[Episode Five]
Arizona BlueâGunfighter
The Wolves Nestâin the North
[Episode Five]
Northern Minnesota Areaâ
Winter of 1877
Chapter One of Seven: The North
The area was known as Pigs Eye [St. Paul, Minnesota]; Northfield was a little more notorious since Jessie James robbed the 1st National Bank, in September of last year, and more to the West. But that was neither here nor there for Arizona-Blue. He didnât like this part of the country for no other reason than it was cold, unpredictable weather, and he didnât seem to offer enough freedom, it wasnât bad thirty years ago, but it had become too tame, Even Mark Twain thought so. His conclusion of why he was here was: âSometimes you just keep on riding and riding and end up where you donât care to be.â
As his rode through the thick of the snow, he had come to a cabin, up in an area where the deer was running as wildâto and froâas the mavericks were down in Arizona, Texas and Wyoming. He smelt the smoke from a nearby chimney. He was a hundred and fifty plus miles North of St. Paul, but it seemed like he was in the Artic.
As Arizona came to a cabin, a man came out of the front door onto his porch. Two wolves stood by his side, a rifle in his hands. He noticed in the back of his house about thirty-more wolves tied to the fence; ââ¦strangeâ¦â thought Blue.
âCan I help yaw stranger?â asked the man on the porch.
Blue knew most everyone in this area did not know his name, and that was one unconscious reason he chose the Midwest I suppose, a time for a rest of wondering whom was going to shoot you in the back, or who you had to tangle with next. His reputation out West was preceding him wherever heâd go, but here, up here in the Midwest who could know his name? No one he speculated. Northfield was to hot for anyone like him, after the James Gang shoot out, and St. Paul looked like St. Louis, a conservative little city on the banks of the Mississippi, not enough get up and go for him, plus they sold little books on him: âThe Fast Gun of the West: Arizona-Blue.â They did on all the gunfighters such as: Billy the Kid, Jessie James, Wild Bill, and so forth.
âI need a place to lodge for a day or two. Iâm half frozen.â
The man laughed and motioned for Blue to tie his horse up out side and come in.
As Blue descended his horse, a young boy came out and took his horse saying,
âIâll bed him down a spell, feed him for you sir.â
Blue heard the Midwest was quite hospital to strangers, they had to be, because sooner or later you âall ended-up needing the others help. âThis kind of gives yaw a nice feeling,â he told himself.
As Blue entered the house, he noticed a slim middle aged woman, boiling some stew (about thirty-six years old heâd guess).
âSome hot cider Mister?â she asked.
Blue was not sure what that was, but he knew it wasnât whiskey.
âSounds warming, I guess thatâll be just fine Missâ¦,â unsure how to address her.
She smiled, and commented:
âYouâre not from around here I gather, you got a Southwestern accent?â
âIâm called Arizona; I guess because that is where I am from.â
âArizona what? She asked.
âThatâs it Miss, just Arizona, thatâs what my pop called me, no more no less.â
She smiled again, the man came back in from the backdoor of the house, stomping the snow off his feet.
âHi yaw, my names Harry,â he extended his hand to shake Arizonaâs, âand this is my wife Feba, sheâs Spanish, and a little cute wife at that.â
âHarry! stop making me blush.â
âWell,â said Arizona, âit looks like you got enough wolves around here.â
âI raise them. They can come in handy.â That was all that was said about the nest of wolves. Arizona got the drift of things, it was private, and he wasnât about to step in on a manâs privacy.
âMr. Arizona, please give your jacket to my boy, Tony.â He was standing in the back of Arizona. He hadnât heard him come in. As Arizona took off his jacket, Harry, Tony and Feba noticed the guns. Arizona had one tight against his thigh, and one tucked into his belt.
âYou wonât need them here sir,â said Harry with a little concern.
Arizona smiled. He was not a wanted man in Minnesota, or for that matter anyplace, just a notorious man, and seldom heard of way up in the North Country; and this was new country for him; if this was Wyoming, or Texas, or for that matter Tombstone, or Deadwood, the guns would stay. But he started to unbuckle them; then handed them to Harry to put away for safe keeping.
âHow are the Indian problems up here?â Blue asked.
âSometimes it ok, other times you just donât know. We had several cabins up here a year ago, and the Chippewaâs burned three of them down. Rapped the women, after getting drunk, and took off. The Indians are all over the place. You just never know. I hunt bear and fox and sell the furs down at Fort Smelling. And yaw, some of the Wolves you see, end up being furs. Yaw got to eat. I hate killing them though.â
Harry noticed Arizona watch where he hung the guns up; right on the coat rack that lead to the front door.
âIf you need them mister, theyâre right there for the grabbing.â
âI got the picture, Harry.â
âNow for the dinner, itâs about 11-below zero out there, not too bad for the dead of winter. Youâd think it was 10:00 PM, but it gets dark quick up here, its only 6:00 PM. Not much daylight in the heart of winter. Tonight it will get down to 20 + below. Itâs like the cold knocks the sun out early I swear. Itâs going to be a cold, cold winter, stranger, I mean Arizona.â
As they all four sat down to eat, Harry said grace, thanking God for his wife, son, and that the stranger did not get frozen like an ice cycle before he found his cabin.
âLetâs eat,â says Harry, and plunged into the hot stew.
The stew was great, though Arizona, as he took his third helping.
âMy name is Alex, Mr. Arizona. Are you a gunfighter? You know, like Jessie James, and Billy the Kid?â
âHush,â said Feba, âMr. Arizona is a gentleman, not a killer.â
Said Harry, a bit uncomfortable with the guns hanging where the coats and hats hung:
âMater-of-fact, if you donât mind, what is your line of work?â
âWell, thatâs a good question. Iâve been a soldier, fought at the Battle of Chickamauga, and I was sheriff for a while, and a deputy. And I guess you could say a cowboy of sorts. Not sure what a gunslinger is, but maybe that to.â
âJack of many trades I see,â commented Harry.
Feba looked at Blues eyes; she was almost frozen by them. But her husband was the jealous type, and said nothing, just smiled and continued to eat her stew.
Dennis Siluk is finishing up his most recent book, "Peruvian Poems" it shold been done shortly, and published in the following months [29-poems in English and Spanish] look for it. You can see his other works at http://www.bn.com or http://www.amazon.com
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