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Hanging Woman Creek
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Hanging Woman Creek Mass market paperbound - 1994

by Louis L'Amour

Pronto Pike had never been in a spot like this before. It began with a bitter standoff between a powerful rancher and a homesteading Irishman. It escalated into missing cattle, overlaid brands, and the arrival of a whole lot of folks itching to shoot one another. Now Pronto and his partner, Eddie Holt, are holed up in a cabin against a rugged Montana winter, waiting for their enemies to come. And when they do, the final battle will begin on Hanging Woman Creek.


Summary

Barnabus Pike is no gunfighter and not much of a street fighter. Eddie Holt is a black boxer in a white man's world. They've both taken their share of hard knocks. Now they're looking to survive a brutal winter in a remote Montana line shack, collect their pay, and settle down for good. Then they cross paths with a hardworking Irish immigrant and his beautiful, spirited sister, who've been burned off their land. It's a fight Pike and Holt don't want, don't need, and don't dare turn their backs on--especially when one of the perpetrators might be one of Pike's old friends. Hunted like animals across the frozen countryside, Pike and Holt will risk everything--including their reputations, their dreams--and their lives.From the Paperback edition.

From the publisher

Barnabus Pike is no gunfighter and not much of a street fighter. Eddie Holt is a black boxer in a white man's world. They've both taken their share of hard knocks. Now they're looking to survive a brutal winter in a remote Montana line shack, collect their pay, and settle down for good. Then they cross paths with a hardworking Irish immigrant and his beautiful, spirited sister, who've been burned off their land. It's a fight Pike and Holt don't want, don't need, and don't dare turn their backs on--especially when one of the perpetrators might be one of Pike's old friends. Hunted like animals across the frozen countryside, Pike and Holt will risk everything--including their reputations, their dreams--and their lives.

First line

HASH(0x10ac1960)

From the rear cover

BLOOD BROTHERS

Barnabas Pike is no gunfighter and not much of a street fighter. Eddie Holt is a black boxer in a white man's world. They've both taken their share of hard knocks. Now they're looking to survive a brutal winter in a remote Montana line shack, collect their pay, and settle down for good. Then they cross paths with a hardworking Irish immigrant and his beautiful, spirited sister, who've been burned off their land. It's a fight Pike and Holt don't want, don't need, and don't dare turn their backs on -- especially when one of the perpetrators might be one of Pike's old friends. Hunted like animals across the frozen countryside, Pike and Holt will risk everything -- including their reputations, their dreams...and their lives.

From the jacket flap

BLOOD BROTHERS

Barnabas Pike is no gunfighter and not much of a street fighter. Eddie Holt is a black boxer in a white man's world. They've both taken their share of hard knocks. Now they're looking to survive a brutal winter in a remote Montana line shack, collect their pay, and settle down for good. Then they cross paths with a hardworking Irish immigrant and his beautiful, spirited sister, who've been burned off their land. It's a fight Pike and Holt don't want, don't need, and don't dare turn their backs on -- especially when one of the perpetrators might be one of Pike's old friends. Hunted like animals across the frozen countryside, Pike and Holt will risk everything -- including their reputations, their dreams...and their lives.

Details

  • Title Hanging Woman Creek
  • Author Louis L'Amour
  • Binding Mass Market Paperbound
  • Edition Reissue
  • Pages 224
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Bantam, New York, NY, U.S.A.
  • Date August 1, 1994
  • ISBN 9780553247626 / 055324762X
  • Weight 0.23 lbs (0.10 kg)
  • Dimensions 7.59 x 3.8 x 0.59 in (19.28 x 9.65 x 1.50 cm)
  • Reading level 860
  • Themes
    • Cultural Region: Western U.S.
    • Topical: Country/Cowboy
  • Library of Congress subjects Western stories, Irish Americans
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

Excerpt

Chapter One


It was raining by the time we reached the railroad bridge. Evening was coming on, and the pelting rain was cold.

