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He wore those cowboy boots. |
I knew a cowboy, way back when, at least he said he was. He had the hat and talked real slow the way a cowboy does. He also wore those cowboy boots, the ones I’d wished I wore. He had to duck his head a bit when he walked in the door. With his hat on and with those boots that guy was mighty tall. All of us kids stared up at him; he sure impressed us all. He had so many tales to tell. He swore they all were true. I wasn’t sure of some of them. Well, maybe one or two. He even smoked those cigarettes. I thought that he looked tough. And when he spun his yarns to us his voice was raspy rough. He had a worn and weathered look, like he’d been on the trail. He squinted as he calmly told of winds, and rain and hail. Those cattle drives could cause a man to struggle all his life. He never had the time or means to find himself a wife. But if he did it all again he wouldn’t change a day. He did what he was born to do, he just was made that way. All that was many years ago, but I could not forget. I always did look up to him, this cowboy that I met. Well, now I learned he was a fraud. My uncle just told me. Yeah, all those tales and all that talk were just a fantasy. That image that he wore so well was just a great big lie. As for those Marlboros he smoked, well, they caused him to die. He never even rode a horse. He was a city guy. And yet he made us all believe. You have to wonder why. My uncle said it was his dream, the life he wished he had. And for a while his dream came true. You know that can’t be bad. So he was not a real cowboy, he merely played the part. But in his soul that’s what he was, oh yes, and in his heart. Yippie Yi Yo Kayah |