THOSE EYES. THEY’D SEEN HIS FATHER
TORTURED AND A DOZEN OTHER MEN DIE.
NOW THEY WERE LOOKING TO KILL EVERY
MAN WHO CALLED HIMSELF “RANCHER.”
A BOY WHO SEES HIS PA DIE LIKE AN ANIMAL
BECOMES A MAN WHO KILLS LIKE ONE.
His father's "crime" was building a home in a green Oregon valley. His father's killers were ranchers who believed their greed and guns gave them a lease on every man's land—and every man's life.
As Cassidy grew older, he grew quieter and meaner. He was learning the killing skills of a gunman and he was waiting. Waiting for the day he could kill enough ranchers to ease his hatred. But for a hatred as big as Cassidy’s, “enough” meant the whole rotten breed.
Then he got his chance. Ranchers were hiring guns for a range war. They wanted every settler swinging from a tree. Cassidy knew if the settlers had one gun fast enough and a leader who hated enough, it wouldn't be the settlers hanging in the Wyoming wind.
Three-time Winner of the Spur Award
Wayne D. Overholser
Author of "Law Man" and "The Violent Land."
With millions of his books sold, he is acclaimed coast-to-coast and
around the world as one of the greatest Western writers.
eBook On Sale Now