Novel 1955 - Heller With A Gun (v5.0) Read online

Page 3


  It was something to remember. Something not to forget. Nor was Barker an enemy to be underrated. The big man was too confident not to have victory behind him. He was no fool. He was a shrewd, tough, dangerous man.

  There was an uncomfortable silence in the room after Andy Barker had gone. Mabry drank his coffee and refilled the cup.

  “None of my business,” he said, “but I’d think about that trip. You’ll have trouble.”

  Healy shifted his cup on his saucer and said nothing. Janice Ryan started to speak, then stopped. Silence stretched taut between the walls, and then a board creaked, and when they looked around a man was standing in the door.

  He was a tall man, somewhat stooped, with a lean hatchet face, and he wore his gun tied down. And King Mabry knew the kind of man he was, and what to expect.

  Low-voiced, he said, “Better get out. This is real trouble. Gun trouble.”

  Chapter 3

  NOBODY MOVED. THE man in the doorway looked down the table at Mabry, then advanced a step into the room. When he stopped his right side was toward them.

  His features were lean and vulpine. Mabry could see that the fellow was primed for a killing, and he was the man he had seen watching the game in the outer room.

  “You brought in Pete Griffin?”

  Mabry’s right side was toward the door as he sat on the bench. His coffee cup, freshly filled, was before him. He waited while a slow count of five might have been made, and then he replied, “I brought him in.”

  “Where’s Pete now?”

  The speaker came on another step, his eyes holding on Mabry.

  “I said, where’s Pete?”

  “Heard you.” Mabry looked around at him. “You want him, go find him.”

  A second man came into the room and moved wide of the first. This man was not hunting trouble. “Bent?”

  Benton ignored him. He had come into the room set for a killing, for a quick flare of anger, then shooting. Yet the attitude of Mabry gave him nothing upon which to hang it.

  Mabry took the cup and cradled it in his hands. Benton tensed; Mabry might throw the hot coffee. He drew back half a step.

  Healy looked from Mabry to Benton, seemingly aware for the first time that the situation was taut with danger. Sweat began to bead his brow, and his lips tightened. There was only one door and Benton stood with his back to it. Janice Ryan sat very still, her attention centered on Mabry.

  “Bent?”

  Distracted, Benton turned a little. “Shut up!”

  Aware of his mistake, he jerked back, but Mabry seemed oblivious even of his presence. Mabry tasted his coffee. Then, putting down the cup, he fished in his shirt pocket for makings and began to build a smoke.

  “Bent,” the smaller man persisted, “not now. This ain’t the place.”

  Benton was himself unsure. Mabry’s failure to react to his challenge upset him. He dared not draw and shoot a man in the presence of witnesses when the man made no overt move, and when, as far as he could see, the man was not even wearing a gun.

  Yet he could see no way to let go and get out. He hesitated, then repeated, “I want to know where Griffin is!”

  Mabry struck a match and lit his cigarette.

  Benton’s face flushed. He considered himself a dangerous man and was so considered by others. Yet Mabry did not seem even to take him seriously.

  “By God!” He took an angry step forward. “If you’ve killed Pete—”

  Mabry looked around at him. “Why don’t you get out of here?”

  His tone was bored, slightly tinged with impatience.

  Benton’s resentment burst into fury and his right hand dropped to his gun.

  Yet as his hand dropped, Mabry’s right slapped back and grabbed Benton’s wrist, spinning him forward and off balance. Instantly Mabry swung both feet over the bench and smashed into the man before he could regain his balance.

  Knocked against the wall, his breath smashed from him, Benton tried to turn and draw, but as he turned, Mabry hit him with a wicked right to the chin that completed the turn for him. And as it ended, Mabry swung an underhanded left to the stomach.

  Benton caught the punch in the solar plexus and it jerked his mouth open as he gasped for wind. Mabry hit him with a right, then a left that knocked him against the wall again, and a right that bounced his skull hard off the wall. The gunman slumped to the floor.

