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Lassiter 4: Gunfight at Ringo Junction
Lassiter 4: Gunfight at Ringo Junction
Lassiter 4: Gunfight at Ringo Junction
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Lassiter 4: Gunfight at Ringo Junction

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When Lassiter broke out of jail with the Irishman Pierce McCain, the next logical step seemed to be joining McCain’s half-breed army in their crazy rebellion. McCain needed guns, and Lassiter agreed to get them—for a price. There would be big money if he succeeded and a swing in a noose if he failed!

LanguageEnglish
PublisherPiccadilly
Release dateAug 31, 2015
ISBN9781310551550
Lassiter 4: Gunfight at Ringo Junction
Author

Peter McCurtin

Peter J. McCurtin was born in Ireland on 15 October 1929, and immigrated to America when he was in his early twenties. Records also confirm that, in 1958, McCurtin co-edited the short-lived (one issue) New York Review with William Atkins. By the early 1960s, he was co-owner of a bookstore in Ogunquit, Maine, and often spent his summers there.McCurtin's first book, Mafioso (1970) was nominated for the prestigious Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award, and filmed in 1973 as The Boss, with Henry Silva. More books in the same vein quickly followed, including Cosa Nostra (1971), Omerta (1972), The Syndicate (1972) and Escape From Devil's Island (1972). 1970 also saw the publication of his first "Carmody" western, Hangtown.Peter McCurtin died in New York on 27 January 1997. His westerns in particular are distinguished by unusual plots with neatly resolved conclusions, well-drawn secondary characters, regular bursts of action and tight, smooth writing. If you haven't already checked him out, you have quite a treat in store.McCurtin also wrote under the name of Jack Slade and Gene Curry.

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    Lassiter 4 - Peter McCurtin

    When Lassiter broke out of jail with the Irishman Pierce McCain, the next logical step seemed to be joining McCain’s half-breed army in their crazy rebellion. McCain needed guns, and Lassiter agreed to get them—for a price. There would be big money if he succeeded and a swing in a noose if he failed!

    GUNFIGHT AT RINGO JUNCTION

    LASSITER 4

    By Peter McCurtin writing as Jack Slade

    First Published by Tower Publications

    Copyright © 1970, 2015 by Peter McCurtin

    First Smashwords Edition: September 2015

    Names, characters and incidents in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead is purely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information or storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.

    This is a Piccadilly Publishing Book ~ Text © Piccadilly Publishing

    Series Editor: Ben Bridges

    Published by Arrangement with the Author’s Estate.

    Chapter One

    The cell was on the lower tier, about twenty feet from the guardroom. It was about seven feet high, four feet wide, and seven feet long. The walls were rough split granite, and the door was oak riveted and banded with steel.

    In the cell there was an iron bed frame, slatted with hoop iron. One side of it hung from two hooks in the wall, allowing it to be slung out of the way by day, to be let down on two legs by night. The bed-frame was six feet by thirty inches wide. When it was down, it took up most of the space in the cell.

    There was a flat tick-mattress filled with straw. The straw pillow was dirtier than the mattress. It was too cold for bedbugs. A thin dark-gray blanket that was once a lighter color stank of sweat and other things.

    Against the wall there was a stool-table twenty-eight inches high, thirty inches long, and sixteen inches wide. There was a one-quart tin dipper, an iron knife with no edge, a fork and spoon, a black junk bottle filled with cheap molasses. And a slop bucket.

    Lassiter had seen the inside of worse jails than this one in Trail, British Columbia. First thing in the morning a trusty came around and slipped a pan of greasy hash through the bread-hole in the bottom of the door. He threw a hunk of bread after the hash. Later he came back with a huge coffee pot with a long spout and half filled the tin dipper through the bars of the door.

    While the trusty, a dribble-mouth old Scotchman, was pouring the coffee, he advised Lassiter that the hash wasn’t part of the regular prison breakfast. He would have to pay for it. Lassiter said there was money belonging to him locked up in the warden’s office, along with his rifle and handgun.

    Sixty-three dollars to be exact, the trusty cackled, scattering spit. That should keep you in hash for awhile.

    Lassiter had a question. Suppose I don t want hash?

    I’d take it if I was you, the Scotchman said. The warden wants all his moneyed guests to take the hash. That don’t mean you have to eat it.

    Lassiter said greasy hash was his favorite food.

    Good man, the Scotchman praised him. Besides the hash there’s a few other comforts to be had long as the money holds out. The molasses is free but you’ll be wanting real sugar to sweeten the coffee. And some smoked fish of course. Maybe the warden’ll let you have an oil stove in your cell. Some of the other boys got stoves. Kind of expensive like everything else in here. But you got to remember, it ain’t all clear profit.

    The cell was as cold as a place for storing meat. Lassiter said a stove would be fine no matter what it cost.

    I can tell you’re not Scotch, the old man wheezed, laughing at his own joke. A Yank, ain’t you? What you in for anyhow?

    The way Lassiter spoke, only a Canuck would mistake him for a Yank. To Canucks all Americans were Yanks whether they were from Maine or Alabama. Lassiter grinned at what he was going to say.

    You won’t believe this, grampaw, but I don t know what I’m in for. A bunch of these militiamen jumped me as I was riding into town. That was last night. They said I was being arrested on suspicion. On suspicion of what I don’t rightly know.

