Pulp - Adventure.20.01.18.Ike Harpers Historical Holiday - W. C. Tuttle (pdf)

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Pulp - Adventure.20.01.18.Ike Harpers Historical Holiday - W. C. Tuttle (pdf) Page 3

by Monte Herridge

“I was just funning, Ike,” says he. “I’ll

  Custer.”

  go peaceful, ’cause I’m dry, too.”

  “All right,” says I. “Why stop at

  Then me and Hassayampa runs into an

  modern history, Hassayampa? Let’s go further

  argument. We finds Ricky Henderson, “Three

  back and see Caesar or the last of the

  Star” Thorndyke, Art Miller and “Coyote” Mohicans.”

  Calkins arguing with Doughgod Smith.

  We found a fairly peaceful bunch in

  Doughgod holds-forth thusly:

  front of the tent. Old Judge Steele wanders up

  “You’ve got to show a little becoming

  to us. His face sure looks like something had

  class, ain’t you? I’m bossing the music end of

  tried to erase his nose, and in his hand is the the program, and she can’t fall below the rest, remnants of that high hat. Just then I’m

  can she?”

  grabbed by the arm, and Magpie’s voice

  “She can’t,” agrees Ricky. “She sure

  grunts in my ear—

  can’t, Doughgod.” And the four of them walks

  “Feller wants to see you, Ike.”

  away.

  I suffers him to lead me around back

  Doughgod looks at us and sort of of the tent, where he lifts the canvas enough to grins.

  let us both under. I was glad to get away from

  “Them is the Paradise brass band,” the judge right then, ’cause I don’t know what explains Doughgod. “Been tooting for two

  Mike might have told him.

  weeks for this celebration. Everything is sort

  In there I meets the worst freak I’ve

  of out of the ordinary, so I wishes my end to

  seen this day and date. It happens to be Sad

  show up well. A band is just a band unless

  Samuels, but he sure is disguised. I reckon

  they rides horses, which makes ’em a mounted

  he’s dug up all the fringed buckskin in Yaller

  band. Sabe? Them hombres is going to Rock County and hung it on his lanky carcass.

  dispense music from their broncs.”

  He stands there, leaning against the platform,

  We looks back at the speaker’s tent,

  puffing away on an extinct cigaret.

  and here comes an apparition which we

  “Ike, meet General Custer,” says

  deciphers to be Mike Pelly. Mike sure looks

  Magpie.

  like the breaking up of a hard Winter. He’s got

  “Howdy, Cus,” says I. “How’s all your

  the brim of that stovepipe hat around his neck

  little Big Horns?”

  and in his hand he carries one of them rails he

  “Poorly, Ike. You ain’t sore at Curlew,

  was posing over. He’s still got on portions of

  are you?”

  that tight coat. He’s got a bump on his

  “Not at the town itself, Sad. The town

  forehead, and in his face is memories of long

  ain’t to blame.”

  ago. He weaves up in sort of waltz time and

  “Let me explain it,” says Magpie.

  pauses to look back.

  “Curlew has ideas of her own as to who is to

  “Who done it, Mike?” I asks.

  blame for the Fourth, Ike. Being a free country

  “Lincoln,”, says he sweet-like and and peace on earth to all men we lets each city weaves on.

  worship as they see fit. Sabe? Curlew opines

  “Lincoln was a great man,” states that General Custer is the one.”

  Doughgod.

  “All right with me,” says I. “Make it

  “Was?” grunts Hassayampa. “If he anybody you want, just so you keeps the name hung that bump on Mike I’d say he is, not

  of Harper out of the list. I won’t have my good was, Doughgod. Almost as great as Custer.

  name sullied, Magpie.”

  My gosh, I done forgot all about my

  “We’ll respect your wishes, Ike,” says

  contentions, Ike. Let’s go back and see Magpie. “Now here’s what Sad wants of you;

  Adventure

  10

  he’s shy one actor for his living picture, and

  celebration will be wrote up for posterity—if

  you’re the only person he can depend upon.

  anybody is left to write it.”

  He honors you, Ike.”

  Just then somebody shows their

  “Yeah?” says I. “Honor of that kind is

  impatience by shooting twice through the

  like beauty—it don’t get under my skin. I

  ridge-pole, so we wobbles up and takes our

  won’t have a danged thing to do with it. Not a

  position.

  danged solitary thing! Rest in peace is my

  Sad is on his hands and knees with his

  motto, and I don’t care where the chips fall. I chin on a block of wood, and they places me

  will not do it!”

  on my knees, with my nose muffled in the

  Well, they got me into that disguise,

  back of his neck, and my hands are raised as

  and I’m betting that nobody ever looked like

  in prayer. Over us stands Rain-in-the-Face,

  me.