  King Mabry turned on the smaller man. “You’ll be Joe Noss. You wanted out of this, so you’re out. But take him with you.”

  And as the white-faced Noss stooped to get hold of Benton, Mabry added, “And both of you stay out of my way.”

  He sat down and picked up his cigarette. He drew deep, and as his eyes met Janice’s he said, “If that’s too brutal, better get out. It’s nothing to what you’re liable to see between here and Alder Gulch.”

  “I didn’t say anything,” she said. “I didn’t say anything at all.”

  He got up abruptly, irritated with himself. He was no kid to be upset by the first pretty girl who came along. He had seen a lot of women, known a lot of them.

  But not like this one. Never like this one.

  He walked out and nobody said anything. At the bar he stopped, aware of the undercurrent of interest. Hat Creek Station had seen much rough, brutal action, but fists were not much used where guns were carried. It was something new to be considered in estimating the caliber of King Mabry.

  No place for a woman, Mabry told himself.

  BEHIND HIM THE momentary silence held. Then Tom Healy looked at Janice. “I’m a fool. You shouldn’t be out here. None of you should.”

  “Because of that? That could happen anywhere.”

  “It may be worse. That’s what he said.”

  She looked across the table, knowing what this trip meant to Healy, knowing there was nothing back East for him.

  “Do you want to quit, Tom? Is that it?”

  “You know me better than that.”

  “All right, then. We’ll go on.”

  “There’s only trails. We may run short of supplies before we get through. And there’s Indians.”

  “Friendly Indians.”

  “You’ve a choice. I haven’t. I failed back East. I’m bankrupt. The frontier’s my last chance.”

  She looked at him, her eyes grave and quiet. “It may be that for a lot of us, Tom.”

  His coffee was cold, so he took another cup and filled it. He had no idea why Janice was willing to go West with him. Maybe somewhere back along the line of days she had known her own failure. Nevertheless, what he had said was true. For him there was no turning back. He had to make it on the frontier or he was through.

  He had been finished when the letter from Jack Langrishe reached him, telling of the rich harvest to be reaped on the frontier in the cow and mining towns. Langrishe had a theatre in Deadwood, and there were other places. So Tom Healy put together his little troupe of five people and started West.

  He had not been good enough for New York and Philadelphia. He had not been good enough for London, either. Not to be at the top, and that was where he wanted to be.

  The Western trip began well. They made expenses in St. Louis and Kansas City. They showed a profit in Caldwell, Newton, and Ellsworth. In Dodge and Abilene they did better, but in Cheyenne they found the competition of a better troupe and barely broke even. And the other troupe was going on West.

  Then Healy heard about Alder Gulch. For ten years it had been a boom camp. Now it was tapering off. The big attractions missed it now, yet there was still money there, and they wanted entertainment.

  It was winter and the snow was two feet deep on the level, except where the fierce winds had blown the ground free. Alder Gulch was far away in Montana, but with luck and Barker to guide them, they could get through. Yet Mabry’s doubt worried him. He was a good judge of people, and Mabry was a man who should know. And he did not seem to be a man to waste breath on idle talk.

  Yet what else to do?

  The groun
d had been free of snow when they left Cheyenne, the weather mild for the time of year. Hat Creek Station had been the first stop on the northward trek. And they were snowed in.

  It was part of his profession to put up a front, and being an Irishman, he did it well. Actually, there was less than a thousand dollars of his own money in the ironbound box. There was that much more that belonged to the others, and—something that nobody knew but himself—there was also fifteen thousand dollars in gold that he was taking to Maguire in Butte to build a theatre.

  Secretly he admitted to himself that he headed a company of misfits. Janice was no actress. She was a beautiful girl who should be married to some man of wealth and position. She had spoken to him vaguely of past theatrical successes, but he knew they were the sort of lie the theatre breeds. What actor or actress was ever strictly honest about past successes or failures? Certainly not Tom Healy. And certainly not that charming old windbag, Doc Guilford.

