- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
From Spur Award-winning author Charles G. West comes a blistering tale of the American West, where guns are the law, good men are outnumbered—and sudden death is a way of life . . .
MASSACRE IN MONTANA
Raised among the Blackfoot, John Hawk is a valuable asset to the US Army. As a military scout at Fort Ellis, he is able to cross the line between two worlds—and help keep the peace. But when he disobeys a direct order from his commander, Hawk is immediately dismissed from his post.
That was the army’s first mistake.
The second was losing track of a small mule train en route to Helena. At the request of his former lieutenant, Hawk leaves his cabin on the Boulder River to help find the missing party. The mule train, it appears, was ambushed by a savage gang of outlaws. Most of the travelers were murdered. Only a few survived to tell the tale. And now it’s up to Hawk to stalk the killers across the lawless Montana territory—alone. No backup. No calvary. No mercy . . .
Release date: July 28, 2020
Publisher: Kensington
Print pages: 304
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Author updates
Montana Territory
Charles G. West
Hawk wasn’t enthusiastic about riding scout for these patrols, and Lieutenant Meade knew it, so he was surprised that Meade had assigned him to scout on this one. Meade was commander of all scouts, so he could pick anyone he wanted. He and Hawk had already established a condition of mutual dislike that had resulted in Meade being openly opposed to working with the tall scout with the hawk’s feather stuck in his hatband. They had had a couple of disagreements in the past, the last of which took place about twenty miles south of where Hawk presently stood. The incident came to mind now. It occurred at the Big Timber Hog Ranch when Hawk had tracked three outlaws to that compound on the Yellowstone River. The soldiers searched the cluster of small houses next to the main saloon but found no trace of the outlaws. Meade ordered the patrol back to Fort Ellis over Hawk’s argument that the three outlaws were there. Meade informed him that he had done a poor job of tracking and the patrol’s mission was impossible to complete. Hawk, in turn, informed the lieutenant that he knew damn well the three outlaws were in the compound, and he was just too anxious to call it quits and go home. Recalling it now got Hawk’s dander up. The fact that it was later found that he had been right was of no solace. In view of all this, he had to again wonder why Meade had assigned him to a patrol he was commanding. His thoughts on the matter were distracted then when he saw Ben Mullins emerge from the screen of trees beside the creek. The patrol was not far behind.
Sitting tall and erect in the saddle, as if on parade, Lieutenant Harvey Meade led his patrol into the clearing where Hawk waited. “Like you figured,” Ben commented when he pulled his horse up beside Rascal. He stepped down while Meade gave his men the order to dismount. “One bunch of poor-devil Injuns dropped down to get some fresh steaks,” Ben continued. “Where you reckon they’re headin’?”
“Yes, Hawk,” Lieutenant Meade interrupted. “Where do you think they’re driving those cattle?”
“Like I told you from the start,” Hawk answered, “they ain’t drivin’ any cattle. There ain’t any tracks of anymore cattle.” He nodded toward the ashes. “You’re lookin’ at the cow they stole, and it ’pears like they ate a good bit of it right here. To answer your question, though, it looks to me like they headed toward the Crazy Mountains with what they’ve got left.”
Meade considered that for a few moments before commenting, “I suppose that could be, or it could be a war party that just happened to stop here to eat before they swung south to raid again.”
Hawk shrugged. “It could be,” he said, “but it ain’t. They ain’t lookin’ to raid nobody. They ain’t in any shape to raid anybody. They’re just hungry, and there ain’t no more buffalo to hunt, thanks to us.”
“If they’re hungry, they should report to the reservation,” Meade snapped. “It’s our job to drive them there, if they don’t go willingly.”
“That’s one way of lookin’ at it,” Hawk allowed. “But it ain’t always turnin’ out for ’em like that. Judgin’ by what’s happened to some of their brothers, the reservation just gives them a place to sit around while they starve to death.”
Meade fixed on him with an expression of disgust. “Sometimes I forget your love for your Blackfoot friends. I was willing to give you the opportunity to demonstrate your loyalty to the people who pay your salary as a scout. But I can plainly see that your loyalty continues to ride with the Indians. In view of that, I’m telling you, as of this instant, you are no longer employed by the U.S. Army.” He waited for Hawk’s reaction, half expecting to have to have him restrained.
Hawk didn’t say anything for a long moment. He was not really surprised, but somewhat stunned by the incredibly simple excuse to fire him. He had known for a long time that it was Meade’s desire to fire him. But because of Hawk’s popularity with all the other officers, it had been difficult for him to find good reason. When Hawk finally responded, it was to say, “Well, you’re the boss. I figured you’d come up with something sooner or later.” He turned to Ben Mullins, who appeared to be more in shock than Hawk was. “There are tracks on the other side of the creek where they headed back west toward the Crazy Mountains. They’ll most likely give you a good time tryin’ to find ’em up in those mountains.” With that, he turned, took Rascal’s reins, and led the big buckskin gelding toward the rear of the column, exchanging nods of good luck with several of the soldiers as he passed. Behind him, he heard Meade giving orders to rest the horses. Rascal deserved a rest as well, so to avoid any further conflict with the lieutenant, he walked a few dozen yards upstream before letting his horse go to water.
