Devil's Manhunt (Stories From the Golden Age)

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It had been named for a surveyor who had been jumped by Apaches here in ’71 and obliterated, and whose grave was now no less so on a knoll amongst the tin cans south of the tracks.At the moment in history when Johnny tackled Thorpeville, that squalid cluster of shacks and loading pens was the current end of the Texas trail, whence came tens of thousands of heads of beef to be shipped to Kansas City and tens of dozens of Texas punchers to be bilked, cheated, knocked out, poisoned, shot and mayhem...ed.Just now Thorpeville sat in the middle of a sea of prairie mud, the spring rains being late here, and waited for the first of the long, bawling herds which would come and make the citizenry, namely George Bart, solvent once more. Cattle buyers waited in boredom around the New York House, gamblers and their cohorts shuffled cards disconsolately, dance halls had the desolate and deceptive air of churches.George Bart was all ready for the brisk trade which would last the next many months. As sole agent for more things than any respectable man would want, Bart had caused his warehouse—the only warehouse—to be full of cases and bottles which gurgled, barrels which sloshed and kegs which purled, as well as more mundane articles such as canned corn, pineapple, peaches, tomatoes and peas, as well as bulging sacks of dried beans and casks of brined beef.

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