  Janice was not even the type. She was competent, he admitted that, and on the frontier all they demanded was a woman. If she was pretty, so much the better.

  Janice had that scarcely definable something that indicates breeding. Tom Healy was Irish, and an Irishman knows a thoroughbred. But like them all, Janice was running from something. Probably only fear of poverty among her own kind.

  Doc Guilford was an old fraud. But an amusing fraud with a variety of talents, and he could be funny.

  Of them all, Maggie had been the best. Maggie had gone up, partly on talent, partly on beauty. Her mistake was to love the theatre too much, and she stayed with it. Her beauty faded, but she still kept on…and she would always keep on.

  How old was Maggie? Fifty? Or nearer sixty? Or only a rough-weather forty-five?

  She had rheumatism and she complained about the rough riding of the wagons, but on stage her old tear-jerkers could still reach any crowd she played to. And in her dramatic roles she was always good.

  Of them all, Dodie Saxon was the only one who might be on the way up. She was seventeen, eighteen, or nineteen. Nobody knew, and Dodie was not talking. She was tall and she was well built and she was sexy. She could dance and she could sing, and, moreover, she was a solid citizen. She was a clear-thinking youngster with both feet on the ground, and of them all, she was the only one with a future.

  And these were the people he was taking off into the middle of a Wyoming winter over a trail he had never seen, into a country where he would be completely out of place.

  The only shooting he had ever done was in a shooting gallery, and he had never killed so much as a rabbit or slept out of doors even one night.

  Until he was eleven he had lived in a thatched hut in Ireland, then on a back street in Dublin, and after that he had never been far from a theatre or rooming house. When he had money he ordered meals; when he had no money he starved. But he had never cooked a meal in his life.

  So it was Alder Gulch or break up the company and turn them loose to sink or swim with little money in a country where none of them belonged.

  Barker had been a godsend. On his first day at Hat Creek he had met Barker, a strapping big man in a buffalo coat that made him seem even bigger. He had an easygoing, friendly way about him that made a man overlook the sharpness of his eyes. Barker heard Healy inquiring the route to Alder Gulch and Virginia City, in Montana.

  “Been over that trail,” he’d said. “Nothing easy about it.”

  “Could we make it? With the vans?”

  Barker had glanced through the window at the vans. “Take money. You’d have to take off the wheels and put ’em on sled runners. And you’d have to have drivers who know this country in the winter.”

  Healy ordered drinks. “We’ve got to make the trip,” he said, “and we can pay.”

  Barker glanced at the sign on the vans and his voice changed subtly. “Oh? You’re Tom Healy? Of the Healy Shows?”

  Healy had paid for the drinks with a gold piece.

  “If you’re serious,” Barker told him, “I can furnish the drivers.”

  Nobody else offered any comment. One rough-hewn old man got abruptly to his feet and, after a quick, hard stare at Barker, walked out.

  Barker knew the country and Barker could get the men. Out of insecurity and doubt came resolution, and the plans went forward. Barker would handle everything. “Just leave it to me,” he told them.

  Two drivers appeared. “Reliable,” Barker said. “They worked for me before.”

  Wycoff was a stolid Pole with a heavy-featured, stupid-looking face. He had big, coarse hands and a hard jaw. He was heavy-shouldered and powerful. Art Boyle was a slender man with quick, prying eyes that seemed always to hold some secret, cynical amusement of their own.

  Neither man impressed Healy, but Barker assured him he need not worry. Getting teamsters for a northern trip in winter was difficult, and these were good men.

  Healy hesitated to ask questions, fearing to show his own ignorance, and equally afraid he would hear something that would make it impossible for him to delude himself any longer. Alder Gulch was the only way out.

  And why should Barker say it could be done if it was impossible? He knew the country and was willing to go. Nonetheless, a rankling doubt remained. He stared gloomily at the snow-covered window and listened to the rising wind.