Hawk’s firing caused an awkward silence among the troopers. John Hawk had proven himself the most capable scout at Fort Ellis in the estimation of every soldier who had ever ridden with him. That opinion was shared by most of the other scouts who rode out of Fort Ellis. Soon the silence was breached by several whispered discussions about the unexpected firing, as several small fires were built to boil coffee. Off in his exile, Hawk decided a cup of coffee would taste pretty good right then as well. He gathered some dead limbs and soon had a fire going. He was down by the creek filling his coffeepot when he heard Ben Mullins behind him. “Put enough water in it for me.”
Hawk looked over his shoulder and smiled. “All right, I’ll fill it up, but ain’t you worried the lieutenant will see you drinkin’ coffee with me?”
“Well, he didn’t order me not to,” Ben said, “and me and you share a campfire most of the time, anyway.” He shrugged. “I don’t know, maybe he’ll fire me, too. Then he can scout for himself.” He picked up a few sticks for the fire on his way back with Hawk and the coffeepot. Getting serious then, he said, “Damn, Hawk, that was a raw deal that son of a bitch just gave you. What the hell did you do to deserve that?”
“I don’t know, Ben. Some folks just have a natural dislike for other folks. Meade and I ain’t ever got along real good.” He paused to think about it. “And there was that time on the Yellowstone when I told him he was a damn fool for givin’ up on a patrol.” The thought of that brought a chuckle from him. “Meade don’t take criticism too well.”
Ben shook his head, still finding it hard to believe. “Can he fire you from your job like that? Without goin’ through Major Brisbin or anybody?”
“I reckon so,” Hawk said, placing the coffeepot on the edge of the fire, so it wouldn’t boil too fast. “He’s in command of all the scouts at Fort Ellis, so you’d best mind your p’s and q’s when you ride with him.”
“Maybe you can still scout at one of the other forts,” Ben suggested, genuinely worried for Hawk.
“Maybe I could,” Hawk allowed, “but I ain’t sure I even want to. I might just decide to give up scoutin’ for a livin’.”
“And do what?” Ben scoffed, thinking Hawk was born to be a scout.
“I don’t know, rob banks, I reckon.” He appreciated Ben’s concern over his loss of a job, but he was not greatly upset about it. He’d find something else to do—he always had.
When the horses were rested, the fires were put out, and the troopers were ordered to mount up. Hawk stood upstream and watched them move out as they crossed the creek and started toward the Crazy Mountains. He hoped that Ben would point out to the stubborn lieutenant that there were no tracks to support the rancher’s claims that the Indians were driving a sizable portion of his herd away. He gave a little whistle, and the buckskin came up from the edge of the creek at once. Hawk climbed on board, already thinking about some things he hadn’t gotten around to doing back at his cabin on the Boulder River. He would have time to replace some of the mud chinking on his stone chimney now that he was a free man. And he would need to do some hunting to make sure he had enough meat smoke-cured. First, however, he would have to return to Fort Ellis to get his packhorse and pick up the possibles he kept in one of the stables there. It was a day and a halfback to Fort Ellis. Rascal could make it in a day if he had to, but now, with all the time in the world at Hawk’s disposal, there was no need to push the buckskin.
As he rode, moving comfortably with Rascal’s easy rhythm, he thought about the patrol he had just left, and it occurred to him that he was relieved to have been fired. Old Walking Owl and his people had long been friends of his, and he wasn’t really comfortable leading a patrol to capture him. In fact, he sincerely hoped the old chief successfully escaped into the mountains. Ben Mullins was a good scout, but Walking Owl was a pretty shrewd old bird, and he had been avoiding army patrols for quite some time. Hawk was glad to be relieved of the task of finding the small village of Blackfeet, because he was confident that he could have tracked them down. Unlike Ben, he had lived with the Crow and the Blackfeet. He knew how they thought. He also suspected he knew Lieutenant Meade’s lack of determination. And if Walking Owl could manage to stay ahead of the cavalry patrol, he thought there was a good chance Meade would call it quits. It had been Hawk’s experience that Meade wasn’t comfortable when he reached the exhaustion of the rations drawn for an estimated number of days and would recall the patrol. So, with the chance of that possibility in mind, Hawk headed southwest, intending to strike the Yellowstone west of Big Timber and follow it in to Fort Ellis.
