#4 in the Rafferty series. This 1989 series entry by author W. Glenn Duncan fits right in with the series. After reading the series debut, Rafferty’s Rules (1987), and getting hooked, this volume was the first that came to hand. Rafferty is not as violent as he was in the series debut, so where I said he was influenced by Mike Hammer and Spenser, perhaps in this entry Mike Hammer is replaced by Travis McGee. A complex plot but all becomes clear and justice (Rafferty style) prevails.
Toby Wells said he was a legit bounty hunter, Rafferty saw no reason not to believe him. Now Luis Ortega is dead and Rafferty’s carrying the gun. It hurts to admit it, but Toby Wells played Rafferty like a bar-room fiddle. While the cops know Rafferty didn’t kill Luis Ortega, that cold comfort won’t be enough to prevent him from looking for the sonofabitch who pulled the trigger. Only problem is, he’s a little occupied right now trying to get the teenage vandals to lay off Thorney, Honeybutt’s recalcitrant great-uncle. Plus, Ortega’s past offers no clues as to why someone wanted to cancel his breathing licence and, besides, Wells has disappeared. Just when Rafferty thinks he’s getting somewhere, the paint bombs on Thorney’s porch escalate to rifle shots. It’d make more sense if Rafferty could just work out who’s behind the gun and who they’re shooting at. Now he’s got to keep Thorney alive, and find the shooter, too.