  with his soft-pine sword raised aloft. I’ve got

  “Not so danged bad at that,” states a

  my head toward the audience and I gets a

  voice, and I turns around.

  glimpse of the sign as the curtain goes up. It

  It looks like a cross between an Injun

  reads:

  painted for the war-trail and an accident in a

  paint factory. It’s wearing the headdress of the CUSTER DONE IT AFTER

  Sioux, the breast-plate of a Cheyenne and the

  POKYHONTAS SAVED HIM

  pants of a Digger medicine-man, which FROM HER PAW. FROM CURLEW

  consists of a pad at the knees and feathers at

  the ankle—nothing more. He’s got a wooden

  I hears a slight stir in the audience.

  knife about three feet long. His face is painted Bang! goes a gun. I glances behind me.

  like the rainbow, one end of his mustache

  Mighty is standing there looking at his sword,

  being pink and the other green.

  which ain’t nothing but a splinter now.

  “My ——!” says I. “That last drink

  “Don’t never try to split up no ladies

  broke the camel’s back!”

  around here, dog-gone your painted picture!”

  It is “Mighty” Jones.

  whoops Dirty Shirt’s voice. “Don’t you never

  “Shake hands with your paw,” says he.

  do it!”

  “I’m Rain-in-the-Face.”

  Dirty is right up against the platform

  I looked at Magpie and the tears are

  and appears to be trying to get up with the

  flowing down his cheeks. Any man must be

  living pictures.

  tender hearted to cry at a time like this.

  “Yo-o-o-o-ow! ” yelps a voice from the

  “Who in the —— am I?” I asks.

  rear of the crowd. “Bust up my donation, will

  “My daughter,” says Rain-in-the-Face.

  you!”

  “You’re Pokyhontas.”

  All the history I ever knew stood on

  HASSAYAMPA has got a horse, and just as I

  it’s head and skidded out of the picture. I

  glance up he sails a loop of rope to try and

  looks at General Custer and then at my paw.

  circle Dirty Shirt. He didn’t. That was the

/>   “With a mustache?” I asks foolish-like.

  second time he shoots high. I tries to move

  “Your face don’t show,” says Magpie

  quick, but my costume was made more for

  choking-like. “You assumes a bowed attitude

  show than for speed. That loop of rope settles

  over Custer, who is about to get carved by

  right over the rear of me, tightens behind my

  Rain-in-the-Face. Curlew may be wrong in the

  knees and over the small of my back, and poor

  main facts, but that part is historical.”

  Pokyhontas got uplifted.

  “It will be,” I agrees. “I feel that this

  I reckon that Pokyhontas didn’t want

  Ike Harper’s Historical Holiday 11

  to leave Custer there even if Rain-in-the-Face

  fondles that club.

  didn’t have no more sword than a toothpick,

  “We will open with a spup-speech by

  ’cause when that rope hit me I got a strangle

  me,” he whispers right back.

  hold on Custer and we both moved away from

  “Prayer!”

  there.

  “Speech!”

  Me, I’m jack-knifed so that my toes

  “Dearly beloved, we——”

  are tickling my mustache and Sad is yelping

  Bam!

  like a trapped coyote pup. We turned over just

  The old judge surges forward and taps

  once, swung in under the railing, where we

  Testament on the head and our preacher

  seem to sort of hang up, and then, as far as I

  shuddered deep-like and pokes his long nose

  can see, the railing, platform, tent and all went into the dirt.

  with us.

  Judge Steele pokes his nose toward the

  Man, I’d say that the strain was great. I

  sky, shoves one hand inside his torn vest and

  seemed to feel every muscle in my body begins—

  stretch a foot and as we sailed into the air

  “Friends, Romans and feller——”

  somebody reached up and took one of my

  Clank!

  moccasins off.

  I sees that lard bucket hop off the

  I lost Custer at an altitude of about

  judge’s head and the rock nestled right up

  forty feet and when I landed I picked a tub of

  against my shin.

  lemonade to stop in, and then it seems that I

  “He-heathen!” stutters a voice and I

  took the tub along with me on a voyage of

  turns to behold what is left of Hassayampa.

  discovery. I’d say that Hassayampa and his

  He’s got his head through one of the

  bronc went regardless and nobody knows arm-holes of his vest, which makes him look whither we might have wandered if that rope

  like he had a stiff neck. The belt of his chaps hadn’t busted.

  has busted, and the two halves of his leather

  Anyway, I think it busted, ’cause all to

  panties are wrinkled down around his feet. His

  once I gets relief from the cramps and the

  hat is gone, and if his mind ain’t gone too his sandman visits Ike Harper.

  eyes sure lie to me. He’s got another rock in

  Then along comes a million needles to

  his hand.

  penetrate my carcass and I feels my nervous

  “Pup-pick on a preacher, will you?” he

  system yank me to a sitting position.

  yelps.

