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Deathwalk [Mass Market Paperback]

Matt Braun (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 15, 2000
Could the most feared gunman in the West become a respectable lawman in the wildest city in Texas?

Ben Thompson carved out a name for himself as a gambler and a shootist-from Dodge City to the Rio Grande. But settling down in Austin with a wife and young son didn't settle Ben's taste for the sporting life. He still found himself in the gambling dives-where the turn of a card too often led to a shootout. Then a circle of powerful businessmen decided Thompson was the only man who could tame Austin's wild side. They asked him to rule the streets and take no prisoners. They asked him to take on the job of a marshal in a town where every man packed a gun. And for Thompson, his explosive career as a lawman would prove to be a crossroads. His personal code of honor was the price for a tin-star badge. . .

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About the Author

Matt Braun is a fourth generation Westerner, steeped in the tradition and lore of the frontier era. His books reflect a heritage rich with the truths of that bygone time. Raised among the Cherokee and Osage tribes, Braun learned their traditions and culture, and their philosophy became the foundation of his own beliefs. Like his ancestors, he has spent most of his life wandering the mountains and plains of the West. His heritage and contribution to Western literature resulted in his appointment by the Governor of Oklahoma as a Territorial Marshal.

Braun is the author of over forty novels and four nonfiction works, including Black Fox, which was made into a CBS miniseries, and One Last Town which was made into a TNT movie called You Know My Name. Western Writers of America awarded Braun the prestigious Spur Award for his novel The Kincaids. He was also the recipient of the Cowboy Spirit Award and was inducted into the Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1999.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

ONE



“Kings bet twenty.”
Thompson studied the dealer’s hand. On the table were an eight, a king, a ten and a king. He figured it for two pair, probably kings and eights. Homer Watts, the dealer, was a tombstone peddler who fancied himself a poker player. The other men in the game had dropped out of the hand.
Watts stared across the table with an eager smile. The game was five-card stud, and Thompson’s hand revealed a jack, a three, a jack and a king. In the hole he had another jack, but it was the king that impressed him most. With three on the board, the dealer would have to hold the case king to win. The odds dictated otherwise.
“Your twenty—” Thompson shoved chips into the center of the table—“and raise fifty.”
“You’re bluffin’, Ben.”
“One way to find out.”
“Call your raise,” Watts cackled, “and bump it another fifty.”
All afternoon the two men had butted heads. The other players were largely spectators, seldom winning a hand. Ben Thompson was the owner of the establishment, the Iron Front Gaming Parlor & Saloon. A gambler of some repute, he invariably drew players to his game. Today was no exception.
“Let’s make it interesting,” Thompson said casually. “How much in front of you?”
Watts quickly counted his chips. “Hundred and thirty.”
“I’ll tap you, then. The raise is a hundred and thirty.”
“You’re tryin’ to buy yourself a pot. No way you’ve got three jacks.”
“You’ll have to pay to see, Homer.”
The other players watched with amused looks. Watts fidgeted a moment, then pushed his chips into the pot. “You’re called,” he said. “What’s your hole card?”
Thompson turned over the third jack. Watts glowered at the cards with an expression of dumb disbelief. “Gawddamn the luck!” he howled. “I would’ve sworn you was bluffin’.”
“Another day, another time, Homer. Your luck’s bound to change.”
“Hold my chair” Watts announced, jumping to his feet. “I ain’t outta the game yet.”
The deal passed with each hand. One of the men began collecting the cards. “We’re fixin’ to play poker here, Homer. You gonna be gone long?”
“Won’t take a minute,” Watts called, rushing toward the door. “Just gotta go to my wagon.”
Thompson shook his head, chuckling to himself, and raked in the pot. He was a blocky man, not quite six feet tall, with square, broad shoulders and rugged features. His gray eyes were alert and penetrating, and even with a full mustache, he looked younger than his thirty-nine years. Over his vest, he wore a spring-clip shoulder holster, the leather molded to the frame of a Colt pistol. The lustrous blue of steel was set off by yellowed ivory grips.
The Iron Front was located just off the corner of Mulberry and Colorado. The establishment got its name from a heavy metal sign that extended the width of the building. A lifelong resident of Austin, the capital of Texas, Thompson had bought the gaming parlor two years ago. In that time, he had transformed it into one of the premier gambling clubs of the city, frequented by lawmakers and influential businessmen. The state capitol building was only two blocks away.
Homer Watts rushed back through the door. A granite tombstone, weighing at least a hundred pounds, was cradled in his arms. In the afternoon lull, there were few men at the long mahogany bar, and fewer still at the faro and twenty-one layouts along the opposite wall. Yet they paused, bemused by the sight, as he staggered toward the poker tables at the rear of the room. He lowered the tombstone to the floor with a thump.
“There you are,” he said, grinning at Thompson. “Solid granite and smooth as a baby’s butt. Carve anything you want on it.”
Thompson nodded appreciatively. “That’s a fine looking headstone, Homer. What does it have to do with poker?”
“Well, it’s worth a couple of hundred, easy. You credit me with a hundred and I’m back in the game. You got yourself a bargain.”
“What the devil would I do with a headstone?”
Watts gave him a crafty look. “Everybody needs one sooner or later. C’mon, Ben, be a sport. What’s a hundred?”
Thompson glanced at the men seated around the table. “How about it, gents? Think it’s worth a hundred?”
None of them thought Ben Thompson had any immediate need of a headstone. He was the most renowned shootist of the day, reported to have killed eight men in gunfights. The Police Gazette, ever in search of a sensational headline, ranked him more deadly than Doc Holliday, or the infamous John Wesley Hardin, now confined to the state penitentiary. His name on a headstone seemed as remote as the stars.
“All right, Homer,” Thompson said amiably, tossing chips across the table. “Have a seat and let’s get on with the game. You just made a sale.”
“Five-card draw,” the dealer said, shuffling the cards. “Everybody ante up.”
Homer Watts found luck to be as elusive as ever. He opened with a pair of queens and failed to improve his hand on the draw. Yet he rode it to the end, confident he couldn’t be beat.
A pair of aces left him poorer, if not wiser.


