Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher

Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher

    • £2.99
    • £2.99

Publisher Description

“Now, look a-here, Alec Lloyd,” broke in Hairoil Johnson, throwin’ up one hand like as if to defend hisself, and givin’ me a kinda scairt look, “you shut you’ bazoo right this minute–and git! Whenever you begin singin’ that song, I know you’re a-figgerin’ on how to marry somebody off to somebody else. And I just won’t have you around!”

We was a-settin’ t’gether on the track side of the deepot platform at Briggs City, him a-holdin’ down one end of a truck, and me the other. The mesquite lay in front of us, and it was all a sorta greenish brown account of the pretty fair rain we’d been havin’. They’s miles of it, y’ savvy, runnin’ so far out towards the west line of Oklahomaw that it plumb slices the sky. Through it, north and south, the telegraph poles go straddlin’–in the direction of Kansas City on the right hand, and off past Rogers’s Butte to Albuquerque on the left. Behind us was little ole Briggs, with its one street of square-front buildin’s facin’ the railroad, and a scatterin’ of shacks and dugouts and corrals and tin-can piles in behind.

Little ole Briggs! Sometimes, you bet you’ life, I been pretty down on my luck in Briggs, and sometimes I been turrible happy; also, I been just so-so. But, no matter how things pan out, darned if I cain’t allus say truthful that she just about suits me–that ornery, little, jerkwater town!

The particular day I’m a-speakin’ of was a jo-dandy–just cool enough to make you want t’ keep you’ back aimed right up at the sun, and without no more breeze than ’d help along a butterfly. Then, the air was all nice and perfumey, like them advertisin’ picture cards you git at a drugstore. So, bein’ as I was enjoyin’ myself, and a-studyin’ out somethin’ as I hummed that was mighty important, why, I didn’t want t’ mosey, no, ma’am.

But Hairoil was mad. I knowed it fer the reason that he’d called me Alec ’stead of Cupid. Y’ see, all the boys call me Cupid. And I ain’t ashamed of it, neither. Somebody’s got t’ help out when it’s a case of two lovin’ souls that’s bein’ kept apart.

“Now, pardner,” I answers him, as coaxin’ as I could, “don’t you go holler ’fore you’re hit. It happens that I ain’t a-figgerin’ on no hitch-up plans fer you.”

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2014
18 April
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
513
Pages
PUBLISHER
Library of Alexandria
SIZE
592.8
KB

More Books Like This

Stunned and Seething Stunned and Seething
2022
Torchy, Private Sec. Torchy, Private Sec.
2009
Tattletale Roadhouse Tattletale Roadhouse
2012
Zombies and Vampires and Tooth Fairies, Oh My! Zombies and Vampires and Tooth Fairies, Oh My!
2015
Hand In Glove Hand In Glove
2014
Twisted Shorties Twisted Shorties
2012

More Books by Eleanor Gates

Good-Night (Buenas Noches) - Illustrated by Arthur Rackham Good-Night (Buenas Noches) - Illustrated by Arthur Rackham
2013
“Swat the Fly!” “Swat the Fly!”
2024
The Plow-Woman The Plow-Woman
2024
Apron-Strings Apron-Strings
2024
Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher
2024
Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher
2024