D M Harrison author 

Black Horse Westerns

When a Pinkerton agent offers Soames Ho the job of taking gold from Marysville to a Californian bank he accepts. The stagecoach carrying the gold travels through Savage Pass with a nervous driver and a greenhorn shotgun rider. Waiting up ahead are three men intent on robbery. The Pinkerton agent has deliberately set it up so that no one with guts or real fire power escorts the stagecoach, but he got Soames Ho all wrong. Soames believes in justice and, whatever the cost, he is determined to find the gold and the outlaws.

Wells Fargo Agent, Jay Kato, didn’t want the job of taking a consignment of gold to Green River Springs. The town held too many memories - bad ones.

His cousin, Duke Heeley, had threatened to kill him if he ever came back to town, but he put aside his misgivings when he was offered a generous bonus. After all he only had to deliver the money to the marshal. 

However, when the time came to step off the train, a hail of bullets greeted him. Kato knew then he’d have to raise an army to fight them all. 

For over twelve years, Kit Bayfield believed his son was dead. Back then, Kit's two other sons had been unable to find Mitch. But now, an Indian claiming to be his son, and going by the Comanche name of Broke, confronts him. Kit reckons folks will find Broke's return difficult. Everyone should have helped search for the boy and now his son's face is full of hatred - the whole town, including his brothers, is on his payback list...

Mitch Bayfield, or ‘Broke’ as he prefers to be known, is kidnapped and raised as a Comanche. When, many years later, he looks for his kin he finds himself unable to settle in either world and turns his back on them all. 

However, because he made a promise to a young white girl  who still lives with the Comanches, he is determined to go back for her.

After a bloody confrontation with the Comanche warriors, Broke and Little Bluestem are allowed to flee. 

But it’s just a game. 

And they know that capture means torture and death.