
David and his new toy haven’t escaped the attention of the
US Army so Noah is dispatched with the hope that the blood connection will help
sway David to deal with the Army and not just the highest bidder, of which
David has representatives of four interested buyers.
Noah spies on a demonstration and is impressed so he decides
to surprise David by dropping in after the audience has returned to town to
work out their bids. But when Noah gets down to the barn that houses the gun,
his world explodes in a shower of bullets that could only come from a Gatling
gun. Wounded in his shoulder and after working up the strength, he crawls into
the barn to find David’s throat slashed, lying in a lake of blood, and the gun
gone.
Noah gets patched up and spends a day or two in the town
hospital. He meets the local marshal and works out a cagey partnership to find
out who killed David and then to find the gun. And he starts snooping around the prime spots for information like the saloon, livery, and barber shop.
MRB friend Charlie Stella made a pitch for Gorman on his
blog not long ago and the Knuckmeister is usually right on target with his recommendations.
Now my partner in the venture also took the bait and chose a Gorman book and
didn’t like it. Must've been the choice of titles. Turns out The Killing Machine is part 1 of 3 about The Cavalry
Man (assume that’s Noah Ford) and I kind of liked it. Some might say it resembles an old Agatha Christie novel where there are dozens of suspects, each with reason to be the killer, until the book's detective sorts it all out in a big reveal at the end (yeah, but this has a lot of shooting, too). The writing is as
sparse as the trees on the far western prairie of Montana making the setting easy to picture while reading. I could see Noah as
the grandfather of MRB fav Joe Pickett in his view of right and wrong or his
strong and quasi-silent nature. If not Pickett, then maybe Walt Longmire.
Either works. Gorman is a Spur Award winner for western fiction as well as
Shamus and Anthony awards for his work, so he's got the chops. I’ll look for parts 2 and 3 of this
series and get back to you.
East Coast Don
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