Tag Archives: cowboy

“Jack of All Trades, Revenant” Flash Fiction by Moss Springmeyer

Nobody had seen him since the fall. After sheepherding, he’d come by Crooked Creek Ranch to bathe and leave his summer’s pay with my grandparents for safekeeping; had hooked up the field cultivator to spread and work the summer’s worth of chicken manure into a small alkali flat that was a thriving hay meadow in my grandfather’s mind’s eye; had been seen loafing and sipping on Picon Punch at the bar in the Basque restaurant in Mica; had stopped over at the Shooting Star Ranch to shine as a deft roper during their autumn branding and arranged to winter there in exchange for maintaining their tack and harness. As usual in the fall, he had scooped up his prospecting gear from the Dreaming Lion Ranch and headed south. That was the last anybody had seen of him. 

He would usually have been back as October’s warm spell, Indian Summer, was cooling, before bitter cold and deep snow were serious risks in the mountains. Here in the valley, he would set trap lines for the winter. Maybe he had sensed bad winter coming and headed south on the eternal search for gold (or golden solitude with no responsibilities), far enough south that the Sonoran desert held him, ever promising but never delivering, all winter long. But, then, he would have drifted back to the Beckworth Meadows by April in time for lambing, spring round-ups, and deep disking the vegetable gardens. Yet he did not come. People began to wonder if the early snow had caught him and the Tormentoso winter had devoured him.

Then, a very old pickup truck rattled and clattered up to the Crooked Creek ranch house and out tumbled a disreputable looking bundle with a wild bushy beard and an unkempt mane. A pick and rucksack and a fat, 6’ square object (later revealed to be a cattail quilt) spilled out after him. He straightened up, squared his shoulders, futilely smoothed the mane, strode to the door, knocked, and then bowed respectfully to my grandmother. She stood stock still, then greeted him stirring warmth with exasperation. She jerked her head sideways. Obediently, Luke walked around the house to the patio facing east.

He set a wooden stool beside the galvanized metal washtub, then placed another nearby. He began shedding fabric, furs, feathers and cattail fuzz. Even stripped down, he still sported an unfamiliar fur. There was a terrible stink, but maybe he was used to it. He sat in sunlight, absorbed in simply being. He was the scrawniest man I had ever seen.

My grandmother came out in a canvas  apron and perched on the other stool. Luke hung his head and offered her his left arm — looking close you could see that his fur was not natural, but rather involved a ruin of weirdly dark and hairy waffle-cloth long underwear. Waffle cloth is normally a light oatmeal color, with bright narrow raised edges around square hollows, the squares about half an inch on a side. But not this version. 

She looked at his arm and then up into his eyes and shouted, “I’ve never seen a man go without a bath so long that his body hair’s grown through his Long Johns!” His body hair had wound its way through the waffle cloth, encasing him in an outer skin that was both him and not him.

With firm, deft, graceful movements, she began clipping the wiry hairs down close to the cloth. Remonstrating and occasionally expostulating — I could not hear the words — she eased the first two fingers of her left hand under the cuff of the sleeve, working it a little loose. She drew out a pair of nail scissors with the right hand, slid them in, and snipped. One square of the waffle cloth was detached. Relentlessly, but unhurriedly, she worked her way around that wrist. Luke regarded it with bemusement, blew softly on his newly bare wrist, and smiled. 

She snipped and lifted her way around the next row of squares, then the next. Onward, she worked her way up from the wrist, first clipping the hairs on the outside and then working underneath the fabric. Having trimmed the hairs on the outside meant that on some of the squares,  the hairs slid through when she lifted the cloth with the scissors. Then, with a bigger scissors, she cut off the fabric. 

On the stubborn squares, she eased the nail scissors under the fabric. She snipped the hairs one by one to free the cloth.

She and Luke began to sing. In some places, the fabric disintegrated as she worked. Shadows glided from the west. Finally Luke stood, naked as a baby, the long underwear in rags about his feet, some sores and angry patches on his skin. 

Cowboys who had been moving furniture during the weekly mopping of the house’s concrete floor staggered out, carrying huge kettles to pour into the washtub. My grandmother returned to the house. Luke folded his skinny frame into the tub and sat there for half an hour. Then he grasped the scrub brush, worked up a good foam on the soap, and scrubbed — wherever the skin was whole — from the crown of his head to the soles of his feet. Then a dip to rinse. My grandmother returned, donned rubber gloves, dipped a washcloth in a bucket of clean water and carefully cleaned injuries and sores. After he toweled himself off, she set to work with the medicines. As the day waned, he was decorated, almost tattooed, with purple gentian violet and vermilion  mercurochrome on his sores and injuries, a wild and savage look, but recognizably human.

“Thank you Ma’am, Bless you for your kindness. Never again, Ma’am,” he promised. “Welcome back,” she said. “You’re a sight for sore eyes, even if not a pretty one.” They laughed.


.Moss Springmeyer strives to express the world (s) in a grain of sand. Moss’s resourceful, ageing werewolf stars in  “Fur-Break”, Spring 2024 Altered Reality (p. 16).   https://www.alteredrealitymag.com/spring-2024-issue/ . “Choirboy”  probes the glory and cruelty of a very special gift in Story Block 2, Spring 2024 The Green Silk Journal https://www.thegsj.com/current-issue-spring-.html.


Please share this story to give it maximum distribution. Exposure is our authors’ only pay. You can also help our contributors gain exposure by linking to them and to RFM’s homepage.

If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines

Financial donations through either our GoFundMe or Buy Me a Coffee accounts will help expand our global reach by paying for advertising, more advanced WordPress plans, and expansion into more extensive Content Delivery Networks.



