The Rider of Golden Bar. William Patterson White

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      William Patterson White

      The Rider of Golden Bar

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-2044-1

      Table of Contents

       Chapter One. Billy Wingo

       Chapter Two. A Safe Man

       Chapter Three. What Sally Jane Thought

       Chapter Four. Hazel Walton

       Chapter Five. Jack Murray Objects

       Chapter Six. Cross-Purposes

       Chapter Seven. Rafe's Idea

       Chapter Eight. The New Broom

       Chapter Nine. The District Attorney

       Chapter Ten. A Short Horse

       Chapter Eleven. The Trappers

       Chapter Twelve. The Trap

       Chapter Thirteen. Open and Shut

       Chapter Fourteen. When Thieves Fall Out

       Chapter Fifteen. The Best-Laid Plans

       Chapter Sixteen. Obscuring the Issue

       Chapter Seventeen. What Hazel Thought

       Chapter Eighteen. The Bare-Headed Man

       Chapter Nineteen. The Persistent Suitor

       Chapter Twenty. A Discovery

       Chapter Twenty-One. The District Attorney's Nightmare

       Chapter Twenty-Two. The Hunch

       Chapter Twenty-Three. The Gunfighters

       Chapter Twenty-Four. Contrarieties

       Chapter Twenty-Five. Jonesy's Ultimatum

       Chapter Twenty-Six. The Fool-Killer

       Chapter Twenty-Seven. The Long Day Closes

      Chapter One.

       Billy Wingo

       Table of Contents

      "But why don't you do something, Bill?" demanded Sam Prescott's pretty daughter.

      Bill Wingo looked at Miss Prescott in injured astonishment. "Do something?" he repeated. "What do you want me to do?"

      "I don't want you to do anything," she denied with unnecessary emphasis. "Haven't you any ambition?"

      "Plenty."

      "Then use it, for Heaven's sake!"

      "I do. Don't I ask you to marry me every time I get a chance?"

      "That's not using your ambition. That's playing the fool."

      "Nice opinion of yourself you've got," he grinned.

      "Never mind. You make me tired, Bill. Here you've got a little claim and a little bunch of cows—the makings of a ranch if you'd only work. But instead of working like a man you loaf like a—like a——"

      "Like a loafer," he prompted.

      "Exactly. You'd rather hunt and fish and ride the range for monthly wages when you're broke than scratch gravel and make something of yourself. You let your cows run with the T-Up-And-Down, and I'll bet when Tuckleton had his spring round-up you weren't even on the job. Were you?"

      "Well, I—uh—I was busy," shamefacedly.

      "Fishing over on Jack's Creek. That's how busy you were, when you should have been looking after your property."

      "Oh, Tuckleton's boys are square. Any calves they found running with my brand, they'd run the iron on 'em all right."

      "They'd run the iron on 'em all right," she repeated. "But what iron?"

      "Why—mine. Whose do you suppose?"

      "I don't know," she said candidly. "I'm asking you."

      "Shucks, Sally Jane, those boys wouldn't do anything crooked. Tuckleton wouldn't

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