Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western)
Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western)
Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western)
Ebook204 pages2 hours

Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western)

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Cort Lacey rode back to the valley he had left twelve long years before. Now he was famous—but for all the wrong reasons. There was a woman, too, a special one, and she expected him to do something about the range-hog who was crowding the settlers out of the valley. Haunted by his own reputation and the bloody victories that had built it, Cort realized he had one last chance to wipe the slate clean ... but to do it, he would have to stop the land-grabber and his army of gunfighters in their tracks ...and stop them for good.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherPiccadilly
Release dateDec 29, 2020
ISBN9781005695231
Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western)

Related to Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western)

Related ebooks

Historical Fiction For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western)

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Rider in the Rain (A Scott Siegel Classic Western) - Scott Siegel

    The Home of Great Western Fiction!

    Cort Lacey rode back to the valley he had left twelve long years before. Now he was famous—but for all the wrong reasons. There was a woman, too, a special one, and she expected him to do something about the range-hog who was crowding the settlers out of the valley.

    Haunted by his own reputation and the bloody victories that had built it, Cort realized he had one last chance to wipe the slate clean … but to do it, he would have to stop the land-grabber and his army of gunfighters in their tracks …and stop them for good.

    RIDER IN THE RAIN

    By Scott Siegel

    First published by Manor Books in 1979

    Copyright © 1979, 2021 by Scott Siegel

    First Electronic Edition: January 2021

    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.

    You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by means (electronic, digital, optical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

    This is a Piccadilly Publishing Book

    Series Editor: Ben Bridges

    Text © Piccadilly Publishing

    Published by Arrangement with the Author.

    In loving memory of my mother.

    Chapter One

    John Bell, as was his custom, stopped at the Mustang Saloon for a drink before taking that long ride back to the Five Fingers. He came in out of the hot sun, limping through the bat-wing doors, only to find that more than half of the Mustang’s customers were hands from the Double C. It was easy to tell. They were the ones with coins jingling in their pockets. An honest cow-puncher couldn’t afford getting drunk as often as the Double C riders did.

    John couldn’t help but think of the change in the Double C—and with it, the valley—since Howard Cliffords died. It was a change that could only be measured by the gulf between what is best in man and what is a good deal less than best. Howard originally owned the entire valley, but had opened it up to people looking for a fresh start. Cliffords made money, but on the whole, he had been generous and helpful to the poorest of the poor, who saw in his valley a chance to build a future. Now Howard was gone, and his kid brother, William, was running the Double C. William Cliffords was nothing like his older brother ...

    A tumbler of rye awaited John at the bar as he said hello to the few friendly faces he could find scattered among the new, rough-looking Cliffords bunch.

    He put his lame leg up on the bar-rail, took off his hat, and wiped his brow. There was a strange tension in the air. It made him uneasy. A man gets a sense for trouble living in a rough country, and John had felt it when he walked in the door. The looks on the faces of his friends deepened that feeling. And the voice that bellowed, John Bell, I hear you used to be real good with a gun before you got yourself crippled! confirmed his worst fears.

    He motioned to the bartender for another drink. Usually he had only one, but he didn’t want to turn around. No trouble, he promised himself. It was a difficult promise to keep.

    A large, meaty hand grabbed him by the shoulder and pushed him away from the bar. He half-stumbled as he tried to place his left leg firmly on the saloon floor. As he spun around, he caught sight of William Cliffords smiling wickedly in the doorway of the Mustang Saloon.

    John Bell heard that same bellowing voice say something about his courage, but he didn’t listen. He was concentrating on finding a way out of this. The loudmouth bucking for a fight was a stranger. Maybe John could beat him at slapping leather and maybe he couldn’t. He didn’t want to find out.

    What troubled him most was that he didn’t know why he was being goaded into a fight—at least he didn’t know until he caught the eye of a neighbor who had a small ranch across the valley. That man was looking up to him, hoping he had the sand in his gut and the speed in his hands to stop whatever William Cliffords might be planning.

    John Bell was a modest man. It wasn’t until that hopeful look from his friend that he realized he was the closest thing to a gunfighter the small ranchers had. Get rid of him and start harassing these peaceful folks and that most would get the fear in them and they would leave.

