Monday, 2 August 2021

CHAPTER ONE of THE PEACEMAKER

 I’m very happy to announce that my acclaimed western novel THE PEACEMAKER, previously published by Sundown Press, has been re-issued as an e.book by Andride Press, as of July 2021.

The book is set in Arizona in 1871. It describes a perilous mission to end the war between the white man and the Chiricahua Apaches under their great chief, COCHISE.




The cover design is by RICHARD HEARN.

Although THE PEACEMAKER is a stand-alone novel, and can be read as such, it is also a follow-up to my (also critically-acclaimed) western novel COYOTE’S PEOPLE, which you can find here: https://www.amazon.com/Coyotes-People-Andrew-McBride/dp/1432867253/ref=monarch_sidesheet




A BRIEF SAMPLE OF REVIEWS of THE PEACEMAKER:

I’ve received 30+ reviews of THE PEACEMAKER on Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk. and Goodreads. I’m very humbled and flattered that they’re all positive – a few 4 star, but the overwhelming majority 5 star, including reviews from some of the most successful and acclaimed western authors in the business, such as ROBERT VAUGHAN, RALPH COTTON and PETER BRANDVOLD. Here’s brief sample:

Spur award-winning and Pulitzer Prize-nominated author ROBERT VAUGHAN: ‘A great book’.

RALPH COTTON (also a Pulitzer-prize nominated novelist): ‘For pure writing style, McBride’s gritty prose nails the time and place of his story with bold authority. …this relatively new author has thoroughly, and rightly so, claimed his place among the top Old West storytellers.’

PETER BRANDVOLD (Winner of the PEACEMAKER lifetime achievement award – please note, that’s a different ‘peacemaker’ than my book!): ‘Excellent, riveting western.’

I’m very grateful to those writers (and others kind enough to review the novel) for their fantastic support.

You can read FULL REVIEWS of THE PEACEMAKER here: https://andrewmcbrideauthor.blogspot.com/2021/08/the-peacemaker-reviews.html


Apache Indians 1886 (GERONIMO extreme right)

Meanwhile, here’s the BLURB for THE PEACEMAKER:

BLURB:

Eighteen-year-old scout Calvin 'Choctaw' Taylor believes he can handle whatever life throws his way. He’s been on his own for several years, and he only wants to make his mark in the world. When he is asked to guide peace emissary Sean Brennan and his adopted Apache daughter, Nahlin, into a Chiricahua Apache stronghold, he agrees—but then has second thoughts. He’s heard plenty about the many ways the Apache can kill a man. But Mr. Brennan sways him, and they begin the long journey to find Cochise—and to try to forge a peace and an end to the Indian Wars that have raged for so long. During the journey, Choctaw begins to understand that there are some things about himself he doesn’t like—but he’s not sure what to do about it. Falling in love with Nahlin is something he never expected—and finds hard to live with. The death and violence, love for Nahlin and respect for both Cochise and Mr. Brennan, have a gradual effect on Choctaw that change him. But is that change for the better? Can he live with the things he’s done to survive in the name of peace?


And here’s CHAPTER ONE of THE PEACEMAKER:

CHAPTER ONE

The sun hung, midway between noon and dusk. It was a blazing silver dollar, bleaching a landscape that was bleached anyway.

He sat on the earth in the only shade there was, his horse’s shadow, and drank from his canteen. When the wind lifted it was hot against his flesh, spraying his skin with warm motes of dust that scratched. When it fell, as it did now, the breathless heat was sickening.

He brushed pale sand from his pants and stood. Taking a pair of army field glasses from his saddle bags, he trained them on the country to the east: the extreme south-east corner of Arizona Territory.

Land rippling in haze. A spine of salt-white sand dunes writhed like a snake, and, beyond them, purple mountains flaunted against a blurred sky. The Peloncillos, perhaps fifteen miles distant. Beyond this saw-toothed range lay New Mexico Territory. There was another boundary only twenty or so miles south, the border between the United States and Mexico.

He’d lost track of time somewhat, but guessed it was about the first of August, this year of 1871, which put him some five weeks past his eighteenth birthday.

His name was Calvin Taylor, although everyone called him Choctaw.

