wild west's rich and the famous. So when his father proposed to pay him a visit in the rough-and-ready town of Rawhide, Duke had to think fast. It would kill his old man to discover that Duke was in real
A war was raging between the Anvil Ranch and its bitter rival, the Fifty-four. Men were being cut down from ambush, cattle rustled, and each side constantly blamed the other. And when Joe Tucker, boss of the Fifty-four, hired Flint and Ram Brand, two of the toughest gunfighters money could buy, Burk
There was trouble in Fortitude Valley. Someone had set up a lumber camp smack in the middle of cattle country. And to make matters worse, the lumbermen drafted in to work the axes and saws, and float the timber down to the sawmill, were paroled convicts! If they made a go of the chance they'd been g