The game ended shortly before six o’clock. The players cashed in their chips and drifted to the bar. There, over whiskey, they commiserated with one another on the turn of the cards. Few of them had won more than the price of a drink.
Thompson walked to his office at the rear of the room. He was a family man, and unlike most gamblers, he made it a point to have supper with his wife and son. Then, around eight in the evening, he would return to the Iron Front for a night of poker. He usually played until two or three o’clock in the morning.
A dandy of sorts, Thompson was an impeccable dresser. His normal attire was a Prince Albert suit, with a somber vest and striped trousers, and a diamond stickpin in his tie. He topped it off with a silk stovepipe hat, and the result was a man who looked the very picture of sartorial fashion. As he slipped into his coat, tugging the lapel snug over his shoulder holster, the door opened. Joe Richter, who managed the club, stepped into the office.
“You’re a corker, boss,” he said with a toothy grin. “Everybody in town will have a good laugh over that game.”
Thompson shrugged. “Homer had his mind set on playing. How could I turn him down?”
“Damn fool ought to stick to sellin’ headstones. Poker’s not his game.”
“Joe, the same might be said about most of our customers. Sometimes it gets discouraging.”
Thompson was known and respected on the Western gamblers’ circuit. Over the past decade he had played poker from the Mexican border to the Dakotas. In the Kansas cowtowns, during trailing season, he’d never failed to find a high stakes game with wealthy Texas cattlemen. His name alone brought high rollers to the table.
Austin was a different kettle of fish. On occasion he would host a high stakes game with legislators from the state capitol and local ranchers. But for the most part, the Iron Front catered to a clientele who viewed gambling as a pastime. Faro and roulette, and other games of chance, made the enterprise immensely profitable, even for low stakes. Still, it was a world apart from the action he’d known on the gamblers’ circuit. Some days were more boring than others.
Joe Richter saved him from the drudgery of daily operations. A slender stalk of a man, Richter was a veteran of the gaming life and a highly competent manager. His responsibility included everything from hiring and firing dealers to overseeing the bartenders. He was trustworthy and capable, and his expertise with gaming tables was reflected in the monthly balance sheet. His attention to detail relieved Thompson of the tedium associated with running a business, albeit one of a sporting nature. He was, for all practical purposes, the backbone of the Iron Front.
“Before you go,” he said now. “What should I do with the tombstone? We have to get it off the floor.”
“Donate it to one of the churches,” Thompson replied. “Preachers are always burying somebody.”
“And if they ask how we got it?”
“Tell them Homer Watts took it out in trade.”
Thompson moved to the door, his stovepipe hat tilted at a rakish angle. He went through the club and emerged onto the street, struck by the cloying warmth of day’s end. Austin was sometimes brutally hot in the summer, and July had proved to be a scorcher. He turned toward Congress Avenue, where the streetcar line bisected the city.
A short distance ahead, three cowhands were congregated at the corner of Mulberry and Colorado. Thompson saw that they were reasonably sober, and wondered why they had strayed into the uptown area. The cattle trade usually kept to the red light district, which was some blocks south, nearer the river. As he approached, the men inspected his fashionable attire with wiseacre grins. One of them stepped into his path.
“Well, looky here,” the cowhand gibed. “We got ourselves a regular swell. Where you from, pilgrim?”
Thompson realized he’d been mistaken for an Ea...

