about Skeeter Skelton
Transcription
about Skeeter Skelton
When a "Black Duster" hits, there's not much two young schoolboys on Easter breal<can do. Mothin' that is exm cept get into a little mischief and some good ole shootin' fun with a couple of alltime classic rifles. ... YOU'VE GOT TO BE at i . least 50 years old to remember how it was in a little red schoolhouse in the Texas Panhandle when the 'long winter had grudgingly passed, the trees were budding, and you fidgeted in your blackboard-walled cell, waiting for the Easter parole. M e and Jody Bishop sweated out our Easters i n an old brick building called Central School in Hereford, Tex. After seven months of maximum-security confinement, not counting Thanksgiving and Christmas, we were fit to bust out of our bib overalls by the time the April holiday showed up. Thefruity smell of paper-bag lunches, screech of cheap chalk on scratchy blackboards, and the drone of the geog- ing weeks that they were slippery. We raphy teacher dully describing places had stored up enough ammunition to we would never see (and didn't care) open a shooting gallery. We were in business. all combined to make us crinkle our toer and bite the insides of our cheeks After a gigantic supper beneath the to endure those last few days befare coal-oil lamp on Rosie's oilclothrelease. .There were bad tempers and a covered table. we hit the feathers early. lot of fist fights on the playgrounds A dawn attack was scheduled. Along about 3 a.m. the senile board right before Easter. Outside our prison the trees were house started making subtle creaking greening up and the birds were chirping sounds. A loose shingle slapped sugtheir appreciation of the warmer weath- gestively on the roof. A low, continuous moaning rising in pitch washed aroupd er. Rabbits .were thick in the winter wheat and alfalfa, and me and Joe the farmhouse. I took notice and sensed knew that the crappie fishing in our that loe, lying next to me, was aware almost-private creek was just beginning of it, too. We moaned inwardly to ou;selves. to perk up. In our hungry anticipation of four We had a hideout for our four days of hiatus from Central School, and like days in our cherished preserve, we had Mr. E. G. Robinson and Mr. J. Cagney neglected to remember one harsh fact. of the movies, we laid plans t o "crash We lived in the end of the Depression, out of that college." on the High Plains, and in the heart O n Thursday afternoon, Jody's of the Dust Bowl of the '30s. It was mother drove us t o her parents', the springtime, and while that meant cherry O'Farrells, farm, loaded with our guns, blossoms in Washington, D.C., it held clean underwear, and a few spare Three a portent of 100-rnph winds tha? blackMusketeer candy bars. ened the sky and choked, blinded, and immobilized the people and places they A t the old frame farmhouse, we greeted Elmer and Rose O'Farrell; old commanded in Texas. These storms were terrible and quite Dick, leader of our ratty dog pack; and Nickand Freckles, our horses. Then common i n those days. They were we fell to serious business, dragging our called Dusters or Black Dusters back long bamboo fishing poles from storage then, and when you got caught in one, in the barn, checking the line and hook you couldn't see five feet ahead of you. supply, and counting the minnows in They were dangerous, and people died the stock tank. . . i n them. Nobody in their right mind Our .22 rifles had been cleaned and would leave shelter until thedust storms oiled so many times during the preced- had blown themselves out-which 114 SKEETER SKELTON 1980 sornetirnes took days. M e and Joegot out of bed and waited for the sun to rise, but it never did. We had us a Black Duster on the first of our precious days. We fought our way t o the barn, bareheaded so we wouldn't lose our sornbreros, fed the horses, milked the aging cow, and threw the dust-stirred milk to the chickens. ljaving learned respect for dusters, we strung three lariat ropes together from the barn door to the yard gate of the house so we'd have a lifeline through the choking darkness when we had to venture out for the necessary care of the stock. Following the wire clothesline to the big galvanized tank of the windmill, M e and Joe got out of bed and waited for the sun to rise, but it never did. we ~ u i i e dthe lever that shut off the rickety Dempster fan by turning i t sideways into the wi'nd and clamping it against its tail. Then we drew a few buckets of tank water for the house, covered them with wet flour sacks to keep some of the flying topsoil out, and went back inside-into exile. That first day, Good Friday, we tromped the house