We dug in our heels and slid down the embankment to get under the bridge, where there was shelter of a sort. We built a fire, then huddled over it wondering what had become of our summer's wages.

Three of us were there, strangers until a few hours ago, now joined in the idea of going west. I'd be going home, or to as much of a home as I could lay claim to, being rootless as a tumbleweed, blowing on, resting here and there against this fence or that, but staying nowhere long. As for the others, I had no idea.

The black skeleton frame of the trestle danced in the wavering light from the fire, and from time to time the flames guttered and hissed as the wind blew down the draw, spattering us with cold drops from off the bridge.

Rustling around for wood reminded me of a winter I spent in Montana one time . . . at the Hartman & Liggett horse camp. No snow on the ground all winter long, only flurries from time to time, but cold. The ice froze rock-hard on the creek that year, and never broke until late spring.

Taking all in all, that had been a good winter. The cabin was snug against the wind, the pot-bellied stove gave off almost too much heat, and there were old magazines and a couple of books lying around.

When not in a mind to read, I'd sit and ponder. Whilst only a youngster I had taken to rebuilding places in my mind, places I'd lived in or seen, and when I'd nothing else to do I would put a place together, every single thing in place, then bit by bit I'd recall the folks I'd known there and what was said--what we talked about, and the like. It gave me something to do, but no great respect for the high art of conversational talk.

When a man sets out to recall in detail as I did, he sets more to working than he's figured on, for he never looks at anything after that without thinking how he'll recall it in time to come. It also sets a man to thinking about himself, and when a man stands himself up to ponder at, he can't always be pleased at what he sees.

No working cowhand is going to get very far unless he's a hand to notice. Punching cows takes you over a lot of rough country, and pretty soon you get to know every draw, hill, or clump of brush. You notice the game trails and the springs, and where the cattle go for shelter, and a lot more besides. A man has to notice or he won't get very far at punching cows.

Back there at the Hartman & Liggett horse camp there'd always been a brown crock of baked beans, and I'd never had my fill of beans. Sitting there beside that hateful fire under the trestle with night coming on, I kept thinking back to that horse camp and those crocks of beans. They would be tasty, mighty tasty, right now.

That big colored boy, he looked at me and he said, "You look like you been in a fight."

"Here an' there," I said.

"You fight with the mitts?"

"Nobody ever showed me. I just fight the best way I know how."

"I've boxed," he said.

He was a big boy, maybe a year or two older than my twenty-six years, standing around six feet, and built strong. And he had good hands.

That was the first thing he said about me. "You got good hands." He doubled up my fist. "Flat across the knuckles. Stands shock better. You could punch, I think."

Puttering around, I fetched back a few more sticks. A branch or two, a few old sticks and such-like--anything to keep the fire going.

"When did you say that freight was due?" Van Bokkelen asked.

"Ten-twelve, if it's on time."

Van Bokkelen was a big blond man, raw-boned and with an uncurried look--shaggy hair and a broad, tough face, yet not bad-looking. He had small, ice-blue eyes, no more warmth in them than in the head of a nail.

Twelve hours before no one of us had known the others. We'd come together in jail, in the drunk tank. Only I'd been pulled in for fighting, and it wasn't the first time. Seemed like I was always being arrested for fighting. Not that I knew much about it, but I just naturally liked to fight.

The wind blew cold. Rain spattered over us, and I hitched the collar of my cloth suit-coat higher around my ears and stretched my hands toward the flames.

We were sheltered in part by a bank of drift sand; on our left ran a small stream. The rain was falling harder now, the gusts were more frequent.

"You got a place?" Eddie Holt, the colored boy, asked. "I mean, you got a place to go to?"

"I got no place, and never had no place except west." With a gesture I indicated my sacked-up saddle. "My home's been in the middle of that."

"You got to have a horse."

"You think so, do you? Sometimes I figure I've packed that saddle damn near as far as I've rode horses."