    William Cliffords, with all the money, land, and cattle his brother, Howard, left him, was trying to grab for more. And John Bell was the first obstacle. Yes, John was the closest thing to a gunfighter the small ranchers had, and he wasn’t much. Twelve years ago, before his leg was blasted out of shape, he would have had a better than even chance. Now, he wasn’t so sure. He just stood there and listened to his name being cursed and didn’t move. I won’t fight. I won’t, he repeated to himself, trying to close his mind to the epithets being hurled his way.

    Then he heard his wife’s name come slithering out of the foul-minded cowboy’s mouth. John never had a chance. He was provoked, yet, was the second of the two to get his gun clear of leather. A bullet ripped into his throat. His eyes bulged out in a stare that saw nothing as blood gushed out of his neck and life poured out of his body. John Bell toppled over and was dead when he hit the floor.

    When a man is killed before a large gathering of people, somehow, despite the wide open spaces of the west—the deserts, mountains, and Indian country—despite all this and more, somehow, the news travels. Maybe a disillusioned ranch-hand, a fearful drummer, or just a wanderer had been in the Mustang Saloon that day and saw the incident for what it was: murder.

    So this fellow, sick with the sight of greed or scared at the sight for a man acting worse than an animal, makes a point of drifting. Maybe the next stop is a mining town or a boomtown with the railroad coming through. This drifter, with the evil he’s seen still in his mind’s eye, tells the dirty tale. Those he tells it to, tell it to others. Some of these folks go to other mining towns, boomtowns, or cow towns and repeat the story.

    There was a lame cowboy, they’d say, who didn’t fight no matter what dirt-eating names were shoved into his craw by a hired gun ... until the paid killer bad-mouthed the cripple’s wife. And then the poor bastard was shot down.

    And so the story would spread. From Wyoming to the Dakotas to Texas ... to everyplace men get their backs up when an honest man dies for no good reason. And maybe, just maybe, a drifter, who heard the story from a bartender, who heard it from a drummer, who heard it from a railroad man, will repeat what he’s heard to a man who makes a difference.

    Chapter Two

    The worst of the storm was over. The thunder and lightning had stopped over an hour before, but a cold rain continued to fall steadily over the water-soaked ground and the lone rider heading toward Cliffordsville.

    He had been riding a long time. Exhaustion could be easily detected in the dun’s lowered head and in its rider’s slouch in the saddle. Keeping warm and dry were given up long before. Trying to fight nature’s bitter elements was more tiring than just taking the chill of wind and rain down the back of the neck.

    Cort Lacey was silent astride the rider. No cursing at the rainclouds overhead, no self-reproach for leaving the abandoned cabin he had slept in the night before. It didn’t matter to him if it rained all day or all week. The only thing that mattered was getting to Cliffordsville.

    Tired, wet, and very much alone, Lacey slowly closed the gap between himself and his destination. What’s going to happen when I get there? It was a thought that often crossed his mind. Probably nobody would take much notice of a cowboy drifting into town. There were precious few people in the valley who could recognize him. Precious few. And what would they think of him now?

    The constant rhythm of the rain and his horse’s slow but steady pace, allowed Cort Lacey’s wearied mind to return to a time over twelve years before. He was a kid growing into a man, and his friends had a slap on the back for him, a sincere smile, and a loyalty, now remembered, that warmed his chilled and wind-blown soul. They were good people, he thought to himself, and they still are ... it’s me that’s been in the whirlwind.

    He remembered how it was when Thaddeus Clark took his brother Sam aside one day in the bunkhouse. Cort was young and his brother stood up for the both of them.

    I’ve got an idea, Thaddeus had said, "of how my family, you and your brother Cort, the Sloans, John Bell and Rusty Howell can get out of working wages and set up a place of our own.

    "I’ve been getting good money as foreman. I know you’ve been putting money away, Sam, and so have the others. Each of us has a dream of having our own spread someday. How many times have you ridden drag on a drive and been choking on dust but takin’ no notice of it ’cause you’re lost in a daydream of branding your own cattle?

    "Sure, we’ve all had the same hopes but where does it get us? I’ve been saving since my daughter Clare was born and still ain’t got enough saved to get a ranch off the ground. I’m telling you, no matter what you and your brother save, you’ll be as old as me before you have the makin’s of a decent stake ... and sure, that goes for Steve Sloan, John, and Rusty, too.