nervously, leaving gritty tracks on the linoleum floors. The roofs of our mouths felt like they'd been coated with goat-scented talcurn 1 powder. Little, inanimate things floated in the dippers of well water as we swilled, trying to wash out our mouths. Rosie made us some of her huge pancakes, smothered i n homemade sugar syrup. We ate every bite, but we didn't tell her that our favorite O'Farrell dish tasted like i t had metal filings in it. Me and Joe checked our greasy guns. They were oily muddy. We wiped them off and rolled them in an old sheet. By midafternoon the winds were a steady 60 mph. Rosie and Mr. O'Farrell made constant passes through the house, dusting and sweeping. The dirt b u i l t i ~ again p immediately i n their wake, piling bvo inches high or more in front of the dried out old doors. M e and Joe were going nuts. We tried playing checkers, never my favorite pastime, and loe swamped me 10 in a row. No mumblety-peg in the house, so we checked out the reading material. Mostly old magazines and books on farrning. We'd seen 'em before. Jody started telling stories about the previous winter's hunting and the big goose he'd shot with his Model 12 Winchester 20 gauge. I' reminded hirn that I'd popped the old gander, too, with my Ithaca double. He said my shot wasn't necessary, and I said i t was, and that it had been just as much my goose as his. He said i t was not, and Eimer O'Farrell told us both to hush up, so we did. For a long time. W i t h no'electricity there was n o radio, and we'd never heard of television. Crandpareilts and boys alike were on edge, so Jody and I fought our way to the barn, tended the animals, and brought in the eggs. With no rehigeration for meat, there was only a supply of smoked bacons and hams in the fruit cellar, so i t appeared we were going to be dining on sowbosom and hen fruit, instead of fried rabbit, fresh fish, or frog legs. After supper, by mutual agreement, we finished chinking up the doors and windows with wet newspapers and went t o bed Saturday was the same, maybe worse. M e and Joe would have gone back to town to the comparative comforts of home, but M r O'Farrell wasn't about to try the trip in his tin lizzie, and if we wal ked, we would have probabl y wound up in the Land of Oz. That second, terrible day irnproved a bit after M r O'Farrell took pity on us and let us rumrnage through a small room that contained the memorabilia of his life. It was a roorn to which we were normally denied access, and we knew i t contained rnysteries and wonderful things. Joe's grandpa unlocked the door and told us we could look around to our heart's content. Leaning in a corner was a huge Confederate cavalry saber in a ringed, heavy rnetal scabbard. It was almost as tall as me and loe, and we wondered how big a man i t would have taken to swing it, one-arrned during a mounted charge. I had once scythed a little wheat on a relative's Kansas farm. but the scythe seemed like a fencing foil compared to this gigantic long knife. In a box was an aging Edison phonograph, the kind with a big, petal-shaped speaker and a winding crank. I t used thick cylinders for records, and i t took half a day of tinkering and oiling to coax sound from it. The speed wasn't quite right, and J o d y and I giggled through a high-speed, chipmunk-sounding monologue about a farmer getting his picture taken for the first time, a famous baritone singing i n tinny soprano, and finally a John Philip Sousa rendering of The Stars and Stripes Forever in slow motion. Next, we found several cigar boxes containing a beautiful collection of arrowheads and other flint tools. Most of them were larger and of prettier flint than those few that we had encountered before. Sorne of them were of gorgeous Alibates flint that had been mined in only one spot in the Texas Panhandle and traded by ancient Indians as far away as Canada. We hadn't known that Joe's granddad had them, and he shrugged them off saying he'd picked 'em up over many years at the reins of a one-mule plow. He let us into the little closet that housed his guns, and our eyes widened. There was more stuff in that forbidden hideout than either of us had realized. Before we coulcl dive in, Mr. O'Farrell closed the door and shooed us out. It was milking and horse and dog feeding time. That second day had gone a little faster. Outside, the gale continued to blow. Fine sand, along with tens of cubic yards of dry tumbleweeds, had piled against the sides of the outbuildings and the house, burying some of the fence posts almost to their top wires? M e and loe ate our sandy suppers and went to bed for the third night, praying silently for a sunny, springtime