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Coyote
Canyon was a dusty, dirty little town smack in the middle of the desert,
nestled quietly near the end of some salmon pink hills known as the
Coyote Range. It was a little bigger than a one horse town, rumor
having it there were three nags living in the area. The wind blew
in more visitors than the rocky trail that ran through the middle
of town invited in. Everything there was dusty, dirty and mean looking,
but none was grimier or slimier than the local sheriff, "Sam
the Rattler".
He
had folks shivering at the sound of his tail as it rat-a-tat-tatted
all over town. Sam used to be an ordinary rattlesnake living in the
desert on the outskirts of town. He minded his own business and ate
the odd neighbor, just like any other snake. He had no dream of being
a sheriff or running a town. He dreamt of eating everyone in town,
but that’s about as far as it went. I guess that sheriff’s
badge had other plans, because it seemed to be waiting for him in
Coyote Canyon as he slithered around in the hot sand.
As
time went by Sam got bigger and bigger as the local population got
less and less. Sam’s appetite was a little too hardy for the
neighbor’s liking. It seemed like there wasn’t anyone
or anything that he wouldn’t eat. Folks told of a time when
he swallowed a jackrabbit so big, that the fat old snake had to lie
around in the sand, not moving, for days. The lump in his belly was
so darned heavy he couldn’t budge. The only neighbors that were
safe from his appetite were the Armadillo Cowboys that lived at the
Rock Hard Ranch, a mile or two down the road. They were too big to
swallow, too tough to chew and too rubbery to digest. And they seemed
to be smarter than most folk. They conjured up some real interestin’
gizmos and contraptions. Nothing could get at those “armor-dillos”.
News
of Sam and his ever increasing appetite spread into Coyote Canyon
and folks started locking their doors and windows at night. The last
thing you’d want to happen is wake up in the morning and find
your aunt Sarah in the middle of a big old rattler. So, as everyone
was worrying about being eaten by Sam, a pack of cunning coyotes in
the nearby hills got the ideas that the timing was perfect for them
to go take over the town.
After
all, who better to run Coyote Canyon than a pack of cagey coyotes?
At sunrise the pack quietly padded into town. They were five desperados
with fangs bared and their ears back looking mean and nasty and ready
for trouble. One by one they took over the local saloon, the general
store, the barbershop and the blacksmith’s without taking a
bite out of a single person. It was like letting a fox into a hen
house. The coyotes had a great old time eating the townsfolk’s
food, drinking their sodas and dancing with their women. Their behavior
was downright shameful!
One
night, as the coyotes lay sleeping on the saloon floor tuckered
out from too much two-steppin’, a town meeting was held. The
townsfolk had about enough of the coyotes and wanted to run them
out of Coyote Canyon. The only ones brave enough to come forward
were the three nags, Sadie, Laura-Lee and Sundown. They thought
for sure with their size, strength, big hooves and expertise in
"nagging" they could scare just about anyone out of town.
The next morning, the coyotes woke up to three big mares hovering
above them at the bar. Sadie stepped on one of their tails with
her front hoof and sent him off yelping and squealing. Laura-Lee
kicked one of the biggest coyotes right out of the saloon doors,
down the street past the general store. That mean old coyote was
branded with a hoof print on his behind for life. Then Sundown,
the big bay mare, started in on the rest of the pack with some nagging
about how, since they had taken over the town, things were falling
apart … fences needed mending… roof needed fixing…
chores not done… and on and on and on until sundown. That
nag came by her name honestly and lived up to it well that day.
Folks thought it was some of the best darn nagging she had ever
done. The next morning, the coyotes were still there. Seems they
were a lot tougher than anyone thought.
A
second meeting was called and somehow, out of desperation, "Sam
the Rattler’s" name came up. It seemed logical that if
you want to scare away someone big and nasty, that you needed someone
even bigger and nastier. Sam was that for sure, and his appetite had
grown big enough that he might be able to eat a coyote or two. Who
knows, maybe he could eat the whole pack. The only problem was, who
was going to fetch Sam? Anyone that went too close to his hole was
sure enough eaten. After a lot of humming and hawing, Katie the kangaroo
rat came up with a darned good idea. She said they should go get the
Armadillo Cowboys to fetch Sam. The Armadillos were the only folks
Sam couldn’t put his mouth around. There wasn’t anything
fierce enough or tough enough to scare them. They were darned near
invincible with those armor-like plates across them.
Everyone
agreed, so Katie quietly hopped out the back door out of the coyote’s
sight and set off across the hot desert sand. She came upon Dilly the
Kid, Wyatt Dirt and Rock Holiday, the best of the Armadillo Cowboys.
They were three of the dustiest, dirtiest, biggest armadillos this side
of New York City. It looked like someone stuffed them into their boots.
Their hats were so darned big, you could barley see their face, except
for the long nose poking out. But when they smiled, you could see they
were good folk.
They
had a rickety old jalopy that had a few too many spare parts, full
of lasso ropes, some of biggest sling shots you ever did see and a
bunch of new fangled Armadillo contraptions. They were practicing
their roping with a few stray jackrabbits. They had lassos that twirled
in the air, like a tornado, just kicking up the dust and picking up
anything in its path. Never seen anything like it! "Howdy Miss
Katie" Dilly hollered through the dust and wind. "What brings
you out these ways this fine day?" "Townsfolk need your
help something awful. We’ve been taken over by a pack of five
of the meanest, nastiest, bad mannered, horrible dancers in the west.
