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Trigger Law

(1966)
A novel by

 
 
Lee Forder was shocked when his brother Hart, the depot boss for Wells Fargo, was sentenced to death for robbery and murder.

Despite being accused of robbing the coaches, Lee was certain his brother was innocent and decided to prove it by tracking down the outlaws he was sure had framed Hart.

Sheriff Bunn of Fairly offered to help but was limited by the anger of the town mob who threatened to lynch Hart as a punishment and cause trouble for Lee by association.

Bunn pinned a deputy badge on Lee and smuggled him out of the town, giving him recommendations of friends he could call on for aid in hunting the outlaws.

But the star didn't give him any protection when he came up against Curly Bronson's gang and the killer Marshal Hagen of Caribou, both experienced and lethal gun-hands.

Lee was not a professional lawman.

He had been a cowboy most of his working life, but he set out to prove his brother's innocence, and trigger law was the only way of handling the chore.

With the outlaw gang and the crooked marshal hellbent on keeping Lee's mouth shut, Forder's life hung in the balance.

But with the clock ticking on his brother's sentence Lee was prepared to risk everything...

Praise for Neil Webb



'Transports you right back to the old west - fantastic!' - Tom Casey, bestselling author of Trade Off

Neil Webb (1928), is one of fifty pseudonyms for British author, Donald S. Rowland, who was born in Norfolk, England. Rowland is married with three children, and previously had a variety of jobs, including film projectionist and Senior Clerk and Local Government Officer. It was only in 1964 that he dedicated his time to writing full-time and has since written a variety of novels, from science-fiction to westerns.


Genre: Western

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