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Sorry you rode such a long way to die. Lance Kincaid struggles to discover his past after losing his memory due to wounds he received in a Civil War battle. His search takes him from Illinois to Bell County, Texas, by way of Fort Griffin. His trip is plagued by run-ins with red neck Yankees and Lipan Apaches. He is smitten with the fort commander's daughter, Amy Scott, but his romantic desires must be put on hold until he determines if he has family obligations. Dark Moon, a Tonkawa Indian scout from Fort Griffin, guides him and his partner Hefty from Fort Griffin through the Comanche…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Sorry you rode such a long way to die. Lance Kincaid struggles to discover his past after losing his memory due to wounds he received in a Civil War battle. His search takes him from Illinois to Bell County, Texas, by way of Fort Griffin. His trip is plagued by run-ins with red neck Yankees and Lipan Apaches. He is smitten with the fort commander's daughter, Amy Scott, but his romantic desires must be put on hold until he determines if he has family obligations. Dark Moon, a Tonkawa Indian scout from Fort Griffin, guides him and his partner Hefty from Fort Griffin through the Comanche territory to reach Belton, Texas. With the help of Dr. Barton and Judge Tayler, Lance locates his family ranch only to find the Union Regulators have confiscated the property. Still without any memory of his past, he must find those behind this skullduggery and try to recover the ranch. With only determination and skill with a gun, he sets out to bring the wrongdoers to justice. In the end he finds himself face to face with Slade Cannon, a hired killer. He regains his memory when he receives help from an unsuspected source only to find that total justice has not been served.
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Autorenporträt
William Davis is the proud father of a beautiful little girl called Isabelle. Like all little girls she likes to listen to bedtime stories. So, he decided to tell her bedtime stories based on events in the recent past which had a moral message about the importance of kindness to others regardless of their background or ethnicity. One night he made up a story loosely based on the events of the Windrush generation. His little girl liked it so much that she asked for it again and again. Then one day, he decided to sit down and write the story down so that it could be shared with lots of little boys and girls. And then this happened.