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William W. Johnstone - Thunder of Eagles (The Eagles, Book 13)

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William W. Johnstone Thunder of Eagles (The Eagles, Book 13)

Thunder of Eagles (The Eagles, Book 13): summary, description and annotation

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Higbee Colorado, population 147, is booming. A visionary named Garrison Wade is building a railroad to connect Higbee to the Santa Fe. But a family named Clinton has its own selfish reasons for making sure these bands of steel go nowhere - and theyve brought in a ruthless killer to derail Wades plan...Falcon MacCallister owes a debt to the would-be railroad man Wade - and has a score to settle with the Clintons hired gunman. But Falcon knows that Higbee is going to be torn to pieces; neighbours, families and lovers bitterly divided. For a man who has known war and peace, the fastest way to the end of a tragedy is straight through the blood and tears - behind the light of a blazing gun...

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T HUNDER OF E AGLES
T HUNDER OF E AGLES
William W. Johnstone with J. A. Johnstone

Picture 1

PINNACLE BOOKS

Kensington Publishing Corp.

www.kensingtonbooks.com

Contents
Chapter One

Jefferson Tyree lay on top of a flat rock, looking back along the trail over which they had just come. He saw the single rider unerringly following them.

Is he still there? Luke Bacca asked.

Yeah, hes still there, Tyree answered. Tyree was a short man, lean as rawhide, with a thin face and a hawklike nose.

Jefferson Tyree and Luke and John Bacca were on the run. Just over a week earlier, they had raided a ranch just outside MacCallister, Colorado. Waiting outside the house until sunup, they surprised the Poindexters at breakfast, killing Sam Poindexter and his sixteen-year-old-son, Mort. They also raped, then killed Poindexters wife, Edna.

They took particular pleasure in raping Poindexters fifteen-year-old daughter, Cindy, leaving her alive, though not through any act of compassion. They stabbed her, then rode off, leaving her lying in a pool of her own blood, thinking that she was dead.

Before they left the Poindexter ranch, they stole fifty head of prime beef and moved them up to the railhead at Platte Summit, where the cattle were sold at thirty dollars a head for shipment back East.

Whod you say that fella was thats trailin us? Luke asked.

His name is MacCallister. Falcon MacCallister, Tyree said.

Damn! John Bacca said, his face showing his fright. Are you sure its Falcon MacCallister?

Tyree got up from the rock, knocked the dust off his pants leg, then worked up a spit before he answered. Yeah, he said. Im sure.

Son of a bitch! Why did he get involved?

Who is Falcon MacCallister? Luke asked.

You mean you aint never heard of him? John asked.

No.

Well, thats cause you been in prison for the last ten years. But hes

Nobody, Tyree interrupted. He aint nobody.

The hell he aint nobody. They write books about him, is all, John Bacca replied. I dont think theyd be writin books about nobody.

They aint real books, Tyree said. Theyre dime novels. Hell, they make near bout all that stuff up.

You aint never had one wrote about you, have you? John challenged.

What are you, some kind of idiot? Tyree challenged. Why the hell would I want books wrote about me? I aint exactly in the kind of business where its good to have everbody know who you are.

Luke pointed back down the trail. This here MacCallister may be nobody, but Ill say this for the son of a bitch. Once he gets his teeth into you, he dont give up. Weve tried ever trick in the book to shake him off our tail and hes still there.

Jefferson Tyree knew who Falcon MacCallister was, but what he did not realize was that the Poindexters had lived very close to Falcon MacCallisters ranch, which meant that Falcon had considered them friends as well as neighbors. And though Falcon was not a lawman, nor a bounty hunter, hed taken a personal interest in this case. Having himself deputized, hed made it his personal mission to track down the perpetrators.

So, what are we goin to do about that son of a bitch? We cant shake him off, John Bacca growled.

Were goin to kill im, Tyree said.

All right. How are we goin to do that?

Tyree looked around. Were goin to ambush him, he said. He pointed to a draw that cut through the mountain range. Lets go up through this draw. Its got two or three good places in there where we can hide. All we got to do is let him follow us in there, then ambush him.

What if he dont come in? John asked.

Hes after us, aint he? He has to come in, or figure we went on out the other side.

Tyrees right, Luke said. Seems to me like the thing to do is just kill this MacCallister fella and get it over with.

He aint goin to be that easy to kill, John protested.

You think if we shoot him, the bullets will just bounce off of him? Tyree asked.

Well, no, but

No, but nothin, Tyree said, interrupting John. Come on, I know a perfect spot.

The man called Falcon MacCallister stopped at the mouth of the canyon to take a drink from his canteen as he studied the terrain. Falcon had a weathered face and hair the color of dried oak. But it was his eyes that people noticed. Deeply lined from hard years, they opened onto a soul that was stoked by experiences that would fill the lifetimes of three men.

Falcon MacCallister had been here before, and he knew this would be a perfect spot to set up an ambush. The question was, had the outlaws done that, or had they gone on through?

Pulling his long gun out of the saddle holster, Falcon started walking into the canyon, leading his horse. The horses hooves fell sharply on the stone floor and echoed loudly back from the canyon walls. The canyon made a forty-five-degree turn to the left just in front of him, so he stopped. Right before he got to the turn, he slapped his horse on the rump and sent it on through.

The canyon exploded with the sound of gunfire as the outlaws opened up on what they thought would be their pursuer. Instead, their bullets whizzed harmlessly over the empty saddle of the riderless horse, raised sparks as they hit the rocky ground, then sped off into empty space, echoing and reechoing in a cacophony of whines and shrieks.

Falcon chuckled. I guess that answers my question, he said aloud.

From his position just around the corner from the turn, Falcon located two of his ambushers. They were about a third of the way up the north wall of the canyon, squeezed in between the wall itself and a rock outcropping that provided them with a natural cover. Or, so they thought.

The firing stopped and, after a few seconds of dying echoes, the canyon grew silent.

Tyree, do you see him? Where the hell is he? one of the ambushers yelled, and Falcon could hear the last two words repeated in echo down through the canyon. is he, is he, is he?

Falcon studied the rock face of the wall just behind the spot where he had located two of them; then he began firing. His rifle boomed loudly, the thunder of the detonating cartridges picking up resonance through the canyon and doubling and redoubling in intensity. Falcon wasnt even trying to aim at the two men, but was instead taking advantage of the position in which they had placed themselves. He fired several rounds, knowing that the bullets were splattering against the rock wall behind the two men, fragmenting into whizzing, flying missiles. It had the effect that he wanted, because the two men who had thought they had the perfect cover were exposed. Yelling and cursing, they began firing back at Falcon.

It took but two more shots from Falcon to silence both of them.

For a long moment, the canyon was in silence.

Luke, John? Tyree called.

Theyre dead, Tyree, Falcon replied. Both of them.

Tyrees voice had come from the other side of the narrow draw, halfway up on the opposite wall.

How do you know theyre dead?

Because I killed them, Falcon said. Just like I aim to kill you.

The hell you say, Tyree replied.

Falcon changed positions, then searched the opposite canyon wall. There was silence for a long time. Then, as Falcon knew he would, Tyree popped up to have a look around.

Tyree, Falcon shouted. And the echo repeated the names. Tyree, Tyree, Tyree.

What do you want? want, want, want?

I want you to throw your gun down and give yourself up, Falcon said.

Why should I do that?

For his answer, Falcon raised his rifle and shot at the wall just behind Tyree, creating the same effect he had with Luke and John. The only difference was that hed shot only one round, but hed placed it accurately enough to give a demonstration of what he could do.

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