Monty Nash has been despatched to a small town in Texas embroiled in racial tensions.
There has been a gun theft in an armoury. The whites are blaming the black militants. The extremists have got the townsfolk whipped into a frenzy. They say the blacks will overrun them unless they make an immediate stance for white rights.
The local blacks are not backing down. Cole Walker (Austin Stoker) is the ringleader and the rabble rouser. Nash came across him as he as getting beaten up by a couples of white yahoos, Ed Stanley and Scott Stoker.
The town becomes a powder keg when one of the white locals disappears. A note found in his car indicates that he has been murdered. It is all too much for the local sheriff.
However Monty Nash is confused. Both Walker and Stanley served in the same unit in the Vietnam war. They were army buddies now turned into apparent enemies.
Maybe something else in play. A good old fashioned bank heist and the racial tensions are just a convenient distraction.
The episode does well in showing the raw emotions. I did like how the story did an about turn. Walker and Stanley nearly walked off with a lot of money of it was not for Monty Nash.
There has been a gun theft in an armoury. The whites are blaming the black militants. The extremists have got the townsfolk whipped into a frenzy. They say the blacks will overrun them unless they make an immediate stance for white rights.
The local blacks are not backing down. Cole Walker (Austin Stoker) is the ringleader and the rabble rouser. Nash came across him as he as getting beaten up by a couples of white yahoos, Ed Stanley and Scott Stoker.
The town becomes a powder keg when one of the white locals disappears. A note found in his car indicates that he has been murdered. It is all too much for the local sheriff.
However Monty Nash is confused. Both Walker and Stanley served in the same unit in the Vietnam war. They were army buddies now turned into apparent enemies.
Maybe something else in play. A good old fashioned bank heist and the racial tensions are just a convenient distraction.
The episode does well in showing the raw emotions. I did like how the story did an about turn. Walker and Stanley nearly walked off with a lot of money of it was not for Monty Nash.