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Authors: William W. Johnstone

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BOOK: Cry of Eagles
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Author's Note
Some have written that Falcon MacCallister was a cold-blooded killer who terrorized the West, killing hundreds of men for sport after his wife's death in 1876. Actually, the number of men who fell under Falcon's guns was much lower than that and there was no sport involved.
It is true that Falcon was a gunfighter, and it is also true that he was a skilled gambler, but it is not true that he was an outlaw and highwayman. That is nonsense, for Falcon was a rich man at the time of his wife's death.
He began riding what some called the ‘owlhoot trail' through no fault of his own.
Falcon MacCallister was the spitting image of his father, Jamie. He stood six feet and three and was heavy with muscle. Just like his father, Falcon literally did not know his own strength.
And just like his father, Falcon was quick on the shoot. Jamie and Falcon were both known as bad men. In the West, being a bad man did not necessarily mean being a brigand. It just meant that he was a bad man to crowd.
And Falcon was a bad man to crowd.
* * *
Historical figures depicted in
Cry Of Eagles
are shown as faithfully as possible, as was the fight at the OK Corral. Doc Holliday and the Earps, Johnny Ringo, the Clan tons, and events around Tombstone during that era are described as most historians have recorded them, with only slight changes for dramatic effect.
Naiche and Chokole were real characters. Naiche was a son of Cochise, who was the most widely known Chiricahua Apache chieftain in their history. Naiche's actual fate, and Chokole's, are unknown or unproven, although some spotty records do exist, claiming they lived to a ripe old age, others describing their bloody demises. Naiche became Chief of the Chiricahua Apaches after Cochise's death and the death of his older brother Taza.
Fort Thomas was a military post and Apache Indian agency in southwestern Arizona Territory during the period, regarded as one of the worst of all Indian reservations when it came to conditions and cruel treatment at the hands of military leaders and Indian agents. Apaches wore metal tags around their necks, even the babies, in order to be counted. Rations at Fort Thomas were meager and usually spoiled: a handful of weevil-ridden meal or moldy flour, a slice of half-rotted beef, and water. Starvation and sickness often drove many Apaches to escape this brutal treatment by their white captors, and almost certain death as a result of malnutrition or disease.
Delshay, Chief of the Tonto Apaches, was beheaded by a commanding officer at Fort Thomas, and his head was placed on top of a pole in the middle of the fort's parade grounds, remaining there for years as a grinning, fleshless skull, a reminder to Fort Thomas' Apache prisoners of what could happen to troublemakers.
The most infamous and deadly of all Apache warriors was most certainly Geronimo. During one of his many captures, President Grover Cleveland ordered Geronimo hanged. The order was later rescinded. Geronimo served as a role model for many resentful younger Apache boys for his unparalleled skill as a guerilla fighter, whether in irons or roaming free in the Dragoons, or in Mexico.
Geronimo escaped many times, and led the last vengeful bands of Apache renegades in battles against white men in the southwest until his final surrender, when making war against superior numbers of white soldiers with better weapons made his struggle all but hopeless.
Many older Apaches remained stubbornly unreconstructed during imprisonment, even after they were moved to Fort Sill in what is now Oklahoma. Geronimo was one of the worst, often taunting soldiers, “You could never catch me shooting when I was free!”
Naiche was no different while in captivity, and Chokole was certainly one of the bravest Apache women in history, a skilled guerilla fighter until the last, a rare example of women as warriors when record numbers of defeats against army patrols thinned Apache ranks.
Tom Horn knew Naiche and Geronimo, and most likely, Chokole. Horn warned President Theodore Roosevelt that Geronimo was known among his people as The Human Tiger, and that he would never give up his old ways. The same was said of Naiche, albeit not as often, since Naiche made more efforts to live in peace with whites until the final wars broke out over inhumane treatment at the San Carlos and Fort Thomas reservations.
An Apache named Nana died at Fort Sill in 1905, to the end accepting nothing the white man had to offer. His last words were “I can see the mountains of our homeland!” But there is some doubt this was the same Nana who fought with Naiche and Geronimo. Nana was a fairly common Apache name, and at the time few white citizens cared about the actual identities of Apache prisoners. They were regarded as little more than captive animals, heathen savages who had to be incarcerated, or killed outright to allow for expanding white settlement of the West.