Over 150 miles northwest of Hawk’s position as he rode toward the Yellowstone River, an important meeting was taking place near the Missouri River at the farmhouse of Donald Lewis. Lewis, a quiet young man, was the pastor of a small religious community of the Society of Friends. The meeting today was not the usual weekly meeting for worship, as they called their church service. This meeting was called to discuss the final plans for the entire church to leave their farms and homes in this uncivilized territory downriver from Fort Benton. Just two nights before, Brother William Boston’s farm had been struck by the same raiders who had struck several of the other farms, running off stock and destroying gardens, even setting fires in some of the outbuildings. The little group of Friends had decided to migrate to more peaceful lands close to Helena, land enough to parcel off tracts for all of the seven families who had decided to go. A recent convert to the society, Brother David Booth had been instrumental in locating the new land near Helena and had volunteered to lead the party west along the Mullan Road. Everything the Friends owned, primarily their farms, but everything else other than their basic possessions, had been sold, the money from which would be used to buy what they needed in their new home. There had been some objections to selling their wagons, but Brother Booth had persuaded them to go by mule train and leave the cumbersome wagons behind. That way, he said, they could get to Helena much quicker with fewer stops for rest.
It had taken some time, and quite a few Indian raids, to persuade some of the Friends that this exodus was a sensible thing to do. But the promise of a nonviolent land at a very attractive price was enough to finally bring everyone around. Brother Lewis was convinced that David Booth had been sent to help them as a result of their fervent prayers. Though not a man of violence, he was obviously a strong man, and he was very familiar with the land they would buy near Helena. One of the purposes of this meeting tonight was to announce it was time to start out to their new homes. A general sum of cash had been accumulated through the sales of everyone’s property, enough to buy a tract of land large enough to accommodate every family, with enough left over to build a meetinghouse. It was time to go. As was their custom, at the end of the meeting there was a period of quiet contemplation, during which an occasional member voiced an inspirational thought that had come to him. On this night, all of those who saw fit to share their thoughts spoke in favor of going. And everyone agreed, all signs pointed toward a new beginning in the territory Brother Booth had suggested.
Half a day’s ride found Hawk at the Yellowstone, where he turned Rascal to the west. Riding about three miles to a spot where the river bowed around a rocky area, he left the road to continue straight ahead. Hawk had camped there before and found that, once past the rocky crags, there was a grassy clearing in the trees that lined the river and provided a secluded campsite over a hundred yards from the road. After pulling Rascal’s saddle off, he released the buckskin to go to the water, then he gathered some limbs to start a fire. With jerky, bacon, and hardtack enough to last him for a ten-day patrol, there was no shortage of food.
So, when he got his fire going, he went to the edge of the river to fill his coffeepot. “What are you snortin’ about?” he asked Rascal when he walked down the bank where the buckskin was drinking. The horse issued a few inquisitive whinnies as Hawk walked past him to fill his pot upstream from the spot where Rascal was stirring up the water. The horse whinnied again, causing him to stop and take a good look around him before deciding Rascal must have seen a muskrat or something. Thinking it was nothing, Hawk squatted on his heels and reached out to fill his coffeepot. It was then that he discovered what Rascal had been trying to tell him. Kneeling close to the ground, he could see a small moccasin under the low-hanging branches of a large chokecherry bush. He was surprised but gave no sign of having seen whoever was hiding in the bushes. If it was an ambush, he figured he’d be dead by now, so he continued filling his coffeepot. When it was full, he stood up and said, “I’m fixin’ to have me a cup of coffee and something to eat here in a few minutes. If you want some, you’ll have to come outta that bush to get it.”
There was no response from the owner of the moccasin, even though it was drawn quickly back when Hawk spoke. Judging by the size of the foot, he figured it to belong to either a young boy or a woman. From the glimpse he got of the beaded design on the moccasin before it was suddenly drawn back in the bushes, he guessed it to be Crow. “Suit yourself,” he said, after another few moments with no response. “I’ve got an extra cup and some food to cook. If you change your mind, come on out.” He turned and walked back toward his fire, which was burning nicely now.
It occurred to him that he should have spoken in the Crow tongue. He was about to do that, but he heard the rustle of bushes behind him, so he stopped and waited. A young Indian woman emerged, still trying to free herself from the chokecherry branches that held on to her. Her dress was wet. When she looked up to see him watching her efforts, she stopped as if she thought she might have made the wrong decision to come out of her hiding place. “Come on,” he said, “and you can help me cook some of this meat.” Then he turned his back on her again and continued toward his fire. Still undecided, she paused a few moments more, then decided to follow the strange white man. He was tall, with broad shoulders, and wearing a buckskin shirt and a flat-crowned hat with a feather stuck in the band. She wondered if he might be the white man her tribesmen called Hawk. If he was, he was a friend to the Crow. Even if he was not that man, he seemed to have no evil intent toward her, so she decided to follow him.