Easter Sunday. Instead, the winds i:\-creased, and by 10 a.m. we had taken refuge in the fruit cellar. Fruit cellars were also called cyclone cellars in those days. Most of them along the Tierra Blanca creek had been laboriously dug into the tough, chalky caliche banks then roofed over with a one- or two-foot thickness of hard digging~.They were pretty solid, offering a low profile to tornadic winds as well as a good even-temperatured storehouse for Mason jars of peach preserves, stewed tomatoes, rhubarb, and other garden truck. But with four people in them sweating out a cyclone, they seemed as big as a phone booth. The worst was finally over, and we emerged after an hour or two to see a buff-colored waste around the house and barn. With the breeze reduced to Fine sand, ,along with tumbleweeds, had piled against the house, burying some of the fence posts. about 20 knots, ine and Joe attempted to lure the dags from beneath the house for a short safari. &ut they were quite comfortable in their hidey hole, thank you, so we,returned inside t o halfheartedly help with the cleanup, which would take days, and t o get a closer look at Elmer O'Farrell's guns. He allowed it. There was a 12-gauge Model 97 Winchester-Full choked, of course-and a long, .octagon-barreled .30-30 Model 94. We had seen them before, although he'd never let us shoot them. There was the beautiful little Winchester Model 92 saddle-ring carbine in .32-20 that I wanted desperately t o shoot and had secretly fetched along a few shells for, in case Mr. O'Farrell agreed. Other loiig guns included a lengthy, straight-bolt-handled World War I Cerman Mauser that I had never seen, as weli as a rifle that I can't explain being in the gear of Mr. O'Farrell. It was a custom-made, fancy-stocked .220 Swift in nice condition. I t had a receiver sight and was in no way the sort of gun that the old gentleman . SKEETER SKELTON 1980 115 would have acquired for his own use. He must have been keeping i t for someone, or perhaps liad taken it in on a debt. In the handgun line, pickings were slim. Wrapped in an oil rag was a loaded U.S. government property Colt 1911 .45 automatic. I t was the twin of the one carried by Jody's dad, Big Joe Bishop, in his work as a city marshal. I had never learned the history of these guns, but me and Joewere not allowed t o fool with them, which made them all the more fascinating. There was almost a full box of .41 skort rimfire cartridges. Mr. O'Farrell would give no explanation for them, but I've always believed there was a double-barreled Remington derringer stashed around the place, most likely in the old farmer's pocket. The breeze had dropped so that Jody and I could navigate a bit outdoors, but the waters of the creek would still be far too choppy for any fishing, and no sane rabbit would be out of his burrow. This seemed a good time t o h i t on loe's grandpop for permission t o shoot his sleek little .32-20 Winchester. I got up my nerve and made the proposition, showing him the 10 nickelplated, lead-bulleted cartridges I'd brolight from town. They were factory fresh, and I'd bought them at Kerr's Hardware for 304:. A full box would have cost about $1.50. which was beyond my means, but all the hardware stores in those hard times would break open a box of shells and sel1 you as few as you wanted or could afford. With t h e warning that. we had t o clean it, me and loe took the beautiful carbine out beyond the barn. We set a one-gallon can against a d i r t bank, rested the Winchester on a fence post, and took five shots each, exulting in the smoothness of the lever's stroke. We each got five hits at about 15 yards and I've loved '92 Winchesters ever since. This success at centerfire shooting led t o requesting and getting permission to drag out the old German army rifle. I t hadn't been well cared for, and none of us, including Mr. O'Farrell, knew what sort of cartridges i t took. If someone had said "8x57," me and Joe would have supposed they were giving us a multiplication problem. M e and Joe had a little junk box at the farm that contained the accumulated overflow from our pockets for the years we had spent our spare time with the O'Farrells. Digging in this assortment of broken pocketknives, buttons, slingshots, ruined dollar watches, busted arrowheads, and old cartridges, we came up with two or three .35 Remington rounds, which should have been at home with my dad's old Model 8 Remington deer rifle. It didn't take long t o discover that they would chamber in the Mauser and the bolt would close. 