  In the outer room there was boisterous laughter. He listened, feeling doubt uneasy within him. Only the quiet courage of the girl at his side gave him strength. For the first time he began to appreciate his helplessness here, so far from the familiar lights and sounds of cities. He had never seen a map of Wyoming. He had only the vaguest idea of the location of Alder Gulch. He was a fool—a simple-minded, utterly ridiculous…

  “I wish he was going with us.”

  He knew to whom she referred, and the same thought had occurred to him. “Barker doesn’t like him.”

  “I know. He’s a killer. Maybe an outlaw.”

  Wind whined under the eaves. Healy got to his feet and walked to the window. “He wouldn’t come, anyway.”

  “No, I guess not. And trouble follows men like that.” Janice came to him. “Don’t worry, Tom. We’ll make it.”

  Williams appeared in the door, drying his hands on a bar towel. “Some of the boys…” he began. Then he stopped. “Well, we were wondering if you folks would put on a show. We’re all snowed in, like. The boys would pay. Take up a collection.”

  Healy hesitated. Why not? They could not leave before morning, anyway.

  “We’d pay,” Williams insisted. “They suggested it.”

  “You’ll have to clear one end of the room,” Healy said.

  He started for the door, glancing back at Janice. She was looking out the window, and looking past her, he could see a man crunching over the snow toward the barn. It was King Mabry.

  Tom Healy looked at Janice’s expression and then at Mabry. He had reached the barn and was opening the door, a big, powerful man who knew this country and who walked strongly down a way he chose. Healy felt a pang of jealousy.

  He pulled up short, considering that. Him? Jealous?

  With a curiously empty feeling in his stomach he stared at the glowing stove in the next room. He was in love.

  He was in love with Janice Ryan.

  Chapter 4

  HE STOOD ALONE on the outer edge of the crowd that watched the show, a tall, straight man with just a little slope to his shoulders from riding the long trails.

  He wore no gun in sight, but his thumbs were hooked in his belt and Janice had the feeling that the butt of a gun was just behind his hand. It would always be there.

  The light from the coal-oil lamp on the wall touched his face, turning his cheeks into hollows of darkness and his eyes into shadows. He still wore his hat, shoved back from his face. He looked what he was, hard, tough…and lonely.

  The thought came unbidden. He would always know loneliness. The mark of it was on him.

  He was a man of violence. No sort of man she would ever have met at home�
�and no sort of man for her to know. Yet from her childhood she had heard of such men.

  Watching from behind the edge of the blanket curtain, Janice remembered stories heard when she was a little girl, stories told by half-admiring men of duels and gun battles; but they had never known such a man as this, who walked in a lost world of his own creation.

  Yet King Mabry was not unlike her father. Stern like him, yet with quiet humor sleeping at the corners of his eyes.

  Maggie was out front now, holding them as she always held them with her tear-jerking monologues and her songs of lonely men. Her face was puffy under her too blonde hair, her voice hoarse from whisky and too many years on the boards, but she had them as not even Doc Guilford could get them. Because at heart all these men were sentimental.

  All?

  She looked again at King Mabry. Could a man be sentimental and kill eleven men?

  And what sort of man was he?

  The thought made her look for Benton, but he was nowhere in sight. Joe Noss stood near the door talking to Art Boyle. She thought the name, and then it registered in her consciousness and she looked again.

  Yes, it was Barker’s teamster. He stood very close to Noss, his eyes on the stage. But she knew he was listening to Noss.

  The sight made her vaguely uneasy, yet there was nothing unusual in two men talking together in these cramped quarters, where sooner or later everybody must rub elbows with everybody else.

  If Mabry was aware of their presence, he gave no indication. His concern seemed only with the show.

  Dodie Saxon came up behind her and Janice drew aside so the younger girl could stand in the opening.

  “Which one is King Mabry?” Dodie whispered.