  I’ve got my back against a tent and

  The old judge sets there on the ground,

  right in front of me is Judge Steele and Old

  looking sort of dazed-like, and then he seems

  Testament. The sky pilot is kneeling in a to fuss around inside of his bosom. He hauls prayerful attitude, while the old judge squats

  out a long six-shooter, cocks it deliberate-like on his heels in an attitude of deep thought.

  and takes aim at Hassayampa. Hassayampa

  The judge has got a piece of the busted don’t mind. He sways on his heels and grins at platform in his hands and on his head, cocked

  me.

  over on one side, is a gallon tin bucket. A curl

  “How’s every little th-thing, Ike?” he

  of lemon peel sticks out from under the edge

  asks hoarse-like.

  and I opines that the judge must ’a’ mixed

  Bung!

  with the retail end of the lemonade business.

  The old judge ain’t got much grip in

  “We—we will open with a pup-

  his hands, and I sees the gun hop plumb over

  prayer,” whispers Old Testament.

  his head when it exploded.

  The old judge rocks on his heels and

  “Woof! ” grasps Hassayampa, swaying

  Adventure

  12

  backward, and he sets down so hard that he

  “Feel of me!” snaps Mighty Jones.

  bounced. He sets there making funny faces at

  “Ain’t you had enough yet? Maybe you’d like

  me and hanging on to his equator.

  to bust up another historical group.”

  The judge twists his neck and peers at

  “Go home and put on some pants,”

  his gun. Then he gets up and weaves away

  advises Dirty. “You look like——! Come on,

  past a tent, talking to himself like a shepherd. I Ike. Let that delirium tremens Injun set there

  looks over at the suffering Hassayampa and

  and make patent medicine if he wants to.”

  says:

  “Every little thing is all right, DON’T ask me all that happened that day. I’m Hassayampa. How’s it with you?”

  just telling you what happened in my

  He shakes his head and hugs himself

  immediate vicinity. Some day I hope to be an

  some more.

  innocent bystander and be able to tell you

  “Think you’re going to die?” I asks.

  everything, but as it is you’ve got to guess that He takes a deep breath.

  the others didn’t come out unscathed.

  “Hoo-o-o-off! Hit me-uh-in the-uh-

  Me and Dirty found the remains of

  hoof! Belt-buckle. What do you know about

  General Custer sitting near the location of the that? Hoo-o-o-off! ”

  defunct speaker’s stand. He looks up at us as

  “Not much,” says I. “He can’t shoot no

  we go past, but there ain’t no recognition in

  straighter than you can.”

  his eyes.

  “Lead us not into temptation,” states

  “How goeth the battle, Cus?” I asks.

  Old Testament, sitting up sort of jerky.

  He stares straight ahead and raises his

  “Amen,” says I and then I got up,

  voice in tuneless song—

  shook the hoops and staves from around my

  “I am nobodee-e-e-e-e’s darling,

  neck and limped away.

  nobodee-e-e-e ca-hares for me-e-e-e.”

  I’m a peaceful person and I don’t want

  “Knocked sensible,” declares Dirty,

  to do anything to sully the atmosphere of this

  and we weaved along.

  glorious celebration.

  “Ike, you’re an awful looking thing,”

  Then I runs in to Dirty Shirt—or rather

  states Dirty looking me over. “You better

  I stumbles over his boots which are protruding

  shuck that buckskin Mother Hubbard before

  out from under a tent. I hauls him out, and

 
; somebody accuses me of being a squaw-man.

  along with the haul comes Rain-in-the-Face.

  I hate scandal.”

  They’re locked in each other’s embrace, and

  “By grab, I’ve been looking all over

  from the looks of them I reckon it was a case

  for you, Ike,” exclaims a voice, and Pete

  of united we fell. I pries ’em apart and Dirty

  Gonyer takes me by the arm. “Magpie wants

  sets up. He looks at me and then at Rain-in-

  to see you right away.”

  the-Face, who is sniffing at me with his

  “What does he want?” I ask. “I’m all

  swollen nose.

  through being butchered to make a Dancing

  “Pokyhontas, you smell sour,” says Prairie holiday, if anybody asks you. I’ll go Rain-in-the-Faco and then he scowls at Dirty

  home if he wants me to, but that’s all.”

  Shirt.

  We follered Pete down to the bank of

  “You here yet?” he asks.

  the river where mostly everybody is collected.

  “In spirit,” agrees Dirty Shirt. Across the river, which is about fifty yards

  “Physically I’m dead from my boots to my

  wide at this point, is hung a wide piece of

  dandruff. How do you feel, you cross between

  canvas. A scaffolding has been built out from

  a polecat and a totem-pole?”

  around a tree, and the canvas stretched on that.

 

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