Some records indicate Naiche lived to be an old man, living in Mescalero, New Mexico, while others claim an imposter posed as Naiche to give the freedom-loving Apaches continued hope that he was with Geronimo in Mexico—until Geronimo's final surrender, at which time no record of an Apache named Naiche exists among the prisoners taken.
A number of the older warriors, who had known life as free men on the open prairies, killed their wives and then themselves when reservation life became too bleak. They had seen their people die by the hundreds, of the white man's diseases for which they had no natural immunity, of starvation, and in some cases, by execution for minor offenses.
But the annals of the American southwest will reveal that the Apaches killed more white settlers, travelers, and soldiers than almost any other plains tribe, with the possible exception of the far more numerous Comanche bands. Apaches were savage, brutal people toward their enemies. White men, paid to hunt down and kill the raiding Apaches, were rare, and their careers were most often very short.
Mickey Free is an actual historical figure, and his skill at tracking and killing Apaches is well documented. Men like Free, and the fictional Falcon MacCallister, were appreciated by folks living in frontier outposts. Getting rid of the bloodthirsty Apaches became a celebrated event in small settlements. Free was in fact a twelve-year-old boy tending stock on a ranch in Arizona when Apache warriors swooped down on them, stole twenty head of stock, and took him with them. For the next ten years he lived as an Apache, learning to track, hunt, fish, shoot, and kill in Apache fashion. His real name was Felix Martinez. Al Sieber, the famed chief of U.S. Cavalry scouts, described Free as half-Irish, half-Mexican, half-Apache, and whole son of a bitch . . . he meant it as a compliment. It was said he could track a shadow on a rainy night. He had fiery red hair, a small red moustache, and a mug that “looked like a map of Ireland.” Most often described as ugly, his left eye was cocked at an odd angle, probably the result of a cataract. He let his stringy red hair fall over his face to hide it, and usually wore it in twin braids in the style of plains Indians.
MacCallister, and the real-life Indian fighters from which he is drawn, saw nothing wrong with fighting fire with fire. An uncounted number of Apache scalps were taken in Arizona and New Mexico Territories during the late 1800's by white, or half-white, bounty hunters. Monies were paid by territorial governments and the government of Mexico for Apache scalps, and few if any questions were asked as to how they were taken.
Geronimo died at Fort Sill in 1909. With him was Asa Daklugie, son of Ishton. His death is well-documented, and no doubts exist as to his fate.
Were the last of the free Apaches captured or killed by the soldier patrols in Arizona before 1896? No one can be certain.
In 1913, Pancho Villa told General Hugh Scott he knew of bands of “wild” Apaches still living in the high mountain valleys of the Sierra Madre. The Mexican government reported a raid on a Mexican village west of the Sierra Madre by “wild” Apaches in 1934—the last recorded, although poorly documented, attack by renegade Apache warriors anywhere. Yaqui Indians living there, lifelong enemies of the Apache, were positive in their identification of the raiders as North American Apaches.
Men with bitter scores to settle for Indian depredations against their families and friends roamed the West until the end of the century. Such was the man named Falcon MacCallister, a man haunted by bloody memories....
NEW YORK TIMES
AND
USA TODAY
BESTSELLING AUTHORS
W
ILLIAM
W. J
OHNSTONE
with J. A. Johnstone
 
FLINTLOCK
A Time for Vultures
 
Across the West, badmen know his name. The deadliest
bounty hunter on the frontier
,
Flintlock is armed with his
grandfather's ancient Hawken muzzleloader
,
ready to put
the blast on the face of injustice. As William and J. A.
Johnstone's acclaimed saga continues, Flintlock will
discover an evil too terrifying and deadly to even name.
 
WHEN A MAN SAYS HE'S GOING
TO KILL YOU, BELIEVE HIM
 
The stench of death hangs over Happyville. When
Flintlock rides into town, he sees windows caked in dust,
food rotting on tables, and a forgotten corpse hanging at
the gallows. Citizens of Happyville are dead in their
beds, taken down by a deadly scourge, and Flintlock
must stay put or risk spreading the killer disease. His
quarantine is broken by Cage Kingfisher, a mad
clergyman who preaches the gospel of death. He orders
his followers to round up the survivors of Happyville and
bring them home to face the very plague they fled. To save
them, Flintlock must send Kingfisher to Hell. But the
deadly deacon has a clockwork arm that can draw a pistol
faster than the eye can blink. It will take the Devil to bring
him down. Or the frontier legend they call Flintlock.