  Janice indicated the man standing quietly against the wall.

  “He’s handsome.”

  “He’s a killer.”

  Janice spoke more sharply than she had intended. Dodie was too much interested in men, and this man was the wrong one in whom to be interested.

  Dodie shrugged a shapely shoulder. “So? This is Wyoming, not Boston. It’s different here.”

  “It’s still killing.” Janice turned sharply away. “You’re on next, Dodie.”

 

    Novel 1987 - The Haunted Mesa (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1987 - The Haunted Mesa (v5.0)The Haunted Mesa (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineThe Haunted Mesa (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)The Walking Drum (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineThe Walking Drum (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Fallon (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineFallon (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Golden Gunmen Read onlineGolden GunmenComstock Lode Read onlineComstock LodeThe Lonesome Gods (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineThe Lonesome Gods (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)No Traveller Returns (Lost Treasures) Read onlineNo Traveller Returns (Lost Treasures)Yondering: Stories Read onlineYondering: StoriesThe Strong Land Read onlineThe Strong LandReilly's Luck (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineReilly's Luck (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)The Man Called Noon (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineThe Man Called Noon (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Draw Straight Read onlineDraw StraightLast of the Breed (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineLast of the Breed (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Taggart (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineTaggart (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)The Hopalong Cassidy Novels 4-Book Bundle Read onlineThe Hopalong Cassidy Novels 4-Book BundleBowdrie_Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures Read onlineBowdrie_Louis L'Amour's Lost TreasuresReilly's Luck Read onlineReilly's LuckThe Ferguson Rifle (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineThe Ferguson Rifle (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Sacketts 00 - The Sackett Companion (v5.0) Read onlineSacketts 00 - The Sackett Companion (v5.0)The Chick Bowdrie Short Stories Bundle Read onlineThe Chick Bowdrie Short Stories BundleNovel 1974 - The Californios (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1974 - The Californios (v5.0)Collection 1983 - Bowdrie (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1983 - Bowdrie (v5.0)Novel 1984 - The Walking Drum (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1984 - The Walking Drum (v5.0)Over on the Dry Side Read onlineOver on the Dry SideThe Walking Drum Read onlineThe Walking DrumNovel 1963 - Catlow (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1963 - Catlow (v5.0)Borden Chantry Read onlineBorden ChantryCollection 1983 - Law Of The Desert Born (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1983 - Law Of The Desert Born (v5.0)Ghost Towns Read onlineGhost TownsJubal Sackett (1985) s-4 Read onlineJubal Sackett (1985) s-4Novel 1953 - Showdown At Yellow Butte Read onlineNovel 1953 - Showdown At Yellow ButteKilkenny 03 - Kilkenny (v5.0) Read onlineKilkenny 03 - Kilkenny (v5.0)Novel 1969 - The Empty Land (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1969 - The Empty Land (v5.0)Matagorda Read onlineMatagordaThe First Fast Draw Read onlineThe First Fast DrawNovel 1950 - Westward The Tide (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1950 - Westward The Tide (v5.0)Ride the Dark Trail s-18 Read onlineRide the Dark Trail s-18Novel 1963 - Fallon (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1963 - Fallon (v5.0)Novel 1964 - Kiowa Trail (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1964 - Kiowa Trail (v5.0)Kilkenny Read onlineKilkennyRiders of the Dawn Read onlineRiders of the DawnSackett (1961) s-9 Read onlineSackett (1961) s-9Fallon Read onlineFallonRide the River (1983) s-5 Read onlineRide the River (1983) s-5Mojave Crossing s-11 Read onlineMojave Crossing s-11Novel 1958 - Radigan (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1958 - Radigan (v5.0)The Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume Five Read onlineThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume FiveNovel 1953 - Showdown At Yellow Butte (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1953 - Showdown At Yellow Butte (v5.0)Collection 1980 - Yondering Read onlineCollection 1980 - YonderingNovel 1957 - Last Stand At Papago Wells (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1957 - Last Stand At Papago Wells (v5.0)North To The Rails Read onlineNorth To The RailsThe Kilkenny Series Bundle Read onlineThe Kilkenny Series BundleNovel 1972 - Callaghen (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1972 - Callaghen (v5.0)Novel 1970 - Reilly's Luck (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1970 - Reilly's Luck (v5.0)The Lonesome Gods Read onlineThe Lonesome GodsNovel 1963 - How The West Was Won (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1963 - How The West Was Won (v5.0)Collection 2001 - May There Be A Road (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 2001 - May There Be A Road (v5.0)Flint Read onlineFlintNovel 1968 - Chancy (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1968 - Chancy (v5.0)Volume 1: Unfinished Manuscripts, Mysterious Stories, and Lost Notes from One of the World's Most Popular Novelists Read onlineVolume 1: Unfinished Manuscripts, Mysterious Stories, and Lost Notes from One of the World's Most Popular NovelistsNovel 1962 - High Lonesome (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1962 - High Lonesome (v5.0)Fair Blows the Wind (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineFair Blows the Wind (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Lando s-8 Read onlineLando s-8The High Graders Read onlineThe High GradersCollection 1986 - Night Over The Solomons (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1986 - Night Over The Solomons (v5.0)The Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 3 Read onlineThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 3Collection 1980 - Yondering (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1980 - Yondering (v5.0)Showdown Read onlineShowdownThe Quick And The Dead Read onlineThe Quick And The DeadNovel 1968 - Down The Long Hills (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1968 - Down The Long Hills (v5.0)The Lonely Men s-14 Read onlineThe Lonely Men s-14Bowdrie (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineBowdrie (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Treasure Mountain s-17 Read onlineTreasure Mountain s-17Novel 1959 - Taggart (V5.0) Read onlineNovel 1959 - Taggart (V5.0)The Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 7 Read onlineThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 7Novel 1957 - The Tall Stranger (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1957 - The Tall Stranger (v5.0)Novel 1978 - The Proving Trail (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1978 - The Proving Trail (v5.0)Callaghen (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineCallaghen (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Sitka Read onlineSitkaCollection 1988 - Lonigan (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1988 - Lonigan (v5.0)The Californios Read onlineThe CaliforniosNovel 1966 - The Broken Gun (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1966 - The Broken Gun (v5.0)Bendigo Shafter (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineBendigo Shafter (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Novel 1979 - The Iron Marshall (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1979 - The Iron Marshall (v5.0)Novel 1957 - The Tall Stranger Read onlineNovel 1957 - The Tall StrangerNovel 1965 - The Key-Lock Man (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1965 - The Key-Lock Man (v5.0)Collection 1986 - Dutchman's Flat (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1986 - Dutchman's Flat (v5.0)Lonely On the Mountain s-19 Read onlineLonely On the Mountain s-19Sackett's Land Read onlineSackett's LandThe Man Called Noon Read onlineThe Man Called NoonHondo (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineHondo (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)The Lawless West Read onlineThe Lawless WestThe Warrior's Path (1980) s-3 Read onlineThe Warrior's Path (1980) s-3Novel 1956 - Silver Canyon (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1956 - Silver Canyon (v5.0)The Sky-Liners (1967) s-13 Read onlineThe Sky-Liners (1967) s-13Mustang Man s-15 Read onlineMustang Man s-15Novel 1971 - Tucker (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1971 - Tucker (v5.0)Off the Mangrove Coast (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineOff the Mangrove Coast (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Collection 2005 - Riding