Download Marshal Jeremy Six Series (#1-2, 4-7) by Brian Garfield (.ePUB)

Marshal Jeremy Six Series (#1-2, 4-7) by Brian Garfield as Brian Wynne
Requirements: ePUB reader, 2.6mb
Overview: Brian Garfield was a historian, screenwriter, and a novelist. A Pulitzer Prize finalist, he wrote his first published novel at the age of eighteen. He would go on to write over seventy books across a wide variety of genres, and sold over twenty million copies worldwide.
Genre: Fiction > General Fiction/Classics > Westerns

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1 Mr. Sixgun (1964)
It was a hot, summer in Spanish Flat, and Marshal Jeremy Six figured on the usual amount of trouble: liqored-up miners, brawls between farmers and cowhands, and a couple of scraps over girls or cards.
Until Ben Sarasen rode into town…
Something ugly was brewing and the mood of the town reflected it. Where Sarasen walked, so did trouble. And yet Jeremy couldn’t help respecting the man … almost liking him. But he knew that Oakley Madden’s bunch were ripe to start something, and, if so, Sarasen was pretty sure to be involved in it.
Then, Jeremy knew, there would have to be a showdown – and either he or Saracen wouldn’t come out of it alive.

2 The Night It Rained Bullets (1965)
It started out with four drunken gunslingers raising the devil in a local saloon. Jeremy Six, marshal of Spanish Flat, knew it was going to be tough enough to silence that bunch.
But Spanish Flat was in for more than just that little ruckus that night. The tough little crossroads town was in for a blizzard that would make the roads impassable, that would drive the temperature down to zero and the frustrated anger of its frontier toughs boiling.
And then would come the refugees from the storm—the chilly-eyed killer riding in from the outlaw trail and the two-legged wolves from their rangeland hideouts.
They’d all be playing hell in Spanish Flat. And if there was to be a town still standing there tomorrow, it would be up to Jeremy to survive … the night it rained bullets!

4 The Proud Riders (1967)
If it hadn’t been for John Paradise arriving in town the same time as a government payroll amounting to sixty-five thousand dollars in gold, Marshal Jeremy Six might have passed a peaceful Fourth of July weekend. But the one-armed killer with a reputation of having gunned down fifty-seven men in his time was perched, sphinx-like, on a barstool, "waiting for a friend." And Harry Rose, a fat dude from the East, arrived with his entourage in Spanish Flat, gravitated toward the Drover’s Rest Saloon "to wait for his partner." The talent accumulating in town made the marshal itch. Then as four men were shot dead and the payroll disappeared, Jeremy knew he was refereeing a free-for-all between two bands of professional bandits.

5 A Badge for a Badman (1967)
"I’ll have your guts for guitar strings, Jeremy Six!"
If you’ve ever seen a she-bear defend her cub against a pack of wolves, you’ll know what Ma Marriner was like, only maybe she was bigger and meaner and the wolves were on her side.
What the marshal of Spanish Flat had done was to shoot Ma’s husband, Buel, while he was going about his business of robbing the town’s bank. And neither Ma nor her ornery son Cleve were going to let that go unavenged. Especially when Jeremy Six had added insult to injury by tossing Cleve into the calaboose.
So Ma gathered up the clan and all their thirty or more border-rider friends, and the whole pack of them set out for Spanish Flat to skin Jeremy’s hide once and for all.

6 Brand of the Gun (1968)
Wade Cruze and his men were in Spanish Flat, waiting. As hardcase a crew as ever rode the Arizona range, they were loaded for bear. Because their herd was on its way to town also, but under another man’s brand and prodded by an equally gun-quick crew. Marshal Six knew he’d need every bit of his trigger talent and lawman cunning to keep that restless bunch from shooting the town to pieces before their real targets arrived. The dispute was between two ranchers and it might be that both had right on their side, because it seemed to Six that there was an unknown third party prodding things along. If Six didn’t move lightning fast at the exact right time, there was sure going to be a blood-red round up right in the center of Spanish Flat and maybe no town left by sunset.

7 Gundown (1969)
Spanish Flat was a town balanced between high country and desert, between mines and ranches, between horsemen and hoemen, between the law-abiding and the naturally lawless. At any moment, the balance could shift and the place go up in gunsmoke. One man kept watch on that balance. His name was Jeremy Six and he wore the marshal’s badge.
But even the best lawman has to have a deputy – and when Jeremy’s new segundo set out to even a few old scores with the owlhooters, it meant that the law itself in Spanish Flat had gone loco – and every badge was a fair target for a six-shooter.

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Marshal Jeremy Six #03: HERE
Marshal Jeremy Six #08: HERE.



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