"I'd be damned if I'd pack it," Van Bokkelen said. "I'd steal a horse before I'd do that."

"It's been done," I admitted, not wanting to argue principle with a stranger over a friendly fire.

We listened to the rain, and hopefully listened for a train whistle, but it was a long while until train time and I was hungry as a springtime bear fresh out of hibernation.

"Maybe I could get me a riding job," Eddie suggested.

"There was a colored boy rode for an outfit I worked for down New Mexico way. He was a good hand. Can you ride?"

"I never rode for no cow outfit, but I rode in a Buffalo Bill show." He grinned at me. "I was an Indian."

"You ain't the first," I said, and then added, "They tell me you really got to ride for Cody."

"I can ride. I can rope a little. But I never rode for no cow outfit."

"A man who can't live without working," Van Bokkelen scoffed, "is a fool. I'd see myself in hell before I'd eat dust behind a bunch of cows."

Well, I sat quiet, feeling the Old Ned coming up in me. All my life I've punched cows or worked hard for what little I'd had, and I didn't cotton to this stranger making me out a fool. Come to think of it, he didn't seem to be doing so well.

Eddie Holt, he sat quiet, too, and never said aye, yes, or no, and that seemed to be a good idea. This blond gent was a whole lot bigger than me, and my ribs and jaw were still sore from my last fight.

"You do what you're of a mind to," I said after a minute. "I'll punch cows."

"For thirty a month?" he sneered. "You boys come along with me and you'll be wearin' silk shirts and broadcloth. I could use two men like you."

Back up the line I heard a footstep splash in the water. "Somebody comin'," I said, and turned my head to look. When I looked back Van Bokkelen was gone.

"Sit close," Eddie warned. "It's the Law."

It sure was. There were four of them, four big men wearing slickers and armed with shotguns. They had spread out as they came up to the fire and they looked from one to the other of us.

"You!" The man I knew as the sheriff gestured with his shotgun. "Stand up!" He came up to me. "You armed?"

"I owned a Winchester one time," I said. "Never had no use for a hand gun."

He went over me with as smooth and knowing a frisk as ever I got, then did the same for Eddie.
"You haven't even got a knife? Or a razor?"

Eddie lifted his big hands. "Never had use for anything but these," he said.

The sheriff looked around at a narrow-faced, red-haired man. "Didn't you say there were three of them? You had three of them, you said."

"That's right. They didn't come together, but they left together. The black boy there, he was straight vag. Loafing around, no visible means of support. We gave him overnight in jail and a floater.

"The one in the broad hat, he got into a fight with Salty Breakenridge over to Ryan's. They busted up the place."

The sheriff looked at me with respect. "With Salty? I saw him. I figured it had to be a bigger man than you. What do you weigh, puncher?"

"Hundred and seventy," I said. "I never seen size makes too much difference." Then kind of grudgingly I had to acknowledge, "Although that there Salty . . . I'd say he was a fair hand."

The sheriff chuckled. "Yes, I'd say that. Nobody ever whipped him before."

He kicked the sack containing my gear. "What's in that?"

"Saddle. I'm headed west."

"How'd you come east? Trainload of cattle?"

"Uh-huh."

The quiet man with the gray eyes had said nothing up to then, but he had been looking around. "Where's the other one?" he asked. "The big blond man?"

"Ain't seen him," I said, "only once since we left jail. He was headin' for Ryan's and a drink." I grinned at them. "I figured I'd no business goin' back there."

They just looked at me, and then the quiet man said, "Don't cover for him, boys. He isn't worth it. That's a bad man."

"I wouldn't know," I said, "but you had him in jail--why didn't you keep him?"

The sheriff spat. "Because we didn't know who he was. Like damn fools we let him go. Then Fargo here, he got to thinking about an old reward poster. There's a reward on that man . . . dead or alive. He's wanted for murder."

Eddie, he never even looked at me.

"How much?" I said, for I was curious.