We’ve tried everything to get rid of these coyotes but we can’t
clear
them out. We need Sam the Rattler to come and eat a few of those boys
and put them in their place. Problem is, if I go ask him, I’ll
end up being a morning snack. Think you boys could rustle up that
old rattler for me?" Well, being the goodhearted cowboys that
they were, they sure enough wanted to help the folks of Coyote Canyon.
The
three armadillos strode on over to the big old hole in the ground
that was feared by every mouse, lizard and creature in the desert.
Sam was sleeping inside, hiding from the hot morning sun. He heard
some serious stomping of heavy feet above him and woke him up meaner
than a bear out of hibernation. He stuck his head above the ground
and found himself staring at twelve dusty cowboy boots. "Howdy,
you big, ugly rattler, who are you eating today?" grinned Dilly
the Kid. Sam was a little agitated and hissed angrily "Your ssss…
sssss… sister and she’s sss… sss …scrumptious."
"Look you old buzzard face, we didn’t come here for a fight.
We came here for your help" snarled Wyatt Dirt. "Coyote
Canyon has been taken over by a pack of mean coyotes and folks figure
that you’re the only big, mean and ugly enough to scare them
away," he finished.
"And
what makes you think I’d want to help you sss… ssss…
silly… sss… sss… shelled cowboys?" "Well,
we figure you owe them a favor or two considering you’ve eaten
half of their relatives. Besides, it gives you a chance to go after
one of the biggest meals you’ve ever had. Doesn’t a couple
of coyotes on a bun sound darn tasty to you?" asked Rock Holiday.
Sam thought for a moment and decided maybe it was about time he stretched
his appetite to include something bigger. "Let’s sss…
sss… scadaddle boy and go rustle up a couple of coyotes for
lunch."
So, the three armadillos and the big old rattler headed back to town.
They were ready for a showdown. The Armadillos stopped off at their
ranch and rustled up a few of their best lassos, some sling shots,
a few bee stingers, knock out potions that Rock had made up from Sam’s
venomous spitting sessions and then polished up their armor. Good
guys vs. bad guys, armadillos vs. coyotes, big fat old rattler vs.
lunch! The coyotes stepped out of the Wet Your Whistle Saloon and
lined up to face their foes. They figured it was their five against
four … easy pickings.
Besides
they were armed and ready with their six shooters- big old rifles
filled with rocks and nasty old bugs that could sting through the
hide of an elephant. All of the townsfolk gathered around to watch,
hardly able to breathe with all the excitement. The armadillos and
Sam formed a straight line about twenty feet in front of the coyotes.
They just stood staring down at the coyotes, not moving or even blinking.
The coyotes started laughing and howling thinking these boys were
just plumb chicken. They made jokes about the cowboy’s boots
and said their momma was a cow and yelled “arm-moo-dillo!”
They said Sam was so fat he looked like he’d swallowed the stagecoach.
Then they got closer and closer and started kicking dust in his face.
Sam
and the cowboys didn’t budge, not even an inch. Then the coyotes
took out their six shooters and aimed for the Cowboys, with bugs and
rocks flying all over the place. Billy the Bumble bee flew out first
and aimed right for Wyatt, but he had never tried to sting an “armor-dillo”.
He hit the bony plates and bounced off so hard he flew right into
the middle of the next week! When the rocks started hitting, they
ricocheted off those hard bony bellies all over town. Windows were
breaking; women were hiding and the men folks just stood in amazement.
The
coyotes were having so much fun they got foolish and careless. They
loved all the mess and screaming. They had never fought cowboys like
this. This was the best fun ever. “Hey ya’ll what you
boys made of?” they howled at the Armadillos. They loaded up
more bugs and more rocks and laughed and hollered as they saw a Danny
the Dragon Fly get stuck in the armor. He was right smack on top of
Dilly’s belly, just buzzing and flappin’.
Before
they knew it, the coyotes laughed and stumbled around so much, they
found themselves sitting right in front of Sam and the Armadillos,
laughing and scratching without a care in the world. Sam looked to
his left and then to his right and then gave the signal to Wyatt Dirt.
Wyatt smoked them with some skunk gas, smacked them with the snake
bite bullets, and belted them, with bees from their sling shots.
Then
before you could say leaping lizards, two coyotes had been swallowed
whole. Well, you’ve never heard such yelping and howling as
what came out of the other three coyotes. They went downright crazy.
The three Armadillos reached behind their backs, pulled out their
time defying lassos and swung them above their heads. On the count
of three, they had them roped and hog-tied. They tied them to a hitching
post and put a sign on each of their backs, "Monday’s lunch",
"Wednesday’s lunch", and "Friday’s dinner."
They figured it would take Sam at least a couple of days between meals
that big. Vinnie the Vulture flew overhead looking for leftovers,
swooping down to smell the Coyotes. He figured he would just follow
the Armadillos around from here on in, and there would be pickins’
for sure.
So
the town was saved and Sam had his meals planned for a week. Sam was
made local sheriff and the Armadillos appointed as his deputies. They
had become the town heroes. Those good old boys showed them that a
little “smarts” and a tough skin can win any battle. They
opened up a new saloon called the Armor-dillo Cowboy Club and everyone
drank cactus cocktails telling their tales. A deal was made between
Sam and the townsfolk from that day forward, "no more eating
the local folks or their relatives, but anyone that broke the law
or threatened Coyote Canyon was fair game". That way, the town
would always be safe and Sam would always be full. And the Armor-dillos?…
well they lived to become true legends of the west, a breed of the
toughest old boys you ever did see. They traveled from town to town
in their dusty boots leaving a trail of footprints that made even
the nastiest boys quiver with dread.
THE
END
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