Special thanks to blackrandi for the invitation to participate in "Literotica Writers Go West." I'd never even considered writing a Western so this was something new. This is very much patterned after Western Dime novels and Western Spicy Pulps. I typically don't write graphic sex and that remains true here. I normally thank everyone up front, but those acknowledgements at the end of this story, as they are a bit more extensive than usual.
Professor Barnabas Bones and Esmeralda
The Astounding, Incredible, Unbelievable, Traveling Patent Medicine Show
I checked my railroad watch and waited until it struck the top of the hour. I carefully tucked the watch back in my vest pocket, pausing to touch the ornate silver key at the end of the chain fob.
"Ladies and Gentlemen, Ladies and Gentlemen! Gather round, gather round!"
I stepped forward from the edge of the gold-trimmed brilliant scarlet wagon, letting the tails of my long blood-red tuxedo coat billow, just a little. I cocked my fine black bowler slightly forward over my right eye for that proper rakish look. For the ladies.
I straightened up, hooking a thumb in my gold brocade vest. Always look the crowd in the eye. For the men.
The crowd stood almost dead silent while I paused. I could hear the discordant call of a lone crow off in the distance.
"I am Professor Barnabas Bartleby Bones, purveyor of fine nostrums: liniments, salves, tonics and tinctures.
"A wide array of patent medicines for every possible illness, flux or pain.
"Rheumatism, Lumbago, Dyspepsia, Ladies' complaints and..."
Out of the growing crowd, I picked a slightly spinsterish woman in a blue dress, homely enough to almost certainly be single, but not so far gone as to know it. I made eye contact, slightly pinched the end of my thin waxed mustache, smiled a little wider and sent her a wink.
I lowered my voice slightly and arched one eyebrow. "...hysterias."
She flushed bright red and dropped her eyes. Perfect.
I swept the cloth-of-gold curtain back from the un-shuttered side of the wagon.
"Behold! From every dark corner of the globe. Distilled from the mysteries of lost civilizations and secrets of savage tribes! Obtained at great personal risk from the brutal Apache and the cannibals of Darkest Africa."
Row upon brilliant row of tiny clear glass bottles filled with a rainbow of tinted liquids shining like jewels in the rays of the late afternoon sun. Mostly alcohol, mostly--I hoped--harmless.
I continued through the patter, running down the various cures and their fictional proveniences, words flowing through me naturally in a constant stream. I wasn't even listening to myself, just scanning the crowd.
I didn't have to guess when my partner slid around the other side of the wagon; I instantly turned invisible to the crowd. Men sucked in their breath, while women blinked in shock.
"Ladies and Gentlemen: The Amazing Esmeralda de Moliere; Princess of the Gypsies, Seventh Daughter of the Seventh Daughter, Guardian of the Hidden Mysteries of this Vast Starlit Cosmos."
Smoky-eyed and dusky, with the unblinking stare of a rattlesnake and sinuous movements beyond even theirs, she slithered forward, smooth and liquid until she stood next to me. Her dark red shoulder-baring dress showed more of her than would ever be considered proper outside of a saloon, more even than most saloons would allow, but a Gypsy Princess and Seer was naturally given a little more leeway by the crowd.
I let them drink her in for a long few seconds, just until wives recovered enough to start taking side glances at husbands. Couldn't let that go on too long -- jealous enough to want to look like her is fine, husband-glaring angry is not.
"Before you, we are Science and the Mystical, working together to provide you with some light entertainment and healing and comfort of Body, Mind and Soul!"
###
"Gentlemen. It is my regular trade to deceive the eye with the quickness of the hands. I never take bets from paupers, widows or orphan children."
I began with the classic shell game; three walnut shells and a dried pea. The showman places the pea under one shell, and then moves the shells around. The audience gets to guess what shell the pea is under. Of course, the secret is that the pea is under whichever shell the showman wants. It's all an illusion, of course, but the biggest part of the illusion is that the audience thinks they have a chance. It's all sleight of hand, and the ability to distract the audience with entertaining stories and patter. The classic patter of the old con man Umbrella Jim is always a good choice.
"A little fun just now and then,
Is relished by the best of men
If you have nerve and you have plenty
Five draws you ten and ten draws twenty
The little pea is hid beneath the shell
Where it lands few eyes can tell
Pick your shell any one you choose, if right, you win, if wrong, you lose"
I also tell variations of the Ned Buntline stories; full of heroes, villains and noble savages. The crowds out West always love those, even though they live here, and know most of it is just nonsense, tall tales.
I wasn't taking the shell game too seriously, and I wasn't taking bets. I'd seen the Sheriff lurking around the edges of the crowd, and some of the more enthusiastic officers of the law would consider bets on a shell game as illegal gambling. These games can make a lot of money in a bigger city with the right crowd, especially if you seed the venue with shills. I certainly would never use it to make money in a small town where it can only cause bad feelings. Besides, this wasn't really why we were here.
After my audience was suitably awed, I moved on to coins, cards and disappearing, reappearing objects. Very effective, especially with Esmeralda's able assistance and distracting abilities.
After half an hour of my, if-I-do-say-so-myself, remarkable demonstrations of prestidigitation, followed by half an hour of Lady Esmeralda's vague-yet-somehow-absolutely-believable mind reading, we settled into the less exciting but much more lucrative pastime of trading thin silver dimes for the thinner promises in the bottles.
Some of it did work, of course. Willow extract in alcohol for headaches and other pains, camphor liniment for joint and muscle pain, and the colicky baby syrup--sugar syrup with tiny amounts of cocaine--were all certainly effective, but most of our wares were simply alcohol tinctured with laudanum and a few herbs for flavoring and color. We mixed them up ourselves between stops.
We finally closed down as our esteemed customers headed off towards their evening repast, locking up the wagon and slipping up to the room we'd procured above the saloon.
I watched as my Esme unhooked her boots. "Did you see her?"
She slid one boot off before answering. "No, but we just got here. We had a pretty good sized crowd, but this town has a lot more people than I expected."
"I wasn't expecting it either; it had to have some size to have a full Wells, Fargo stop, but I wasn't thinking it would be this big. We may have to really look for her."
"I'll check the dancehall, I don't think she'd end up working there, not with her background, but the girls might remember her coming through here."