The Shadow Man

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Authors: F. M. Parker

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THE SHADOW MAN

F. M. Parker

With an awesome list of stirring Westerns novels, F. M. Parker has won acclaim as a master story teller. In The Shadow Man, he has achieved a new high of bringing alive the high drama and true-grit realities of the Western past
.

The time is 1846 with the United States and Mexico poised for war over the American Southwest. The place is New Mexico, where Jacob Tamarron has come after years as a legendary mountain man. Jacob is weary of mountain loneliness and brutal struggle for survival against Indians and fur thieves and comes to Santa Fe and hoping to find a woman and have a family. He finds the new life he is looking for in Petra, the proud and fiery Mexican woman. He woes and marries her. Then with savage suddenness, his new life is ripped apart by two of the most vicious men ever to ravage the West. James Kirker, a professional Indian killer out to make a fortune in blood money, and Simon Caverhill, a Texas senator, who with a handpicked killing crew and a master forger, is carving out an empire from the land of butchered New Mexico ranchers.

Thus begins a searing saga of search and vengeance as Jacob turns hunter again, this time hunting the men who destroyed all that he had created. With High Walking, a Comanche warrior whose woman and his children have been slaughtered, he uncovers a trail of murder and terror that leads him to his enemies' stronghold. With cold savage fury that matches the power and cunning of their enemies, these two unlikely comrades fight to the death to take their revenge against the great odds against him.

With extraordinary heroes, and with a cast of characters that encompasses the rich mix of men and women - black and white, Indian, Mexican, and American, law-abiding and lawless – who peopled the frontier, The Shadow Man offers a harsh yet heart-stirring vision of the American past. It combines authenticity with non-stop action and suspense into a thrilling reading experience.

* * *

To Louise

Without a family, man, alone in the world, trembles with the cold
.
—Andre Maurois

About the Author

F. M. PARKER has worked as a sheepherder, lumberman, sailor, geologist, and as a manager of wild horses, buffalo, and livestock grazing. For several years he was the manager of five million acres of public domain land in eastern Oregon.

His highly acclaimed novels include Skinner, Coldiron, The Searcher, Shadow of the Wolf, The Shanghaiers, The Highbinders, The Far Battleground, The Shadow Man, and The Slavers.

Visit
www.fearlparker.com
for more details.

“SUPERBLY WRITTEN AND DETAILED... PARKER BRINGS THE WEST TO LIFE.”
Publishers Weekly

“ABSORBING... SWIFTLY PACED, FILLED WITH ACTION!”
Library Journal

“PARKER ALWAYS PRESENTS A LIVELY, CLOSELY PLOTTED STORY.”
Bookmarks

“REFRESHING, COMBINES A GOOD STORY WITH FIRST-HAND KNOWLEDGE.”
University of Arizona Library

“RICH, REWARDING... DESERVES A WIDE GENERAL READERSHIP.”
Booklist

Also by F.M. Parker

Novels

The Highwayman

Wife Stealer

Winter Woman

The Assassins

Girl in Falling Snow

ThePredators

The Far Battleground

Coldiron – Judge and Executioner

Coldiron - Shadow of the Wolf

Coldiron - The Shanghaiers

Coldiron – Thunder of Cannon

The Searcher

The Seeker

The Highbinders

The Shadow Man

The Slavers

Nighthawk

Skinner

Soldiers of Conquest

Screenplays

Women for Zion

Firefly Catcher

Contents

CHAPTER 1

CHAPTER 2

CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 4

CHAPTER 5

CHAPTER 6

CHAPTER 7

CHAPTER 8

CHAPTER 9

CHAPTER 10

CHAPTER 11

CHAPTER 12

CHAPTER 13

CHAPTER 14

CHAPTER 15

CHAPTER 16

CHAPTER 17

CHAPTER 18

CHAPTER 19

CHAPTER 20

CHAPTER 21

CHAPTER 22

CHAPTER 23

CHAPTER 24

CHAPTER 25

The Making of the Land
A Prologue

The first mountains, ancient beyond imagination, were created so long ago that even the sun forgot it had ever shone upon their birth. They were formed a billion years in the past by a mighty, compressive force that thrust up great blocks of the earth's crust into a giant east-west mountain range.

In the last paroxysm of mountain building, molten granite magma welled up from subterranean reservoirs deep in the bowels of the earth and intruded, replacing broad zones of the older rocks of the mountains. Hot mineral-bearing solutions and gases were injected into fractures and ruptures in the rock. In rare, isolated locations, copper, silver, and gold precipitated out in rich concentrations.

Finally the mountains ceased growing and rested. For six hundred million years only the rain and snow and the sigh of the wind were upon the face of the huge mountains.

Bit by minute bit, the mountains were eroded away. The high cloud-brushing peaks wore away to low hills. The valleys of the land were invaded by a shallow sea, and the hills became a chain of small islets surrounded by salty brine.

Seventy million years ago, the seas retreated to the south as a tremendous force again crumpled the mantle of the earth. The rocks arched up in gigantic folds with a north-south axis. The force continued to torture the rocks, overturning them to the east. Then one added inch of movement exceeded their strength, and deep faults of unbounded energy sliced through the layers of stone. In places the earth's crust was lifted upward, in other locations there were down-warping and subsidence. Stupendous rift valleys were formed.

