Difference between revisions of "The Cold Trail"
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==Book Description== | ==Book Description== | ||
+ | When Jim Randall returned to Briscoe, the little range town of his childhood, in response to a note that his father had suddenly died, he was met with a strange and hostile silence. No one cared to explain until Lewis Dunham, once his father's friend, told Jim that his father was an embezzler and a suicide. 'People will hold your father's actions against you, Jim.' Dunham said. ;You'd better clear out and try to make a start elsewhere.' But Jim refused to leave, and each day the doubt in his mind grew. Little pieces of evidence here and there strengthened his conviction that his father was not a suicide, that he discovered that his attempts to establish his father's innocence were resented - so viciously that he too was marked for death. Repeated attempts on Jim's life brought odd results. He found that a few people, including the beautiful, dark-eyed Linda Lane, believed in him after all and would follow him on a cold trail to the bitter end. | ||
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)== | ==Cover Variation (By Release Date)== |
Latest revision as of 20:32, 28 May 2011
By Paul E. Lehman | |
Publisher | Harlequin Romance #82 |
Release Month | 1950 (US) |
Harlequin Romance Series # | |
Preceded by | Idaho |
Followed by | Fall Guy |
- Author: Paul E. Lehman
- Publisher: Harlequin Romance #82
- Year: 1950
Book Description
When Jim Randall returned to Briscoe, the little range town of his childhood, in response to a note that his father had suddenly died, he was met with a strange and hostile silence. No one cared to explain until Lewis Dunham, once his father's friend, told Jim that his father was an embezzler and a suicide. 'People will hold your father's actions against you, Jim.' Dunham said. ;You'd better clear out and try to make a start elsewhere.' But Jim refused to leave, and each day the doubt in his mind grew. Little pieces of evidence here and there strengthened his conviction that his father was not a suicide, that he discovered that his attempts to establish his father's innocence were resented - so viciously that he too was marked for death. Repeated attempts on Jim's life brought odd results. He found that a few people, including the beautiful, dark-eyed Linda Lane, believed in him after all and would follow him on a cold trail to the bitter end.