You might think his nick-name reflected Indian blood. He was dark haired and dark-complexioned, his skin further darkened by months under this sun. But his hair was tousled, not the straight blue-black of Indian hair, and his eyes were a startling Nordic blue. A good-looking boy, with trail stubble around his mouth and chin that hadn’t taken root yet as a man’s moustache and beard. He’d made his full height but was only starting to fill out his six-foot frame.

His clothing–denims, bandana, and flannel shield-front shirt—was largely colourless with wear. He wore a battered plainsman’s hat. His only affectation was a poncho over his shoulders. He wore a Colt .45 pistol, butt-forward in the cross-draw holster on his left hip. There was a brass-faced Yellowboy Winchester carbine in his saddle boot and a knife sheathed at his belt.

All this weaponry was an encumbrance, but a necessary one.

This country was a battleground.

For the best part of a decade, the incoming white man had been at war with the indigenous peoples of these mountains—the Apache Indians, mainly the Chiricahua band. The reasons behind this particular conflict, who’d started it, the rights and wrongs of it, had got lost in years of fighting and bloodshed. Now, it was simple: if you saw Apaches, you got ready to kill them–or they killed you.

Choctaw decided he'd got into a bad habit of travelling alone through dangerous country. On top of that, his horse was a problem. He'd only owned the gelding a few days, trading him for his old horse at the last place along the trail—Fort Bowie. The animal, a handsome rosewood bay, was as skittish as hell. He still needed some breaking in, but there wasn't the time...and this wasn't the place to do it. A man had to be able to depend on his horse, and right now, Choctaw couldn't.

Choctaw blinked sweat and sunspots out of his eyes and began to lower the field glasses; then he glimpsed movement.

He used the glasses again, scanning nearer ground, the white sands. He saw nothing.

And then, two black specks were there suddenly, framed against the dazzling white. They might have dropped from the sky.

They grew bigger. Two horsebackers coming this way, walking their mounts. As he watched, they spurted into rapid movement, whipping their ponies into a hard run toward him.

The specks swelled to the size of horses and men. Men in faded smocks, maybe once of bright colour, their long hair bound by rags at the temple. They had rifles in their hands.

Breath caught in Choctaw’s throat. Fear made him dizzy. His arms started to tremble. He knew who was coming at him so fast.

Apaches.

And you killed them—or they killed you.

This was no place to stand and fight. He remembered his back trail; there was a place, maybe three miles back.

He placed his hands on the saddle, trying not to hurry. He knew a nervous rider made a nervous horse. But, as he could have predicted, the bay turned skittish, anyway. When he reached for the reins, the horse snorted and backed away. Choctaw grabbed the reins and wrenched the bay's head down, trying not to think about the two horsemen hammering down on him.

He got his left foot into the near-side stirrup. The horse snorted and circled away from him. Choctaw hopped after, trying to keep his balance. The horse backed, shaking his head. Choctaw felt fear-sweat burst out all over him. He swore. He grabbed the saddle horn, hauling himself into the saddle and swung his leg over. In the tail of his eye, he glimpsed riders, coming closer.

Choctaw wrenched brutally on the rein, spinning the horse about. Behind him, a rifle cracked.

The horse jumped. Choctaw spurred. And hit the bay with his quirt. And yelled.

The horse broke into a run.

The first stretch was across a salt flat, then upslope. Cresting the slope, Choctaw risked a glance back over his shoulder. The Apaches were now where his run had begun, maybe a quarter-of-a-mile back.

He used the quirt once more. The bay answered, running full out.

Behind him, an Apache yelled. Another rifle banged.

Choctaw got his head down and rode. Now it was all down to which horses were strongest and freshest, and his own horse not putting its foot in a hole...

Two miles of that, hammering across the desert floor, while the horse wheezed under him. The bay’s coat turned dark with sweat, foam flying from his lips. The Apaches yelled once or twice, taking the occasional shot. But Choctaw kept his lead over them.

Until he crested a sand dune.

The sand on the far side was soft; it broke suddenly under the bay's hooves.

The horse fell. And screamed.

Choctaw pitched from the saddle. Both man and horse tumbled down slope, driving a surf of sand before them. At one point, Choctaw was sliding on his shoulders, upside down.

