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Joseph West - The Man From Nowhere: A Ralph Compton Novel

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    The Man From Nowhere: A Ralph Compton Novel
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    2009
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    9781101056967
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The Man From Nowhere: A Ralph Compton Novel: summary, description and annotation

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When the Apache surrounded the settlement of Alma, New Mexico, the respectable townsfolk began hanging those who werent. Town drunk Eddie Oates was lucky to be banished from the town, left for the Apaches to kill. Oates never thought he was a survivor. But now, hes discovered a reason to go on--and hes about to unleash a raging fury upon those who would prey on the helpless, the hopeless, and those who others think arent worth fighting for.

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Dogfight

Oates kicked out at the female coyote and the hard sole of his right foot took her full on the snout. The canine yipped in pain and backed off, snarling. The dog coyote, hearing his mates cry of hurt, was startled and he too bounded back a few steps.

The first round to Oates. But, wiser now, the coyotes attacked again.

This time both of them jumped on Oates, and he collapsed under their weight. He smelled the feral stench of the animals and felt their fangs rip into his back and thighs.

Desperately, Oates tried to sit up, striking out with his right arm. He hit the dog a couple of times, but his punches were weak and ineffective. Blood sprayed around him and dripped like rubies from the muzzles of the coyotes.

Then the flat statement of a rifle shot racketed through the hollow quiet of the evening. The dog coyote shrieked and fell away, landing on its back, its legs twitching.

Another shot. The female dropped without a sound, her deadweight suddenly heavy on Oates.

He felt the coyote being lifted from him and a bearded face with good-humored hazel eyes swam into his view. You all right, pardner? a mans voice asked. Oates tried to answer, but darkness took him and he knew no more.

THE IMMORTAL COWBOY This is respectfully dedicated to the American Cowboy - photo 1

THE IMMORTAL COWBOY

This is respectfully dedicated to the American Cowboy. His was the saga sparked by the turmoil that followed the Civil War, and the passing of more than a century has by no means diminished the flame.

True, the old days and the old ways are but treasured memories, and the old trails have grown dim with the ravages of time, but the spirit of the cowboy lives on.

In my travelsto Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, and ArizonaI always find something that reminds me of the Old West. While I am walking these plains and mountains for the first time, there is this feeling that a part of me is eternal, that I have known these old trails before. I believe it is the undying spirit of the frontier calling, allowing me, through the minds eye, to step back into time. What is the appeal of the Old West of the American frontier?

It has been epitomized by some as the dark and bloody period in American history. Its heroesCrockett, Bowie, Hickok, Earphave been reviled and criticized. Yet the Old West lives on, larger than life.

It has become a symbol of freedom, when there was always another mountain to climb and another river to cross; when a dispute between two men was settled not with expensive lawyers, but with fists, knives, or guns. Barbaric? Maybe. But some things never change. When the cowboy rode into the pages of American history, he left behind a legacy that lives within the hearts of us all.

Ralph Compton

Chapter 1

At ten oclock sharp on a fine spring evening, the Honorable Company of Concerned Citizens, City of Alma, New Mexico Territory, hanged the Hart brothers: Billy, Bobby and young Jimmy.

Next morning, at dawn, they came for Eddie Oates, the town drunk.

Let it be noted that at first the four Concerned Citizens present tried to wake the sleeping Oates almost gently. But when the little man continued to snore and slobber in his sleep, the boots went in.

Even after he woke, red-eyed and puking, kicks slammed into Oates ribs, none driven harder and by more rage than those of Cornelius Baxter, Almas only banker and richest citizen.

To even the most casual observer, the reason for Baxter s anger would not have been hard to find.

His expensive patent leather ankle boots, hand sewn by Rigby and Sons of New York, Boston and Denver, were splashed with the green bile that had erupted from Oates mouth.

God alone knows how it would have ended had not John L. Battles, proprietor of the Silver Nugget saloon, stuck out a pudgy hand and pushed Baxter away.

Let it be, he said. We didnt come here to kill the man.

It took the banker a while.

The others present saw the boiling fury in Baxter bubble away gradually, then settle to a low simmer. He lifted pale blue eyes to Battles, for the saloon keeper was a tall man, and said, quiet and even, John, dont ever lay a hand on me again or Ill kill you.

After twenty years on the frontier, Battles was not a man to take a step back from anyone. He said, Anytime you want to heel yourself, Baxter, we can have at it.

Baxters face was crimson, the mouth under his mustache a thin, hard line, white and pinched at the corners.

Tall, stringy Jeddah Piper, the town undertaker, saw the danger and decided to act. Here, this wont do, he said. The Apaches have us under the gun and were all on edge. Gentlemen, lets not start fighting among ourselves.

The fourth citizen present, Clem Hamilton, who owned a dry goods store, tossed in his two cents worth. Jeds right, he said. Are we going to fight over a drunken nothing like Eddie Oates when we got Mescaleros all around us?

Piper saw hesitation in the faces of Baxter and Battles and said quickly, Get him to his feet. Well take him outside, where he can join the rest of them.

Wait, Baxter said. He began to wipe his shoes on Oates shirt and pants. The little son of a bitch cant smell any worse.

John L. Battles laughed, and with that, the bad blood that had lain between him and the banker was forgotten.

Chapter 2

Eddie Oates blinked like an owl against the morning light.

His sides hurt from the kicking hed taken and there was the taste of blood in his mouth. He needed a drink but doubted there was one to be had.

When the Concerned Citizens had found him, hed been asleep in the alley where he had fallen into unconsciousness shortly after the hanging of the Hart brothers. Now, suspended between Baxter and Battles like a crucifixion victim, his bare toes dragging behind him in the dirt, he was manhandled into the street and tossed in the zinc horse trough outside the Silver Nugget.

Oates sank, then rose, sputtering, gasping like a just-landed trout. Somebody rammed his head under the surface again. He was down there, swallowing water for what seemed a long time, then was suddenly released. He floundered, kicking, into a sitting position and heard laughter.

First bath youve had in years, huh, Eddie boy? a man yelled.

Other voices rose, harsh, amused and merciless.

Why dont we just drown the little shit?

Swim for it, Eddie!

Dont piss in the trough, Eddie. My horse got to drink that stuff!

More laughter followed; then came the voice of John L. Battles. Thats enough, boys. Get him out of there and take him over to the gallows with the others.

Rough hands dragged Oates from the trough. The cool water had not sobered him, or so he believed. For the past seventeen years, since he was twelve years old, hed never been sober, so he had no clear remembrance of what it felt like.

Not being numb all the time, he recalled that. And the world hed known as a boy didnt spin around him so fast that he couldnt catch up and find a place for himself. That too he rememberedor thought he did. Maybe hed just dreamed that had been the way of it all those years ago.

Prodded by kicks to his butt, Oates was surrounded by a dozen grinning men and pushed, stumbling, toward the gallows.

The Hart brothers still hung there. Three long, lanky bodies swayed in the morning breeze, stinking of the vile stuff that had erupted from them and trickled down their legs as they kicked while being strangled in the rough embrace of the hemp.

Oates brown eyes lifted to the dead robbers; he vaguely remembered them.

He was not allowed to drink among men, but now and again hed been welcomed into the saloons to perform tricks for whiskeyusually Good Doggy, when he got down on all fours to bark and play fetch.

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