116 SKEETER SKELTON 1980 It seemed to follow that they would shoot, so a promising experiment got under way. We weren't very smart, but we were too smart to fire the old rifle without taking some precautions. We retrieved a used 600x16 tire from the trash dump. Then we laid the Mauser across the side of the tire, its butt inside the walls, and wired it securely with baling wire,' pointing the muzzle in the direction of a bluff on the creek a few hundred yards away. We rigged a 40-foot twine lanyard that led to the trunk of a large elm. We took cover behind i t after loading the rifle. Mr. O'Farrell, who by then must have been as bored with the bad weather as we were, joined us behind the barricade. I am sure he was silently bidding his old rifle goodbye. We emerged to see a buff-colored waste around the house and barn. Jody did the honors, giving a hearty yank on the twine. We thought we heard a click from the direction of our proving ground, but not being sure, we waited five minutes before sneaking up on the gun and cautiously opening the bolt. The .35 shell was unfired, but its primer showed a light dent. We repeated this elaborate maneuver several t i m e c w i t h no success, u n t i l Elmer O'Farrell decided to save his Mauser for posterity and took i t back in the house. I supposed an accumulation of dirt, oil, rust, and spiderwebs must have prevented the Mauser's firing pin from giving the .35's primer a solid lick. In a way it's too bad, because in looking back I rather think that the ,358-inch bullet trying to make a linedrive through the Mauser's ,323-inch bore would have speeded up the ballistic education of me and Joe considerably. Mr. O'Farrell 'said grace over our simple Easter supper, and me and Joe dreamed tortured dreams of our lost vacation. We awoke as usual at first daylight. We listened. We smelled. M'e yelled, "Hot dog!" in unison. The wind had stilled, the dust had settled, and one look out the window revealed the same kind of light-green spring day we had left at school, even though i t was frayed in spots from the storm. Rosie fussed as we rushed right past her breakfast table, siuffing our pockets with hot cornbread. We whooped ~ i pthe grinning, tailwhipping dogs, netted a battered minnow bucket full -of bait, grabbed our guns, balanced our cane poles like Masai spears, and dashed for the tulebordered creek. I t was still there, as greenish brown as moss and cottonwood leaves could make it. Its surface was smooth as a marble slab. We caught fish We caught crappie and bluegills and some sunperch as big as y o u ~foot. The black bass were hungry, and we added a couple of 2%pounders t o our stringer About noon the fishing slowed down, and Mr. OIFarrell 'rode down on old Nick t o see about us. d e brought a sack of sandwiches and some oranges, and we persuaded him to take the heavy stringer back home and put it in the horse tank until we could get there t o clean the catch. He took our poles, too, and after a drowsy spell under fhe trees we walked a mile or two down the creek, popping a few jacks for the happy dogs and the rabbits' ears for the 24: bounty they would bring at the courthouse. Facing the lowering sun, we ambled tiredly back to the farm, stopping t o kick the fallen, tangled boards of a ruined old barn and jump out some cottontails. M e and Joe each nailed two t o take back t o town. Our folks liked cottontails. We had cleaned the rabbits, and squatting on our skinny hunkers by the tank, we started on the big mess of fish, scaling them w i t h fish scalers we'd made by nailing bottle caps to little paddle-shaped boards. Me and loe never touched tobacco, b u t innate orneriness occasionally caused us to indulge in foot-long cigarettes comprised of the bark from cedar fence posts rolled into pieces of newspaper They tasted awful, sometimes caught fire, and made your throat feel like you were performing a sword-swallowing act with a red-hot horseshoe rasp. You couldn't stand t o smoke enough of them t o endanger your health. To celebrate our day and to brace for the return t o Central School, me and Joe puffed furiously as we finished our fish cleaning. Turning t o wash our hands in the tanks, we froze. There stood Mr. O'Farrell, not 10 feet away, leaning on the corral fence in the dusk. You couldn't make out the expression on his face. Joe always called his grandpa Elmer. And as usual, Joe kept his cool. "Elmer," he bluffed, "you ought to t r y one of these things. They say they're good for asthma and bad colds and everything " Elmer O'Farrell smiled at me and Joe. He said quietly, "Well boys, my asthma's been actin' up right smart the last day or two. If you'll show me how to make one of those things and get it lit, I'll just have one to celebrate with you." And he did.*