 
Chapter One
“I don't like it, Sam,” O'Hara said, his black eyes troubled. “Those women could be setting us up. Their wagon wheel looks just fine from here.”
Sam Flintlock shook his head. “You know what I always tell folks about you, O'Hara?”
“No. What do you always tell folks about me?”
“That you let your Indian side win through. I mean every time. If you were looking at them gals with a white man's eyes you'd see what I see ... four comely young ladies who badly need our help.”
Now there were those who said some pretty bad things about Sam Flintlock. They called him out for a ruthless bounty hunter, gunman, outlaw when it suited him, and a wild man who chose never to live within the sound of church bells. At that, his critics more or less had him pegged, but to his credit, Flintlock never betrayed a friend or turned his back on a crying child, an abused dog, or a maiden in distress. And when the war talk was done and guns were drawn he never showed yellow.
Thus, when he saw four ladies and a dog crowded around what looked to be a busted wagon wheel, he decided he must ride to their rescue like a knight in stained buckskins.
But his companion, the half-breed known only as O'Hara, prone to suspicion and mistrust of the doings of white people, drew rein on Sam's gallant instincts.
“Well, my Indian side is winning through again,” O'Hara said. “It's telling me to stay away from those white women. Sam, it seems that when we interfere in the affairs of white folks we always end up in trouble.” He stared hard at the wagon. “There's something wrong here. I have a strange feeling I can't pin down.”
“You sound like the old lady who hears a rustle in every bush.” Flintlock slid a beautiful Hawken from the boot under his left knee and settled the butt on his thigh. “This cannon always cuts a dash with the ladies and impresses the menfolk. Let's ride.”
The four women gathered around the wagon wheel watched Flintlock and O'Hara ride toward them. They were young, not particularly pretty except by frontier standards, and looked travel-worn. Colorful boned corsets, laced and buckled, short skirts, and ankle boots revealed their profession, as did the hard planes of their faces. Devoid of powder and paint, exhausted by the rigors of the trail, the girls showed little interest in Flintlock and O'Hara as potential customers.
Flintlock touched his hat. “Can I be of assistance, ladies?”
A brunette with bold hazel eyes said, “Wheel's stuck, mister. ”
“I'll take a look,” Flintlock said.
One time in Dallas he'd watched John Wesley Hardin swing out of the saddle in one graceful motion and he hoped his dismount revealed the same panache. And it might have had not the large yellow dog decided to attack his ankle as soon as his foot touched the ground. The mutt clamped onto Flintlock's booted ankle, shook its head, and growled as though it was killing a jackrabbit.
“Git the hell off me,” Flintlock said, shaking his leg.
The little brunette grabbed the dog by the scruff of the neck and yelled, “Bruno! Leave the gent alone!”
But the animal seemed more determined than ever to bite through Flintlock's boot and maul his flesh. Bruno renewed his attack with much enthusiasm and considerable savagery.
All four women pounced on the dog and tried to drag the snarling, biting creature away while Flintlock continued to shake his leg and cuss up a storm. As the epic struggle with the belligerent Bruno became a cartwheeling, fur-flying free-for-all, O'Hara's voice cut through the racket of the melee.
“Sam! Riders!”
A moment later guns slammed and O'Hara reeled in the saddle. He snapped off a shot, bent over, and toppled onto the grass. His horse, its reins trailing, trotted away. Flintlock, dragging Bruno like a growling ball and chain, stepped around the horse and looked toward the tree line. Four riders were charging fast, firing as they came. Cursing himself for choosing fashion over common sense and leaving his Winchester in the boot, he threw the Hawken to his shoulder and triggered a shot. Boom! Through a cloud of gray smoke he watched a man throw up his hands, his revolver spinning away from him. The rider tumbled backwards off his horse and hit the ground hard, throwing up a cloud of dust. Flintlock dropped the Hawken and clawed for the Colt in his waistband.
Too late!
A big, bearded man drove his mount straight at Flintlock and the impact of horse and man sent Flintlock flying and convinced Bruno that he'd be a lot safer somewhere else.