    Look, I like those fellows. They’re hard-working honest men. And I like you and your brother. What I’m suggesting is this—that the group of us throw in together. We each go in for a fifth of the cost of buying the land, cattle, supplies, everything, including the work. Especially the work. Nobody’s gonna get rich, but we’ll be our own bosses on our own ranch running our own cattle. We’re all friends so it’d be kinda like a lot of brothers and their married kin—well, like a family, Sam, building up a ranch. I don’t know what we’d call it but, goddamit, I think it’s a hell of an idea! You willing to take a chance?

    Thaddeus Clark’s rugged features had softened as he spoke. There was more in his eyes than the hope of drawing in a fifth man with some money in the bank.

    Sam, no doubt, saw in Clark’s eyes just what Steve Sloan and his wife Linda did, and just what John Bell and Rusty Howell had ... a man giving up the hope of a personal cattle empire that he had carried over twenty years—giving it up and asking his closest friends to do likewise so that they might have something more than a dream. It would be a place in the here and now where they could lean on each other, help each other, and mostly, stay together.

    It was a lot for a man like Thaddeus Clark to admit out loud that he liked you. And to a man, they all liked and respected him. When all the talking was done, no one hesitated. Sam, like the others, was proud to count himself a friend of Thaddeus Clark.

    Later that night, handshakes sealed the five-way bargain. After a couple of drinks in celebration, someone came up with the idea of naming their future ranch the Five Fingers. A shout of approval went up and they drank to the name and to themselves.

    Five months later, however, Thaddeus Clark was still foreman of the Cross-Key outfit and trail-bossing a cattle drive pointing for the railhead. Plans for their new ranch had been discussed and made and then rediscussed and then re-made. There was never any real anger when someone’s ideas were voted down, but frustration was growing because they just weren’t getting anywhere.

    It was Thaddeus Clark’s wife, Cassie, who finally put her finger on why everyone was disagreeing. The simplicity of it embarrassed the men folk because they had been fools to overlook the obvious. How could they possibly decide how much cattle to buy the first year, or how big the barn should be, and so many other things, when each of them had a different idea of what the lay of the land would be?

    It was on this cattle drive, three and a half weeks out of the Cross-Key, that all the disagreements ended. Rusty Howell, whose job was to scout ahead for the drive, and, off the record, do a little land prospecting for the Five Fingers group, came galloping toward a point where Thaddeus Clark was talking to a drover.

    Old Rusty rode like a bullet shot out of a Sharps buffalo gun. Most of the cowpunchers pulled rifles out of their saddle scabbards, figuring that Rusty was being chased by the Comanch’. Thaddeus Clark, Sam and Cort Lacey, John Bell, and Steve Sloan, however, were standing up in their stirrups, eyes straining well beyond the point where their friend was now riding. They were trying to see a stretch of land where their new home and new lives would be. They were mostly optimists by nature and so they hoped for the good word. But if Old Rusty was bringing news of a war party of Comanche, they would be quick to react, for by nature they were also hard western men—bred to fight like the devil.

    As he drew closer to Thaddeus, the trail boss could see a wide, laughing grin on the scout’s face. Even before Rusty pulled his gray to a stop, Thaddeus Clark had motioned for the Five Fingers riders to join him at point. With wide-eyed faces and a lot of happy hollering that perplexed some of the other drovers, they all put spurs to their mounts and came up to Thaddeus and Rusty to hear the news.

    Bunched together ahead of the herd, they made quite a sight. First quiet, then laughing, and then, just as suddenly, quiet again.

    Thaddeus had been the first to speak. He asked what all of them were wanting to know. Well, you redheaded old mule, why the hell you come ridin’ in here like a norther with a grin as wide as a canyon?

    Rusty looked innocent-like at all of them and everyone just started in to whooping it up. They were sure he had found something.

    When they settled down, Rusty took out the makings and started in to fashioning a quirly. No one moved. Everyone was waiting with growing impatience for Rusty to let the cat out of the bag. Finally, it was Cort Lacey, the least patient of the group, who said, Dammit Rusty, a joke’s a joke, we gotta know what you saw!

    The leathery old scout was a little miffed at the youngster snapping at him, but the news was too good to let something like that

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1