She walked up to within ten feet of the fire, where he busied himself situating his coffeepot in the flames. She stopped then to ask a question. “Are you the white man they call Hawk?”
“Yes, I’m Hawk,” he answered. “What is your name?”
“My name is Winter Flower,” she replied.
“Crow?” Hawk asked, and she nodded vigorously. “Well, Winter Flower, why are you here in this place? Are you alone?” She said that she was alone and that she was trying to get back to her family on the Crow Reservation. “On the Stillwater River?” Hawk asked.
She nodded vigorously again and began to explain her presence there on the Yellowstone. Soon the story poured out of her. When she and her younger sister left their father’s cabin to dig up wild turnips, they were accosted by two white men on horseback. She recognized the two men as evil men who came to the reservation to sell whiskey to the young men of her village. “One of them asked me if I wanted to go with him,” she said. “When I said no, he tried to grab me, but my sister and I ran. He ran me down on his horse and knocked me to the ground. Then he tied me up. The man who took me asked his friend if he wanted my sister and he said ‘No, she is too young.’ They didn’t tie her up, and I was afraid they were going to shoot her, so I told her to run to tell our father what had happened to me. The man who held me tried to grab her, but she was too quick, and she ran into the forest. The other man was still on his horse, but he didn’t try to run her down. He shot at her, instead, but he missed her. Morning Sky can run very fast, and the man’s horse would not hold still, so he missed when he shot at her again.”
“So, she got away,” Hawk said, and Winter Flower nodded. “But you got away, too. It looks like you were in the river.”
“Yes, they drank much whiskey and got sleepy. They didn’t tie me very good, so I got away while they slept. They have been looking for me since this morning, and I think if they find me, they will kill me. The one called Luke said that he would kill me if I tried to run away. So, I slipped out of their camp and crossed the river, hoping they would not follow me. But they must have seen footprints where I went into the river because I heard them on the other side behind me. So, I crossed back to this side and found a place to hide.”
Based on what she had just told him, Hawk had a clear picture of what she had been through. He had no idea where the two men might be now, on this side of the river, or the other, how far behind her they might be, or how strong their determination to find her was. Without knowing any of this, it was difficult to decide what to do. So, he decided to do nothing. “You’ll have to trust me,” he told her. “I’ll take you home to your village, but first, we’ll stay right here and see if they figured out where you went. I’ve got a blanket in my bedroll. You can go back in the bushes there and get out of that wet buckskin dress and leggings and we’ll dry ’em out by the fire. I’ll keep watch while you change. Then you can drink some of this coffee to warm you up a little.” She looked at him as if astonished. He guessed that she expected him to quickly pack up his things and gallop away on his horse with her behind him. “Trust me,” he repeated. “I promise I won’t let them take you, if they find us.”
Feeling that he might not understand how dangerous the two men were, she was not sure if he was making the right decision or if maybe he was with them. But at this point, her options were limited, so she decided to trust the man called Hawk. From what she had heard in her village, Hawk was a man to be trusted. She nodded obediently when he handed her his blanket, then took it and went behind the closest patch of bushes from the fire. “Whatever you want,” she answered when he asked if she wanted deer meat or bacon.
“We’ll have some deer jerky,” he announced. Then thinking he had plenty of provisions, he said, “And some bacon, too.” He doubted that she had been given anything to eat by the two men who had captured her.
“Luke!” Bud Jenkins yelled. “Over here!” He stepped down from the saddle to take a closer look, then he waited for his partner to catch up to him. They had found the girl’s tracks leading into the water, so they had crossed over and found her tracks where she came out on that side. But she had been more careful from that point on. When Luke Ivey pulled his horse up beside his partner’s, Bud pointed to a broken branch between two berry bushes growing on the edge of a low bluff. “That’s what she did,” he said, looking over the low bluff at the water below. “She pushed through this here bush and jumped in the river, thought we wouldn’t see no tracks, so we wouldn’t know she went back across the river. She’s smart, but she ain’t as smart as me and you, right, Luke?”
“I ’spect not,” Luke said. “Come on.” He wheeled his horse and loped past the bluff to a point where the bank was not so steep and entered the water there. When Bud caught up to him on the other side, he said, “You look upstream, I’ll look downstream. We oughta find some tracks where she came out.” As he expected, it wasn’t long before he discovered Winter Flower’s tracks where she had come out of the water. “Down here, Bud,” he called out, and waited for him. When he caught up to him, Luke chuckled and pointed to the footprints coming out of the river. “Looks like she tried to brush her tracks out with a branch or somethin’. I reckon she was in too big a hurry to do a good job. Let’s see which way she ran.”
They scouted the riverbank for only a short while before finding a single footprint heading downstream. “She can’t be far,” Bud speculated. “She mighta found her a place to hole up and hide. Best keep a sharp eye.” They went on foot,. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...