Winded and sprawled on his back, Flintlock stayed where he was for a moment, then he sat up and looked around for his fallen Colt.
There! A few yards to his right.
He staggered to his feet and for his pains, the bearded man charged again. He swung his left foot from the stirrup and kicked Flintlock in the head, the boot heel crashing into his forehead. For a moment, it seemed that the world around him was exploding in blinding arcs of scarlet and yellow fire.
Flintlock's head tilted back and he caught a glimpse of the sky spinning wildly above him . . . and then his legs went out from under him and he saw nothing . . . nothing at all.
* * *
Sam Flintlock regained consciousness to a pounding headache and a sharp pricking in his throat. From far off, at the end of a long tunnel, he heard a woman's voice.
“What the hell are you doing, Buck?”
Buck Yarr stopped, his bowie knife poised. “Gonna cut that heathen thunderbird offen his throat, Biddy. Make me a tobaccy pouch, it will.”
“Morg wants him alive,” the woman said. “You know who he is?”
“Don't give a damn who he is,” Yarr said.
“He's the outlaw Sam Flintlock,” Biddy said. “Morg thinks maybe there's a price on his head, his head and the breed's.”
Yarr said, “Morg didn't tell me that. I want the thunderbird. Now git the hell away from me lessen you aim to watch the cuttin'.”
“I seen a cuttin' or two before and they didn't trouble me none,” Biddy said. “One time down Forth Worth way I seen Doc Holliday cut a man, damn near gutted him. But Morg wants that Flintlock one alive.”
“All I want is some skin, Biddy. He'll still be alive after I'm done.”
“He'll be dead after you're done, Buck. Look, there's Morgan, ask him your own self,” Biddy said.
Flintlock opened his eyes. He tried to move but his arms were tightly bound to one of the wagon wheels. A few feet away O'Hara, his bloody head bowed, was tied to another. Opposite Flintlock, a kneeling man in greasy buckskins held a wicked, broad-bladed knife, his mouth under a sweeping red mustache stretched in a grin. The man's hat—a tall, pearl gray topper, its high crown holed by a bullet—caught Flintlock's attention.
“Morg, the whore says I can't cut on this man,” Yarr said. “What do you say?”
Morgan Davis was a tall, cadaverous man with black hair and penetrating black eyes. He affected the sober dress and measured speech of a country parson but the Colt in the shoulder holster under his left arm gave the lie to that image.
“Not now, Buck,” Davis said. “I've heard of this ranny. His name is Sam Flintlock on account of the old smoke pole he carries and he makes his living as a bounty hunter and bank robber. There's some say he's real sudden on the draw-and-shoot and has killed a dozen men. Others say he's just plumb loco and talks to his dead kinfolk, but I ain't so sure about that. He looks like a mean one though, don't he?”
“He ain't so tough,” Yarr said. “I want the big bird on his throat. Slice it offen him and make a pouch for myself.”
“It will make a fine pouch, a crackerjack pouch, Buck,” Davis said, patting the man on the shoulder. “But hold off on the cutting until we see if there's a price on his head. If he's wanted dead or alive, then he's all yours. But if the law wants him in one piece, then you can wait until after he's hung.”
“Long wait.” Yarr looked sulky.
Davis smiled. “Be of good cheer, Buck. There's a settlement close to Guadalupe Peak with a tough sheriff. We can take Flintlock and the breed there. If there's a dodger on them, once the lawman pays the reward I'm sure we can talk him into a quick hanging.”
“What town? What sheriff?” Yarr said. “I steer clear of lawmen.”
“Town's called Happyville and the sheriff's name is Barney Morrell,” Davis said. “Me and Barney go back a ways, to the time me and him rode with the Taylor brothers and that hard crowd during their feud with the Suttons. Barney killed a couple men and then lit out for the New Mexico Territory ahead of a Sutton hanging posse. He married a gal by the name of Lorraine Day and for a spell prospered in the hardware business. But Barney never could settle down for long and he worked as a lawman in Fort Worth and Austin and then, the last I heard, became the sheriff of Happyville.”
“He still there?” Yarr said.
“I haven't heard otherwise,” Davis said.
“Then I guess I'll wait.” Yarr slid his knife into its sheath. “But there's one thing I need to get straight, Morg.”
“What's that?”
