When beautiful Katie Burke offers
money to anyone who can best Neil Bancroft in a fight, he’s not sure he’s
hearing right. Neil has never laid eyes on the mystery woman – so why does she
want to see him beaten black and blue?
"Robert D. McKee weaves a thrilling Western that keeps the reader guessing, and the pace drives readers through to the end before they know it. I’m not personally partial to the Western genre, but I could not put this book down. Neil and Katie are dynamic and fun characters, and along the way the people they encounter truly bring the Wild West alive in a historically accurate way. Dakota Trails is a wonderful blend of Western, mystery, and romance." — Historical Novel Society
EXCERPT
Neil was halfway into his first beer when the woman from the corrals stepped through the saloon's open doorway. As she crossed to the bar, Neil noticed she eyed him at the table where he sat.
"Excuse me, sir," she said to Dick, the bartender. "Could I trouble you for a glass of water?"
"Why—why, sure,
ma'am." Dick's awkward behavior made it obvious that except for the local
whores, he was unaccustomed to a woman coming into his saloon. He reached
beneath the counter, came up with a pitcher of water, and filled a tumbler. She
thanked him with a pretty smile and took a sip.
It was still early, and the
place was not yet crowded. No more than a dozen men sat around the dimly lit
barroom, all of them with their mouths agape watching the young woman drink her
water.
She blotted her lips with an
index finger when she was finished, and then she turned her back to the bar and
looked out over the room. "Afternoon, gentlemen," she said. Everyone
stiffened, but no one said a word. "My name is Kathleen Burke. Katie
Burke." She patted a small pocketbook she carried. "In my purse, here,
I have a Liberty Double Eagle that I will give to any man who is willing to
knock that cowboy over there unconscious." She lifted her hand and aimed a
finger at Neil Bancroft.