"Five thousand."
Hell, I never seen that much money in my whole lifetime. You don't see much, working for thirty a month and found. It was a lucky thing when I put forty saved dollars into a saddle.

Fargo looked at me. "What's your name, cowpuncher?"

"Pike," I said, "Barnabas Pike. Some places they call me Pronto."

"Pronto? Because you're fast?"

Me, I grinned at him. "Maybe because I swing too quick," I said. "I got a mean temper when I'm riled, but it ain't always that. I never had much fun . . . except fightin'."

"I can believe it," the sheriff said. "I saw Salty Breakenridge after."

They poked around a little, stared off down the stream bed, and then they started off. Only Fargo lingered. He kicked at the ground where Van Bokkelen had sat. "Five thousand," he said, "is a lot of money."

"Mister," I said, "I seen that gent in jail and I didn't cotton to him, but I never sold anybody out yet, and I ain't about to start."

"I thought you'd be that way," Fargo said quietly, "but don't tangle with that man. You leave him alone, cowpuncher. He's bad medicine."

"You been west," I said.

"A time or two," he said. "And maybe again."

Then he walked off after the others, and we said nothing, Eddie Holt and me, watching them go.

Finally Eddie picked up sticks and added them to the fire. "Murder," he said--"that's bad. I wonder who he killed?"

"He's full of mean," I said. "I could see it in him."

I looked at Eddie. "You goin' any place particular? If you ain't, come along with me. Two can starve as free as one, and if I get a ridin' job I'll speak for you."

"I take that kindly," he said.

The fire was warm; the wind had gone down and the rain had about stopped. There was still the sound of the big drops falling off the trestle.

A long time we sat quiet, and me wishing I could catch some shut-eye, but little time remained if we were going to catch that drag. I kept squatting there thinking about how I wished there'd be an empty on that train. I'd never liked riding freights unless there was an empty.

"We're partners, Pronto?" Eddie said.

"Why not?" I said, and then the train whistled far off.

We got up and Eddie kicked out the fire mostly, and then scooped water from the creek with an old can and poured it over what was left to put it out. Then we struggled up to the trestle together.

The train slowed up along here, with a good grade ahead, and a man could take it moving.

"Can you make it? Totin' that saddle?"

"You watch me."

We let a dozen cars go by, and then Eddie saw an open door as it passed a red light on a switch, and called out to me. He was a fast man, making the run easy and swinging up, and he caught my saddle as I swung it at the opening. Me, I caught the edge of the floor and hauled myself up, the ground slipping away behind me.

Long after Eddie had rolled up in some paper he found at one end of the car, I sat there by the open door, a-looking out at the country. Here and there we flipped past lonely farms with lights in the windows . . . one time there was a man walking to-ward the house with a lantern and a milk pail, and a dog barking at the train.

"Dirt farmers," I sneered. "Home guards!" But away down inside I wasn't sneering at all. That man was going into his own house to set down to his supper at his own table, with his kinfolk around him.

And me? All I had was a lonesome whistle sound as the train bent around a curve, the distant glow of the firebox, and somewhere down the line a flea-bitten cow pony, and a chuck wagon for home.

Chapter Two


When I woke up it was daylight and the train was bumping along at a good pace. Walking to the door, I could see patches of woods, a stream and miles of wheat fields slipping by.

Eddie sat up. "That right, what you said? We're partners?"

"Sure."

"Where all we goin'?"

"West . . . I dunno. Maybe Miles City . . . Medora. First place that looks likely."

"I could eat. Boy, but I could eat!"

"You an' me," I said.

"You been punchin' cows a long time?"

Media reviews

Citations

  • Ingram Paperback Advance, 06/01/1999, Page 40

About the author

Our foremost storyteller of the American West, Louis L'Amour has thrilled a nation by chronicling the adventures of the brave men and woman who settled the frontier. There are more than three hundred million copies of his books in print around the world.
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