Invitation to a Hanging
Robert J. Randisi is the best-selling author of The Gunsmith series of Westerns, with over five million books in print. Gunman John Locke, one of the best shots of all time, is as notorious as he is renowned. Whether paired with a sixgun or a rifle, John's trigger finger spells instant death-and anyone foolhardy enough to cross him had best stay out of his sights. Now he's been hired to serve as the master of ceremonies at the hanging of Ignacio Dellgado, a bandit leader and wanted terrorist. But on that fateful day, John is bushwhacked by Dellgado's gang!
"1014196094"
Invitation to a Hanging
Robert J. Randisi is the best-selling author of The Gunsmith series of Westerns, with over five million books in print. Gunman John Locke, one of the best shots of all time, is as notorious as he is renowned. Whether paired with a sixgun or a rifle, John's trigger finger spells instant death-and anyone foolhardy enough to cross him had best stay out of his sights. Now he's been hired to serve as the master of ceremonies at the hanging of Ignacio Dellgado, a bandit leader and wanted terrorist. But on that fateful day, John is bushwhacked by Dellgado's gang!
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Invitation to a Hanging

Invitation to a Hanging

by Robert J. Randisi

Narrated by Richard Ferrone

Unabridged — 6 hours, 17 minutes

Invitation to a Hanging

Invitation to a Hanging

by Robert J. Randisi

Narrated by Richard Ferrone

Unabridged — 6 hours, 17 minutes

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Overview

Robert J. Randisi is the best-selling author of The Gunsmith series of Westerns, with over five million books in print. Gunman John Locke, one of the best shots of all time, is as notorious as he is renowned. Whether paired with a sixgun or a rifle, John's trigger finger spells instant death-and anyone foolhardy enough to cross him had best stay out of his sights. Now he's been hired to serve as the master of ceremonies at the hanging of Ignacio Dellgado, a bandit leader and wanted terrorist. But on that fateful day, John is bushwhacked by Dellgado's gang!

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170618040
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 09/09/2011
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Invitation to a Hanging
Fredericksburg, Texas

1886

John Locke did not ride into Fredericksburg, Texas, undetected.

“That’s him,” Gordon Vestal said to his partner, Ed Hansen. “That’s the Widowmaker.”

The two men were standing in front of the general store they owned together.

“I thought the Widowmaker was the gun?” Hansen asked.

Vestal waved a hand and said, “The man, the gun, what’s the difference. The point is he’s the man we need to keep the lid on this town.”

“I hope you’re right.”

John Locke rode by them, a very tall man who sat his horse with a ramrod back. He was wearing a black, flat-brimmed Stetson without adornment, a blue shirt with a red bandana tied around his neck, black leather vest, and black trousers. He must have been wearing a gun but they couldn’t see it as his left side was to them, and he was probably right-handed. His profile looked as if it had been chiseled from stone. The only indications that he was human were the sweat stains that the August heat had caused beneath his arms.

Vestal looked at Hansen and said, “Of course I’m right. Remember, this is the man who predicted the O.K. Corral. If Tombstone had been able to hold onto him as marshal that never would have happened.”

“I heard they fired him.”

“He walked away,” Vestal said, “when they wouldn’t back him.”

“Not what I heard.”

“What’s it matter, Ed?” Vestal asked. “We sent for him and he’s here. That’s what’s important.”

They watched as Locke rode past them without a glance and continued on to the end of town where the livery stable was located.

“He looks old,” Hansen said.

“Fifty,” Vestal said, “maybe. After the life he’s lead, that’s a testament to the kind of man he is.”

“What’s he been doing since he left Tombstone?”

“Laying low, I heard,” Vestal said. “Some said he got real disillusioned by that whole experience. It was the only time he ever wore a badge.”

“Maybe he ain’t got it in him anymore,” Hansen said. “What do we do then, d’you suppose, if I’m right?”

“I don’t know,” Vestal said. “Cross that bridge when we come to it, I guess. But right now let’s get the others. This is it. We got to make a good enough offer so he takes the job.”

“That’s your part in all this,” Ed Hansen said. “You’re the man with the golden tongue, Gordy.”

“Well,” Vestal said, “I guess we’re about to find out just how golden my tongue is.”

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