“I want to cut this man afore he's hung. Don't set right with me to go slicing a big bird offen a dead man's throat. It ain't proper.”
Davis nodded. “I'm sure that can be arranged, Buck. Easy thing to cut a man before he gets hung.”
“What about the sheriff? What's his name?”
“I'll take care of Barney. Kick back a share of the reward money and he'll cooperate.”
Buck Yarr grinned, slapped off Flintlock's hat, grabbed him by the hair, and shook him. “Hear that, musket man? You'll get your throat cut afore a noose is tightened around it. I wonder how that will feel? Bad painful, I think. Real bad painful.”
Flintlock's wrists were knotted to the wagon wheel at either side of his head. But to his joy his legs were untied. He measured the distance between the toe of his right boot and Buck Yarr's chin. Perfect! Gritting his teeth, he powered his leg upward, arching his back to increase the force of the kick.
The result was all he hoped it would be.
With a sickening thud, like a rifle butt hitting a log, the toe of his boot hit Yarr just under his chin. The man's head snapped back, his mouth spurting strings of blood and saliva. Kneeling on one knee and off balance, he fell heavily onto his right side.
“Never trust a wolf until it's been skun, idiot,” Flintlock said, staring at the groaning man with merciless eyes.
Yarr was hurting but he wasn't done.
Big and strong and snarling like a wounded animal, he got to his feet and charged Flintlock, his knife raised for a downward, killing thrust.
“Buck, no!” Davis yelled.
The enraged man ignored him, but the knife blow never came. Somewhere in Yarr's primitive, reptilian brain he decided that a stabbing was a much too merciful death. His eyes glittering, he switched his attention to the thunderbird on Flintlock's throat. Giggling, he concentrated on his task. The point of his knife pierced skin and drew a thin rivulet of blood and then slowly, carefully, like an eager bride cutting her wedding cake, he began to ... saw.
“Buck, get the hell away from him!” Davis yelled.
Yarr ignored the man, intent on cutting out the skin of Flintlock's throat.
Blam!
Yarr's head exploded as Davis's bullet entered the man's right temple and exited an inch above his left ear, blowing out a gory fountain of brain and bone. For long moments Yarr remained where he was, perfectly still, knife in hand, face expressionless. Then slowly . . . slowly . . . he opened his mouth wide, fell back, and lay still.
Davis kicked Flintlock hard in the ribs. “Now see what you done? You made me kill one of my boys and you already shot another.” Davis shoved the hot muzzle of his Colt between Flintlock's eyes. “Mister, count yourself a lucky man. At the moment you're worth more to me than Buck. Well, maybe. If Barney Morrell tells me he's got no paper on you, I'll cut the bird off your throat myself.”
Pain spiking at his ribs, Flintlock said, “Hell, you got our horses and traps. That's enough for any damned two-bit thief like you.”
Davis shook his head. “No it ain't, not for me.” He stared at Flintlock. “You got a big reputation, feller, but right now you sure as hell don't stack up to much.”
“A lot of men have thought that,” Flintlock said. “I killed most of them.”
The man thumbed his chest. “Well, I ain't so easy to kill, feller. Name's Morgan Davis. That mean anything to you?”
“Seems to me I heard tell of a pimp by that name,” Flintlock said. “They say he has a reputation for beating up on whores.”
Davis smiled. “You're a funny man, Flintlock, a real knee-slapper, but there's something you should know.” The man leaned closer and his voice dropped to a whisper. His breath smelled like rotten meat. “I was spawned in the lowest regions of hell and I've lived in a bottomless pit of depravity and violence since. Don't ever say something is funny again or I'll cut your tongue out.”
Flintlock saw only hate, malevolence, and loathing in Davis's eyes, as though they were stricken with a foul disease. The pimp was a man to be reckoned with and Flintlock wisely kept his mouth shut.
After a final kick at Flintlock's unprotected ribs, Davis stepped away. He stopped at O‘Hara, got down on one knee, and buried his fingers in the breed's bloody hair. He jerked up O'Hara's head and stared into his face. “Hey Flintlock, your breed friend is dead.”
Davis let O'Hara's head go and it lolled lifelessly onto O'Hara's chest. Sam Flintlock felt a devastating sense of loss ... and then a spike of white-hot anger.
BOOK: Cry of Eagles
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