** This story was posted and inadvertently deleted due to a
** miscommunication between the site operators and myself.
** I apologize to the readers for any confusion.
Note: This is a sequel to my story "El Paso." Please read that story first! It is the back-story that provides the setting for what takes place in this story.
"From thirty thousand feet above the desert floor I see it there below.
A city with a legend, the West Texas city of El Paso.
Where long ago I heard a song about a Texas cowboy and a girl.
And a little place called Rosa's where he used to go and watch this beauty whirl."
El Paso City, Marty Robbins
Thanks to Lady Cibelle and techsan for their editing help.
EL PASO AT TWENTY THOUSAND FEET - JACK
"It looks kind of dry, doesn't it? I had no idea El Paso was so big."
"Well, don't forget that all of what you see south of the river is Ciudad JuΓ‘rez. And, yeah, it's very dry."
We were completing our fourth β or was it the fifth? β circuit in the holding pattern above El Paso. There was a problem on the ground and we were getting bored making the long loops above the airport.
I looked over at the girl sitting to my right. I had noticed her when she boarded and took the aisle seat next to me in first class. We had a somewhat desultory conversation when she sat down and shared a chuckle when we both agreed we were in first class only because of frequent flyer miles.
She quickly went to sleep on the flight from Las Vegas. She was flying from San Francisco and I'd been in Las Vegas for a conference on Western History. I was a professor in the new Doctoral Program in Borderlands History at UTEP.
As I had given her my answer about the size of the city below, politely turning to look at her, I looked deep into the eyes of this girl sitting next to me. I'd noticed the reddish blond hair earlier but somehow had missed the sparkling emerald green eyes beneath the full, natural brows. As I caught the full impact of her eyes, I felt something lurch in my stomach β thinking at first it was the plane. I hadn't had much time for girls working on my own doctorate at Yale and then settling down in El Paso helping to start the new doctoral program at the University of Texas at El Paso.
Her quick grin clued me in that I was staring and quickly turned and looked back out the window as a the flush ran up from my neck to my cheeks. The pilot came on the speaker to let us know that the problem on the ground was taken care of. We found out later that a plane had some hydraulic problems and they wanted to keep the runways clear until it safely landed.
The 737 banked abruptly as it started the descent into the landing approach. I had been browsing through my dad's book on Dallas Stoudenmire and was thinking of what he had said in the book about how Felina had changed her name to Faleena. I'd noticed in my studies that this was actually a fairly common practice in the West at that time: changing names either purposefully or accidentally.
I had a habit of doodling when I was thinking and was writing on my notepad the different spellings of Felina I'd run across: Felina, Faleena, Falena, Feleena and Falina.
A pointing finger snaked down to my pad to the first name. I felt a firm pressure on my arm and looked over to see her breast pressed against it. When she saw where I was looking, it was her turn for her face to change to a bright red hue. She moved back a bit ... not that I was complaining. It had felt quite pleasant.
I noticed a ring on her finger β it had a row of small rubies across the setting above and below a row of diamonds. There were five diamonds, a larger one β maybe a half carat β with a smaller one on each side and smaller ones yet on the outside. It looked kind of old fashioned and expensive β though I'm certainly not an expert. It was the kind of ring that could have been just a piece of jewelry or possibly an engagement ring.
Her finger on the first name in the list, she blurted, "That's my name!
Confused, I looked down at my notepad where she was pointing. "Felina? That's really your name?"
"Yes, that's why I'm here. I, uh, I have some time on my hands and I wanted to try to find out if the story of Felina was true. My dad told me this story over and over when I was a girl: about a beautiful Spanish girl and a wild young cowboy she fell in love with. Why are you writing Felina with all of those spellings?"
I showed her dad's book, and told her, "The story is all in this book my father wrote, with my mom's help. The story is about a young woman named Felina. Her name had changed to Faleena when she moved from Santa Fe to El Paso. There she met and fell in love with a cowboy named Texas Red. They both died in a shootout in an alley in El Paso."
Looking a bit nervous, she asked, hesitantly, "What was the name of this cowboy?"
"Well, they called him Texas Red but his name was Matt Donahue. Why do you ask? Have you read this book?"
"No, no I haven't. I didn't even know it existed. My name is ... well, it was ... Felina Donahue.
I stared at her as the plane made a heavy landing, bounced once, and started slowing as the reverse thrusters kicked in. What she said ... it couldn't be. Texas Red and Felina had died in the dusty alley in El Paso. Or had they?