    The old man looked uneasy. I guess you’ll find out soon enough. There’s big trouble up this way. Looks like you came along at the wrong time.

    The prisoners in the other cells started yelling for their coffee. Coffee sloshed inside the big tin pot as the old man turned away from Lassiter’s cell. He whispered to Lassiter before he left, If they take you to see a Colonel Cameron better wad some blanket inside your mouth. Keeps the teeth from breaking.

    While Lassiter was finishing the hash a steam whistle blew. There was the crashing sound of iron bed frames being hung up on cell walls. Two burly guards in blue uniforms and flat-topped caps stomped up and down the cellblock, unlocking doors, yelling like madmen.

    Come to attention, feet together, hands at the sides, face the door, the guards bellowed. No talking. On command step from cell, right turn, place right hand on shoulder of man in front of you. Mark time in position. Left, Right! Left, Right!

    Lassiter stood at attention inside the cell door. The door stayed closed. The turnkey on his side of the cellblock went down the line of cells. Heavy nail-shod boots crashed on stone. The other prisoners stepped out, turned right, and dressed off, as ordered. Another blast of the steam whistle sent them marching out of there.

    The turnkey bringing up the rear looked through the bars at Lassiter as the line of prisoners went past. The turnkey was a huge brute of a man with carrot-red hair choking his ears and nose. He looked like a prison guard anywhere. Lassiter didn’t try to speak to him. He would, as the old trusty said, find out soon enough.

    Welcome to British Columbia, he thought, sitting on the stool. But with that Montana posse behind him it was British Columbia or nothing but a rope. He had never been in Canada before, wasn’t wanted for anything in Canada. Still, the twenty or so militiamen who jumped him from both sides of the trail looked ready to kill him if he blinked too hard. At first he thought they might be acting on a telegraph message from the Montana authorities, but there was no mention of that. They didn’t even ask him his name.

    The cold caused an old wound in his leg to ache. To be on the safe side, in case the old trusty wasn’t just talking crazy, he pulled out his shirt and tore two long strips off the end, wadded them into his mouth, then put them in his shirt pocket. If this Colonel Cameron was as mean as the old man said, there wouldn’t be time to do it later.

    The old Scotchman came back after an hour and stuffed a prison suit of red and black through the food hole in the door. It was the god-awfullest convict suit Lassiter had ever seen. One leg of the pants was red, the other was black. The cap was round, without a peak, and it was half-red, half-black, like the rest of the duds.

    Don’t complain, the trusty advised. Just put it on. Then hand out your clothes.

    Lassiter didn’t waste time complaining. He just said he wouldn’t put it on. To go back and tell them they had overlooked one little formality. Such as he hadn’t been tried and convicted. That he hadn’t been charged with anything.

    The old man shrugged and went away. Lassiter expected a couple of turnkeys to show up with balled fists. Nothing happened.

    At noon, four hours later, the whistle blew and the prisoners came trooping back into their cells to eat. Cell doors slammed, and the two guards hurried down the line, locking the doors. After that the old Scotchman trundled a soup wagon into the cellblock.

    Mostly the soup was warm, greasy water, with some bone marrow and gristle rolling around at the bottom. I see you ain’t dressed yet, lad, the trusty cackled.

    The prisoners marched out again. Lassiter spooned up some soup, managed to get down half of it, and dumped the rest into the slop bucket. He took a swig of molasses and decided that was a mistake.

    By the time the prisoners were marched back to be locked in for the night, he was good and sick of British Columbia. He hadn’t seen that much of it. He’d seen enough.

    Supper was salt fish, cooked with the bones, skin and scales. Plus two unpeeled soapy potatoes. No coffee. No bread. Lassiter asked the old man what about tobacco. The old man said the warden, a strict church-going type, didn’t believe in smoking or drinking.

    Just grafting, Lassiter thought.

    It got dark early, and the cold grew worse. Checking the doors, the turnkeys warned against talking, whispering, singing. Against everything and anything except sleeping.

    The moment the door to the cellblock clanged shut the whispering started. A French accented voice called out hoarsely, Hey, Yank, what you done?

    When Lassiter didn’t answer, the same voice said, Hey, Yank—you in the third cell! What they get you for?

    Shivering, the thin blanket pulled up to his chin, Lassiter wished the son of a bitch would shut up so he could get some sleep. The salt fish burned in his belly and he would have given five dollars for a drink of water.

    Lousy Yank, another voice called out.

    The whispering dropped off as the cold and the darkness lay heavy on the prison. Lassiter woke up when he heard them coming. They were walking like men who knew where they were going, and for what. Lassiter had been in other jails, and he knew the sound. All you had to do was hear it once and you never forgot it. Ever after you knew.

    Quickly, wadding the damp pieces of cloth into his mouth to protect the gums, Lassiter lay with his eyes open, waiting. They sure as hell weren’t worried about the sleep of the other guests. A key rattled noisily in the lock, and the heavy door crashed open. The shutter of a dark lantern was lifted, and light shafted through the darkness of the cell.

    Step out, one of the two turnkeys ordered. Bring those clothes with you. Move it! Left, Right! Left, Right!

    Both guards were big men, taller and beefier than Lassiter. The one who did all the shouting had a breath like a buzzard—rotting teeth, beer, cheap cigars. He smelled worse than the uncovered slop bucket in the cell.

    "Come to attention when a prison officer speaks to you.

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