Rustlers beware!

audiobook

Rustlers beware!

by Arthur Chapman

EN·~2 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total
1

Rustlers Beware

0:01
2

CHAPTER I SEALED ORDERS.

10:22
3

CHAPTER II WESTERN SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE.

11:54
4

CHAPTER III BERTRAM MAKES A GO-DEVIL.

15:13
5

CHAPTER IV A BATTLE AND A BULLET.

14:48
6

CHAPTER V A RIDE TO SANCTUARY.

14:38
7

CHAPTER VI SWINGLEY HAS HIS SAY.

15:47
8

CHAPTER VII THE MASKED HORSEMAN.

17:26
9

CHAPTER VIII THE MARK OF THE BEAST.

14:09
10

CHAPTER IX SOME DEBTS ARE PAID.

11:59

Description

In a sweltering Texas train depot, a restless young rancher named Milton Bertram finds himself thrust into a clandestine operation. He’s recruited by the hard‑boiled Asa Swingley, a towering cattleman with a reputation for making men bend or bleed, to join a band of the West’s most notorious gunmen. The atmosphere crackles with the clink of pistols, the smoke of cigarettes, and the uneasy camaraderie of outlaws who have all earned a reputation as killers.

The crew is bound for the wild frontier of Wyoming, where sealed orders promise a payoff that could change Milton’s fortunes forever. With the cold‑blooded sharpshooter Tom Hoog and a host of rough‑and‑tumble enforcers at his side, Milton must navigate mistrust, brutal secrecy, and the ever‑present threat of a gunfight. The stage is set for a high‑stakes ride across open plains, where loyalty will be tested and every decision could tip the balance between lawlessness and redemption.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (127K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United States: Street & Smith Corporation, 1921.

Credits

Roger Frank and Sue Clark

Release date

2022-07-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Arthur Chapman

Arthur Chapman

1873–1935

Best remembered for the much-loved poem "Out Where the West Begins," this American writer helped shape the sound of early cowboy poetry. He also worked as a newspaper columnist and brought a warm, plainspoken view of the West to both verse and prose.

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