At the bottom of the slope they scrambled upright.

Dust swallowed them. A gauzy shroud enveloped Choctaw, then thinned around him. He coughed against dust and blinked it out of his eyes. He grabbed for the reins. The horse shied away. He reared.

Choctaw dodged flying hooves. He cried: “Keep still, goddammit!”

The bay backed from him, but Choctaw flung himself across the saddle and floundered there. The horse didn't care for being mounted in such fashion and began to spin, chasing his tail. Choctaw swore furiously. He managed to get his feet into the stirrups and swung upright in the saddle. He'd lost his quirt; he used spurs and yelling to get the bay moving. He lashed the animal across the tail with his hat.

The bay ran.

Choctaw glanced back. Both Apaches crested the dune. They'd cut the distance between him and them to two hundred yards. If they hauled in their horses, they could shoot him down while the range was so short. He saw they were doing just that, sitting there, raising their rifles.

He ducked his head, gritted his teeth and drove home the spurs.

Rifles banged behind him, shockingly close. Something struck against the inside of his left leg, a bullet yowled "Cousin!" in his right ear.

Ahead was a belt of low cactus, saguaro and thick brush.

Choctaw swerved the bay between giant saguaro. He found he was weaving through a cactus forest. Vicious thorns slashed him like whips, but at least, there was cover between him and his pursuers.

He broke into open ground and struck a slope.

This was the place he was looking for.

He crested the slope. Heading down the far side, he hauled the reins, pulling the bay up. Choctaw dropped from the saddle and let the reins trail. Dragging the Winchester from its saddle scabbard, he ran upslope, flinging himself face down just back of the crest. He aimed beyond it, tucking the butt of the carbine into his shoulder.

Down slope, the two horsemen issued from the cactus. They were maybe three hundred yards distant.

Choctaw had them cold. Now, if he could only control his nerves, which were jumping like landed fish, and the fear blocking his throat...

He fired at the nearest man.

And missed. The rider veered aside. The second man came at him head-on, seeming to impale himself on Choctaw’s front sights.

Choctaw fired.

The man flung up his arms. His pony plunged ahead, the rider rolling in dust at its heels.

In the corner of his eye, Choctaw glimpsed the other Apache swerving back in, crouched over his pony's neck. The Apache yelled, firing his rifle. Choctaw tracked this man and shot, too low. The pony went down. There was a lot of white dust—an explosion of it—hiding both Apaches.

While this dust was thinning, Choctaw ran over to his horse and mounted. He rode back to the crest, his rifle in his hand, scanning the ground beyond, seeing the dead pony but no dead Indian. Then he glimpsed both Apaches running away from him, toward the belt of cactus. One ran Apache style, ducked low and zigzagging from side to side, his rifle held across his body. The other runner was stumble-footed, he had one hand pressed to his left shoulder.

Choctaw gave them two more shots, kicking up dust at their heels, but both men reached cover.

Choctaw was pouring sweat, and his arms were shaking violently. His heart was pounding hard enough to knock a hole in his chest. He felt so breathless he thought he might faint. He ignored all that, spun his horse, and rode once more.

The bay was making noises like he had no more run left in him. The foam he coughed up splattered the rider’s legs, but Choctaw was merciless; he galloped the horse, nonetheless.

But this was Choctaw’s day for surprises and, after half-a-mile, he got another one.

                                                          *****

Arizona

I wanted a story that combined tough action with an interracial love affair; that dealt with Native American culture and the struggle of people to survive in a land that was both mercilessly cruel and astonishingly beautiful. Out of such elements THE PEACEMAKER was born. Should you read it, I hope you enjoy it.

You can find THE PEACEMAKER here: https://www.amazon.com/Peacemaker-Andrew-McBride-ebook/dp/B099FL3PN1/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=

If you’re interested in my other western novels, (all of which feature CALVIN TAYLOR, hero of THE PEACEMAKER as the central character) here’s my AUTHOR PAGE on Amazon.com: https://www.amazon.com/Andrew-McBride/e/B01N9O1C05/ref=dp_byline_cont_pop_ebooks_1


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