For The Brand (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 2005 - Riding For The Brand (v5.0)Collection 1986 - The Trail To Crazy Man (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1986 - The Trail To Crazy Man (v5.0)Silver Canyon Read onlineSilver CanyonThe Man from Battle Flat Read onlineThe Man from Battle FlatThe Daybreakers (1960) s-6 Read onlineThe Daybreakers (1960) s-6Kid Rodelo (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Read onlineKid Rodelo (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures)Milo Talon Read onlineMilo TalonNovel 1973 - The Man From Skibbereen (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1973 - The Man From Skibbereen (v5.0)Novel 1965 - The High Graders (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1965 - The High Graders (v5.0)The Sacket Brand (1965) s-12 Read onlineThe Sacket Brand (1965) s-12Rivers West Read onlineRivers WestNovel 1970 - The Man Called Noon (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1970 - The Man Called Noon (v5.0)Education of a Wandering Man Read onlineEducation of a Wandering ManThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 1 Read onlineThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 1Collection 1989 - Long Ride Home (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1989 - Long Ride Home (v5.0)Callaghen Read onlineCallaghenCollection 1999 - Beyond The Great Snow Mountains (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1999 - Beyond The Great Snow Mountains (v5.0)West of the Tularosa Read onlineWest of the TularosaEnd Of the Drive (1997) s-7 Read onlineEnd Of the Drive (1997) s-7Novel 1986 - Last Of The Breed (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1986 - Last Of The Breed (v5.0)Novel 1966 - Kilrone (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1966 - Kilrone (v5.0)Chancy Read onlineChancyDesert Death-Song Read onlineDesert Death-SongNovel 1959 - The First Fast Draw (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1959 - The First Fast Draw (v5.0)Kilkenny 02 - A Man Called Trent (v5.0) Read onlineKilkenny 02 - A Man Called Trent (v5.0)Lost Trails Read onlineLost TrailsNovel 1972 - Callaghen Read onlineNovel 1972 - CallaghenNovel 1966 - Kid Rodelo (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1966 - Kid Rodelo (v5.0)The Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 2 Read onlineThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume 2Collection 1983 - The Hills Of Homicide (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1983 - The Hills Of Homicide (v5.0)Novel 1969 - Conagher (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1969 - Conagher (v5.0)Radigan Read onlineRadiganHigh Lonesome Read onlineHigh LonesomeBendigo Shafter Read onlineBendigo ShafterNovel 1954 - Utah Blaine (As Jim Mayo) (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1954 - Utah Blaine (As Jim Mayo) (v5.0)Collection 1990 - Grub Line Rider (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1990 - Grub Line Rider (v5.0)Mistakes Can Kill You Read onlineMistakes Can Kill YouThe Iron Marshall Read onlineThe Iron MarshallNovel 1963 - Dark Canyon (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1963 - Dark Canyon (v5.0)Novel 1955 - Heller With A Gun (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1955 - Heller With A Gun (v5.0)Novel 1978 - Bendigo Shafter (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1978 - Bendigo Shafter (v5.0)Collection 1997 - End Of The Drive (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1997 - End Of The Drive (v5.0)Fair Blows the Wind Read onlineFair Blows the WindTalon & Chantry 07 - North To The Rails (v5.0) Read onlineTalon & Chantry 07 - North To The Rails (v5.0)The Trail to Crazy Man Read onlineThe Trail to Crazy ManTo the Far Blue Mountains (1976) s-2 Read onlineTo the Far Blue Mountains (1976) s-2Collection 1981 - Buckskin Run (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1981 - Buckskin Run (v5.0)Collection 2008 - Big Medicine (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 2008 - Big Medicine (v5.0)Collection 2003 - From The Listening Hills (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 2003 - From The Listening Hills (v5.0)Collection 1995 - Valley Of The Sun (v5.0) Read onlineCollection 1995 - Valley Of The Sun (v5.0)Glory Riders Read onlineGlory RidersGuns of the Timberlands Read onlineGuns of the TimberlandsThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume Four Read onlineThe Collected Short Stories of Louis L'Amour, Volume FourNovel 1968 - Brionne (v5.0) Read onlineNovel 1968 - Brionne (v5.0)