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks; mass market edition (September 15, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312975163
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312975166
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,099,906 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars LITTLE SLOW!, September 7, 2002
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This review is from: Deathwalk (Mass Market Paperback)
This ia about Ben Thompson, a gambler, shootist and a lawman. It dawns on him one day that he has really nothing good to be remembered for and decides to run for Marshall of Austin. He, of course wins, and is soon making people follow the law. The story jumps about with him leaving Austin two different times. He is true to his friends and this gets him in trouble more than once. Was not Marshall long and decided to quit, has not happy doing the job. Book was a little slow to me with several dead pages. Think Braun has done better.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable Western with solid historical background, February 15, 2002
This review is from: Deathwalk (Mass Market Paperback)
This is another tale of the old West from Matthew Braun,and like most of his novels is based on the career of an actual Western luminary,in this case Ben Thompson.Thompson,as described by Braun with the air of slightly musty pedanticicm that is coming to inform much of his research these days,was a widely regarded and exceptionally skilled gambler and a feared shootist who ,having carved out a substantial reputation in both trades in Denver and Dodge City settles in Austin and becomes a prominent club owner with at least one foot in "polite society"
His marriage to "Catherine"is stable and they have a teenage son.

Austin accepts its sporting district,known as "Guy Town",as long as it does not intrude on the right side of the tracks and the games are honest and above board,something about which Thompson is adamant.

Thompson attends a performance of "Macbeth"and something about the play causes him to re-evaluate his life and career.He opts to run for town marshall where he operates a prototype zero tolerance policy

The novel's main focus is on his career in the law enforcement business and the strains placed on him both publically and privately

The result is an enjoyable read with some good historical background on frontier towns in transition to a more stable and settled way of life,

I was always nagged while reading the book however that the book maybe could have gone that bit deeper.Braun ,in his earlier books had an edge to the depiction of Western legends that seems missing these days and the result lacks the bite he would have brought to the tale say 20 years ago

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"Kings bet twenty." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sporting district, sporting crowd, state house grounds, gaming parlor, city marshal, crooked games, variety theater
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Guy Town, Iron Front, San Antonio, Congress Avenue, Dodge City, Ben Thompson, Jack Harris, James Shipe, Judge Warren, Carl Allen, Luther Edwards, Edwin Booth, Mayor Wheeler, Tom Wheeler, Alexander Wooldridge, Joe Richter, Lady Gay, Lone Star, Will Simms, Bat Masterson, Captain Lee Hall, Dora Kelly, Lola Montana, Lon Dennville, Rio Grande
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