One such rift valley was fifty miles wide and hundreds of miles long. A tall range of mountains bordered it on the side where the sun rose. In the depths of the five-mile-deep chasm, a grand river came to life, fed endlessly by the countless streams pouring down from the mountains. The strong current of the river rushed away to the south until it reached a far-off sea.

Over the aeons the great fault valley began to fill with rubble from the mountains, boulders, and gravel washed down from the highlands. Once a thick lava flow dammed the river, but the prodigious torrent of water hammered a gorge through the tough rock and surged onward.

On the east side of the mountain range a myriad of streams tumbled with awesome violence down from the high ramparts. As the grade flattened on the lower reaches of the streams, they slowed and wandered in meandering courses, dropping their load of eroded mountain debris. The valleys of the streams became choked with swamps and shallow lakes as thousands of cubic miles of sediment were spread in ever-thickening layers for great distances over the land.

The millennia passed, score after score, adding to millions of years. During the long epoch a broad plain formed at the base of the mountain and extended to the east for many hundreds of miles. So flat was the land surface that the larger animals could see each other for great distances, to the limits of their vision.

Twenty million years ago, near the mouth of the grand river of the north, a hungry lizard raced down the bank to capture a fish that was stranded and floundering in a shallow pool of water. The lizard's tail left a small scratch in the mud. From that tiny scar in the dirt, during the next rainstorm, an incipient streamlet was born.

The rivulet had inherited the hunger of the beast that had created it. Within a foot, the rivulet cut into the course of another trickle of water and beheaded it, adding that miniature flow to its own body. Then it captured another streamlet, and another. Swiftly the rivulet grew to become a creek.

The new creek greedily ate its way north along the base of the tall mountains, encountering the channels of many streams. A battle was fought each time to determine which stream would die. The hungry offspring of the lizard won every battle and survived.

The creek grew to become a river, flowing in a wide, swampy valley. Its headwaters lay on the very summit of a high mountain far to the north. Now there were two large rivers, with a mighty mountain range rearing into the sky between them.

That is the way a tribe of man found the land when they arrived, migrating from a far and distant place in the north. The people liked the land of rivers and mountains, and they stayed, their numbers increasing.

Thirty thousand years later, barely a tick of time as measured on the geologic clock, a second tribe of men arrived, creeping timidly and cautiously up from the south. They also liked the two rivers and the mountains. The men gave them names, the Rio Grande, the Rio Pecos, and the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, and they settled there with their women and children.

Time ticked away again, and a third tribe of men came hurrying into the land. They came from the east and their numbers were many. They made savage war upon the first two tribes.

The events of this story happened during the days of that war.

CHAPTER 1
Culebra Mountain, Mexican Territory, February 27, 1846

The storm came straight from the hunting ground of blizzards. Jacob Tamarron could see the seething dark clouds through breaks in the forest, pouring in a mile-thick avalanche down from the high backbone of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.

A mighty blast of frigid wind roared out ahead of the storm, careening across the mountainside and whipping the giant pine trees like blades of grass.

The thick mass of clouds, riding upon the back of the frontal winds, charged in to hide the weak winter sun from the earth. The forest was filled with dark, gray shadows, as if the evening dusk were arriving with deep night but minutes behind.

Jacob increased his pace to a trot. He moved effortlessly with a rolling, spraddle-legged stride to keep his bear-paw snowshoes from tangling together. His .50-caliber Hawken rifle swung easily in his hand. The pack of wolf skins and his buffalo sleeping robe rode lightly upon his back.

His camp lay an hour away at the base of the tall Culebra Mountain. Already he could catch glimpses of the bottom of the valley lying a thousand feet below him. His partner, Daniel, would be at their bivouac. He would have a hot fire burning and an elk haunch roasting.

Three days before, the mountain had lost some of its deep freeze, and the pale winter sun now coasted on a cloudless blue sky. Jacob had taken his rifle and tramped around the flank of the mountain to a broad thicket of bitter brush. The browse was the favorite food of deer, and the winter-hungry animals had come for miles across the snowy shoulders of Culebra to congregate there and feed.

The wolf packs also stole through the forest and gathered. The powerful predators stalked and killed many of the deer. In turn, Jacob stealthily stole up on the wolves and slew five of them. All the pelts were prime, with long luxurious guard hair and a soft, dense undercoat. The fur would bring a premium price.

Daniel had remained behind at the cabin. He was getting old and did not like camps in the snow. But he was a staunch and hardworking partner. Each day he traveled the long, difficult miles of the trap line and removed the night's catch of mink, otter, fox, and marten, and reset the crushing steel jaws of the traps.

Jacob halted abruptly. The short hairs on the back of his neck twisted and rose as some instinct warned him he was not alone in the woods. He stepped sideways to stand against the trunk of a large pine and swiftly scanned ahead toward Saruche Creek, along every snowy aisle among the trees.

He pivoted slowly to the rear, his eyes probing all the openings. On one of the curving passageways, his fresh tracks lay plain in the white blanket of snow covering the ground. An enemy could track him at a run.

Jacob waited, pushing the limits of his senses outward, straining to determine consciously what some ancient instinct had detected at a primal level. He didn't question the feeling that unseen enemies were near. Once he had made that mistake, when he had been very young in the mountains, and a long scar remained from the wound that had almost killed him.

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