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Franklin Sutter was born in Alabama prior to the civil war. His parents were Marsha Lee Sutter, the white daughter of Jesse and Carolyn Sutter and Odelle Jones a black slave on their plantation. However, Franklin is white. His father, Odelle is banished from the plantation and Franklin is raised by his mother. When his mother dies, he's adopted by her brother and becomes heir to the family fortune while still a teenager, with his secret intact. His future travels take him to the seat of the power in the US and thence to California where he meets the legendary Tommy Sanchez, gets involved in a land war and marries into a Spanish aristocratic family, who are not aware of his secret. The climax comes when he's forced to reveal his secret.
Hiram Bookers became disenchanted with his life on the east coast and sold his merchant fleet involved in the Slave Trade and bought a large parcel south of Santa Barbara. After he built his home, he advertised for a mail order bride. While on a hunting trip, Hiram was shot and left for dead. He was found and taken to the hospital by Tommy Sanchez, the son of Sitting Bull and his wife Sarah who'd been married to Crazy Horse, the Indian hero of the Battle of the Little Big Horn. When Hiram recovered, he was suffering from amnesia. Tommy Sanchez and his wife took him in and employed him at their ranch. The county sheriff, seeking reelection sensed that Silas Smith, as Bookers was now called, may have been involved in a robbery of a special train, carrying thirty thousand in money for a new bank in Santa Barbara. The sheriff harassed Silas until he uncovered evidence pointing at him as one of the train bandits. It was Tommy Sanchez who found the clues pointing to someone else. He came up with a plan to free Smith, uncover his past and identify the actual train robber.
TRUE TO HIS WORD, Joseph Horn Cloud presented White Bird to the Pine Ridge Indian Council for a Trial on Behalf of the four soldiers. Their verdict, which Joseph and his brother feared, was a lifetime ban from the Sioux Nation and all its followers. It was to commence in ten days, White Lance and his brother had expected a similar fate for their younger brother, but not one of that length.Their parting was one of sadness. They loved their white brother and would miss him forever. but they knew in their heart that this was just verdict and not as great as the court in Santa Barbara had pronounced.White Bird vowed to his brother that he would devote the remainder of his life to being a good man and one they could be proud of. He spent the next week in meditation at his parents' grave and at the monument at Wounded Knee. He then left the area and headed south toward Sidney. He found Rosita Riley in a dirty saloon on the outskirts of the town and asked her to forgive him. He learned that he had a son who was four years old.He told her what he'd done and what the verdict laid down by the Pine Ridge Council was. He told her he was still hunted by the authorities, but if she and the child were willing, he would marry her and take then with him. "Jacob, we've had a miserable existence the last three years, but I don't know if I can trust you. You left me once; why wouldn't you do it you?""I understand your reluctance, but I'm a difference man today and I promised my brothers that I would be a good man. My name is not Jacob Light; it's Raymond O' Caliegh. I researched records of the many wagon trains that were lost and found out who my real parents were."
Jason Brown, a bank robber and killer, was comfortable taking anything he wanted. When he made a proposition to Sarah Sanchez and was rebuffed, he kidnapped her and made his getaway to the Santa Ynez Mountains. Tommy Sanchez, the son of Sitting Bull, reverting to his days as an Indian Brave, went in search of his wife. He used all his skills he learned at the feet of his famous father, to track down the two. The reader will be mesmerized at the final confrontation between the two men.
This is a love story between two outcasts of society in the early west. Tommy Sanchez, the half-breed son of Sitting Bull and Sarah Hansen, who was captured by the Sioux and forced to marry Crazy Horse, the war chief of the Sioux. Sanchez was attempting to make his way in white society until one fateful day his world turned upside down and he was pursued from town to town by a vengeful sheriff. Upon the death of Crazy Horse, Sarah Hansen had to return to her white culture, to support her two children while handling the stigma of being a whie squaw. Sarah and Tommy overcome many obstacles until they meet in the beautiful Santa Ynez Valley.
The double murder of two long time friends has caused hysteria in the small town of Solvang, California. It's up to Clay Wrens, the county's foremost detective to solve the crimes and calm the local populace. As the investigation reaches a climax, Wrens is drawn to a twenty-five year old case and the convicted murderer who's just been released from prison.
Jason Brown, a bank robber and killer, was comfortable taking anything he wanted. When he made a proposition to Sarah Sanchez and was rebuffed, he kidnapped her and made his getaway to the Santa Ynez Mountains. Tommy Sanchez, the son of Sitting Bull, reverting to his days as an Indian Brave, went in search of his wife. He used all his skills he learned at the feet of his famous father, to track down the two. The reader will be mesmerized at the final confrontation between the two men.
During a pre-dawn bank robbery, one of the robbers stumbles upon a skeleton unearthed from its resting place of twenty-six years by a major winter storm. Determining who's interned under the building foundation and what the skeleton took to its grave is the responsibility of Clay Wrens, the premier homicide detective in central California. Constrained by budgetary concerns and a supervisor who sees him as a threat, Wrens follows a trail to the seat of this country's power and revisits Washington's most famous burglary case. Standing in the shadows and watching his every move is a ruthless adversary with substantial financial resources who will strike with a viciousness when cornered and a Washington agency that sees Wrens' inquiry as a threat to national security
On a quiet summer day in Solvang, Ca., the ex-wife of county homicide detective Clay Wrens is murdered; all clues point to him. While trying to clear his name, he uncovers the secret life of his ex-wife and her ties to a terrorist plot to blow up Los Angeles International Airport. Lurking in the shadows is an old nemesis operating an illegal enterprise in Solvang's own backyard. As his investigation is rushing to a conclusion, Wrens must contend with an FBI agent trying to restrict his every movement and a cunning criminal who will stop at nothing to protect his criminal enterprise.
In the early 1800s, two young men grew up in the South, became great friends, and loved the same woman. As they grew older, their relationship grew stronger, until one of them moved to the North to found several banks and become wealthy, while the other became a U.S. Senator from the South. As war broke out between the states, James Harris became the Administrative Assistant to President Abraham Lincoln, while John Beauregard assumed the position of the South's chief spy. As the war progressed, both men were pitted against each other, to sway the balance of power. Could these two men reconcile once the war ended? And would the woman they both loved be an impediment to renewing their friendship?
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