Author's note. This story was previously submitted as my Valentines Day Contest story in 2005
*
Lucky was in town for a Saturday night, him and the other hands at the Double 8 had just been paid. He had stopped off at Sal's Tonsorial Emporium for a much needed bath, and a shave. He had changed into a pair of clean Levis and a clean shirt. And as usual he had paid the extra ten cents for the Wildroot in his hair, and the Bay Rum for his cleanly shaven face.
As he walked along the sidewalk his spurs rang like little chimes. He stopped at the corner for a moment. Should he go to the card room and play a little Faro, or should he head on down to Lou's and see that girl?
Lou's won out. He may have a few coins left after Lou's for a couple of drinks and a few hands of Faro, but if he started at the card room first, he might not have any money left in his pockets for Lou's.
As he passed over the railway tracks he could see the red light glowing dimly outside of Lou's place. He smiled as he walked through the door. The girl of his dreams would be here, ready for thirty minutes of heavenly bliss.
"Howdy Lucky," purred Lou, her expansive bosom threatening to break free from her dress at any moment. "Are you lookin' for her again?"
Lucky smiled, a smile that went from the Pecos to the Brazos. "You know I am."
"Well, you take them damn spurs off this time." Lou pointed at Lucky's boots.
"But Lou, she likes it with the spurs," teased Lucky.
Lou shook her head and laughed, "You damned cowboys you're all the same, well, it's a buck extry then if you leave your spurs on, to replace the torn up sheets." Lou pointed to the stairs. "She's up there, your favorite love, the girl with the round glasses."
~~~
Lucky and Earl had worked together jingling cattle for eight or nine years. They rode quietly along the road out of town, heading back out to the ranch. They had decided to spend the night in town at the hotel. When Lucky had returned to the hotel last night, he had found Earl fast asleep, and snoring.
"What did you do?" asked Earl, he already knew the answer, but he wanted some conversation.
"I went to Lou's, and then over to the Cattleman's for some cards and a few drinks," replied Lucky in a dreamy faraway voice.
"Lou have any new girls?" Earl looked over at Lucky.
Lucky shrugged his shoulders. "I dunno, didn't ask."
Earl grinned and shook his head. "Lucky if you don't stay away from them whores, you're gonna find yourself with a case of the drippin' dick."
Lucky blushed. "She always cleans me up right after."
"Not the one with the glasses again. Damn it Lucky, if you're gonna spend money on a woman, at least try to get a good lookin' one," Earl chuckled, "But then you always were a sucker for the homely ones."
"She's not homely," Lucky protested. He felt his heart skip a beat as he thought of her. "I think Rose is a handsome woman, and besides, after our business has been conducted she sits and reads to me."
"What the hell," Earl snorted, "She reads to you. What does she read, the paper? The almanac? Don't tell me, she reads the Word from the Bible to you."
Lucky shook his head. "Nope, she reads poetry, beautiful poetry," Lucky sighed softly, "Poems of love and stuff."
"You're going soft in the head," teased Earl. "Well I saw Budge from the Lazy J last night, and wait 'til you hear what he told me."
"How is Budge?" Lucky was glad that the subject of the conversation had finally changed.
"Good." Earl nodded. "But get this, he told me that there is some foreign Princess at the Palace of Pleasure in Cheyenne."
"Oh really, I've never seen a princess," Lucky commented.
"Wait, it gets better," Earl continued, "Budge told me that for twenty dollars she will take your willywhacker into her mouth and do you that way."
Lucky's jaw dropped in astonishment. "No!"
"Yup, at least that's what Budge said, twenty bucks." Earl had been waiting all morning to spring this piece of information on Lucky.
"I've never heard of that before, have you?" Lucky still couldn't believe what he had heard.
Earl shook his head. "Can't say as I have."
The two men road in silence as the town disappeared, the landscape of the open prairie rolling in front of them as far as the eye could see.
The rolling landscape ebbed and flowed like a sea of grass, rising and falling like waves on the ocean. It was just past noon when the two cowboys rode up to the ranch. They unsaddled their horses and set them out into the corral.
As Earl stretched out onto his bunk, Lucky grabbed a tin cup and poured himself a cup of coffee from the large pot that sat on the stove.
Lucky walked to the window and looked outside. "Wonder where everyone is?"
Earl was half asleep already. "Sleeping it off somewhere I would expect."
Lucky nodded. "Yeah, I expect you're right."
Earl's first snore caused Lucky to turn. He sighed softly and sat down at the table with his cup of coffee. He thought back to last night. Lucky could hear her voice in his head, and the words she read from the book. Lucky had never realized that there could be beauty in words until she heard her read for the first time. He closed his eyes, and her soft and gentle voice spoke to him.
When we two parted
In silence and tears,
Half broken-hearted
To sever for years,
Pale grew thy cheek and cold,
Colder thy kiss;
Truly that hour foretold
Sorrow to this.
The sound of the door opening and the stomp of heavy boots brought Lucky out of his reverie.
"Hey Lucky, how was your night in town?" asked Stubby, the short, stout ranch cook.
Lucky nodded. "It was good, I ended up six bucks to the good at the Cattleman's last night."
"Faro?" asked Stubby.
"Naw." Lucky shook his head. "I got into a game of Three Toed Pete with some of them railroaders."
Stubby grinned and winked at Lucky. "Did ya go to Lou's?"
Lucky blushed, and nodded his head. "Yep, I sure did."
Stubby sat down with a cup of coffee. "Did she read some more to you?"
A large sigh escaped from Lucky, "She sure did. Stubby I didn't know people could make words that pretty, and when she reads them to me, I dunno, Earl thinks I'm goin' soft in the head."
"You don't listen to him, there ain't nothin' wrong with words like that," Stubby waved his hand towards Lucky, and then sighed, "I would like to hear her read them myself. I saw a girl in San Antonio once who spoke a recitation like that in a theatre, she damn near made me come to tears." Stubby pointed his finger at Lucky. "And don't you go telling anyone 'bout that."
"Nope, I won't say a word," Lucky promised.
They sat in silence for a few minutes, drinking their coffee, when Lucky spoke up, "Stubby you been around for a while, Earl said that Budge said that there was this princess at the Pleasure Palace in Cheyenne, and for twenty bucks, she will take your willy into her mouth, and pleasure you that-a-way. Did you ever hear anything like that before in your travels?"
"No." Stubby shook his head. "But I have heard that some of them people in the old country have some odd customs. Maybe that's one of them."
Lucky thought for a minute, "Could be. Maybe next time I'm in town, I will ask Rose. She might know."
~~~
It was late spring, and that meant one thing at the ranch that Lucky and Earl worked at. Branding time, all of the new calves would be branded; male calves typically would be castrated also, a job that Lucky preferred to leave to someone else. It meant long days in the saddle rounding up the cattle from the range and branding the calves that had been born earlier in the spring. Lucky and Earl were combing the range now for any missing cattle. They knew how many head there should be, and as usual they were short from the count. This was not unusual as sometimes cattle died from natural causes, predators, and even rustlers.
The land looked flat, but it was deceiving, there were countless little depressions in the landscape where hundreds of heads of cattle could have stood without being seen.
Lucky stood tall in the saddle scanning the landscape with a pair of binoculars looking for any sign of the missing cattle.
"See anything?" asked Earl.
"Nope," replied Lucky, "I think we need to keep goin' north, there's that little creek that runs in the spring up a couple of miles. We might find some a hidin' up in there."
Earl nodded in agreement and waited for Lucky to pack his binoculars away.