My Louis L’Amour kick continues with this book about a card-shark drifter who becomes so much more, in true L’Amour style. Unlike his other titles, this one isn’t spread around the Southwest, staying mostly in a little town, which makes the characters even more important to the story.
Fallon is at the end of his rope…literally. A brilliant card player, his winnings in some hokey-dokey Old West town gets him in trouble, to the point of being led to his own hanging. But fortune plays a role, as Fallon manages to spur his horse past the posse, albeit with his hands tied behind his back. He makes his way to an old, abandoned mining town, one of many that dot the western portion of the United States. At the same time, he also comes upon a wagon train in trouble. Realizing he is still a hunted man, he decides to take the waggoners to the old town and pretend that he owns it.
The near hanging has changed Mr. Fallon, as he starts a new life of hard labor, getting the town in order. He finds water, builds a dam, installs landscaping, helps the families get started in their stores, and keeps the peace. Of course, his plan is to get someone to purchase the useless mine from him, but as he gets to know the newcomers, he learns he can choose that path in the road that always eluded him before.
This is a slightly different book from L’Amour, as the action pretty much stays within one location. There are also nasty bandits and angry Indians and jealous townspeople and that hanging posse, so Fallon is one busy fellow. As usual, Louis L’Amour creates a character who may not be an angel until events change Fallon’s outlook on life. It’s also a lesson for the reader, to not give up and to realize there are other options in life.
Book Season = Year Round (extra nines)