THIS WAS A DEBT HE'D SETTLE HIS OWN WAY—WITH THE BUSINESS END OF A .44
What Mark Morgan learned about his past made him set his sights for Broken Bow. He'd be looking for the Burkes. Twenty years before, they'd gunned his father down, seized his land, and built an empire of their own.
Morgan knew he was headed for a showdown. The Burke empire was still intact, but there was also the Hall gang—and the Dorn boys. Mean as weasels, the Dorns would skin a dog just to hear it howl. Morgan would have to be fast, very fast—or all he'd get for his trouble would be a quick trip to hell.
One of America's greatest Western storytellers, Wayne D. Overholser was born September 4, 1906 in Pomeroy, Washington and died August 27, 1996 in Boulder, Colorado. Overholser won the 1953 First Spur Award for best novel for Lawman using the pseudonym Lee Leighton. In 1955 he won the 1954 (second) Spur Award for The Violent Land. He also used the pseudonyms John S. Daniels, Dan J. Stevens and Joseph Wayne.
Learn more about the author on his website: www.waynedoverholser.