In 1868, William Standing, a man shadowed by his history, is forced into thievery, taking a majestic horse that is half mustang, half Arabian. He returns to an unspeakable tragedy: his sister's homestead ravaged by the Cheyenne Dog Soldiers, a tribe notorious for their fearsome warfare, leaving only the children taken captive. Driven by desperation, Standing tracks the Cheyenne, witnessing the aftermath of their raids.
In an unexpected confrontation, Standing proves his mettle, rescuing the children but surrendering the black horse to his adversaries. Just as hope dawns, the horse's original owners emerge, leading to Standing's harsh sentencing: twenty years in Georgia Penitentiary. His escape sparks a relentless search for the scattered children, now with distant kin.
Joining Buffalo Bill's Wild West show offers Standing a guise to move from town to town, yet the Pinkertons' pursuit is unyielding. His quest is a tumultuous ride through the heart of a man's indomitable spirit and the wild tapestry of the American frontier.
James Noble is a Yorkshire author, who previously wrote a non-fiction book concerning the travels of the Buffalo Bill Wild West (Show) in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. Apart from writing in several genres, his interests are many, including Napoleonic History, restoring elderly model steam engines, model soldiers and computer modelling and animation. He also paints in oils, mainly wildlife and local pastoral scenes, and has a healthy sales record locally.