Image generated by AI

“The Wind on the Wires” Short Story by Eolas Pellor

Jimmy watched Anne coming in from her ride, leading Albion by the reins. He leaned against the side of the old truck and watched her, still not quite believing she’d picked him. You’d never guess she was a city-girl, to see her ride. Just like you’d never guess that Jimmy had grown up in the shadow of steel mills, breathing in the sulphurous reek from the coke ovens night and day. They’d both grown up down East, a long way from Alberta, and she hadn’t wanted to move out here, so far from her family.

They’d broken up over it for a while, when he first came out West. He thought she’d never join him. After a while, she came, though; he’d saved up and sent her down the train fare, hoping, but not really believing, she’d come. She did. Love is like that, Jimmy thought.

“How’d the ride go?” he asked her, lifting a last bale of hay onto the back of the pickup. 

“It was good,” Anne answered. “There was a coyote out over the ridge. She had her pups out for a romp.” Nothing would convince Anne that coyotes were vermin, and Jimmy didn’t mind that, even if none of the people round here understood. It was just Anne seeing worth where others failed to; she’d realised there was something more to him, as well, when no one else had.

He drove toward the barn, slowly, while Anne rode alongside him. The setting sun glinted off her blonde hair and Jimmy wondered what she’d look like riding nude. His erection was instant and uncomfortable and he was glad it had subsided by the time they got back to the barn. 

While Anne gave Albion a quick rub-down, Jimmy tossed the bales of hay off the truck. By the time he’d hauled the first one up to the loft, she was beside him, and put her hand on the rope. They pulled together, and one by one, the last bales were stored.

“Isn’t it late in the year for coyote pups?” Jimmy asked her as they walked back to the house. Jimmy didn’t care what the answer was, really, he just liked to listen to Anne talk.

“I think it happens sometimes,” Anne said. “Maybe it’s a second litter. It was a good year; maybe there were enough mice and prairie dogs to feed them.” He watched her mouth form the sounds and thought about kissing her lips.

Anne had left the stew simmering since lunchtime; the aroma filled the kitchen as they came inside. After he washed up, Jimmy set the table while Anne laddled a generous helping onto his plate. Her own didn’t hold half as much.

“Are you feeling OK?” Jimmy asked, as he took a biscuit from the pile in the middle of the table.

“I’m fine,” Anne asked, but there was something in her voice that made him look at her more closely. She smiled at him and he could see her resemblance to the photograph on the wall. It was a picture of a silent movie star – Ann Dunn who had been famous back in the early days of Hollywood. Anne was named after her. Jimmy had never seen any of her movies, and Anne had told him that many of them were lost. Still, it was something to be married to a star’s grandniece.

“I called Dad earlier,” Anne said, pushing the food around on her plate. Jimmy suddenly felt unsettled; he often worried that Doug had never forgiven him for marrying his youngest daughter. Anne always told him that was silly; their elopement was long forgiven, if not forgotten. 

“How are they doing?” he asked, trying to keep his voice neutral.  Wherever Anne’s father was mentioned, his voice took a defensive edge. That was ridiculous, though. Jimmy had proven he could take care of Anne to Doug, to everyone.

“Pretty good,” Anne said. “You’re not mad, are you? I know it’s expensive. I just really needed to hear him and Mom.” She got up and fetched Jimmy a beer from the fridge while she spoke. Her hips moving under the tight, faded denim, distracted Jimmy. She didn’t take one for herself, but he was thinking about other things and didn’t notice. 

“He said Mom was wondering when we’d give them some grandkids.” Jimmy was about to say something flippant, when he glanced over at Anne. Her face was tilted down, as if she was looking at her plate, but he caught the flash of her blue eyes looking up at him through her bangs. 

She was hanging on his answer, though he didn’t know why. He took a pull from the bottle, then scooped up a forkful of stew, while he thought about what to say. 

“Aren’t we still kind of young to be having kids?” It wasn’t true, really. He was going to be 24 soon; Anne would be 20 in the Spring, but still looked like the 16 year-old he’d met working at the drive-in. 

“Not really,” Anne said. “My friend Karen has three kids already.” 

“Yeah, I know,” Jimmy replied. Karen had gotten pregnant with her first before she finished high school. When Anne dropped out to marry Jimmy, Doug had been furious that it was the same thing. It wasn’t though; Anne had made him wait until they were married. 

“I just think that we should get more settled first, you know?” he said.

It had seemed such a good idea to get married. Well, it was, but they’d rushed, Jimmy thought. He hadn’t got a real job, and Annie hadn’t finished her diploma. After a week their savings ran out and Anne had to move back with her folks. Jimmy had come out here but, to be honest, he’d been a bit of a jerk, leaving her behind. At the time, knowing his cousin had a job waiting for him out here had seemed important.

“You’ve been managing the ranch for a year now,” Anne replied. “We’ve got the whole house to ourselves.” His cousin owned the ranch, and another one besides, now. He’d given Jimmy a job and, bit by bit, Jimmy had worked his way up to manager; not bad for a guy who never finished high school.

“I know,” Jimmy agreed, grudgingly. “But, we’re still just kids. We should have some fun.” He wanted to say he couldn’t imagine Anne with babies when, almost at once, he saw it in his mind. It wasn’t a bad idea, but he didn’t feel ready; he still wanted to enjoy their time together. Kids were such a distraction; surely Anne could understand that.

“I guess,” Anne said, her tone flat. That was never a good sign. She picked up her plate and took it over to the sink. She’d barely touched anything. The phone rang, two shorts and a long; it was for them, but Anne made no move toward it. Jimmy hurried over to pick it up. 

“Macard residence,” he said. The link crackled a little; the wind on the wires made it do that, sometimes. The voice on the other end sounded very distant.

“Is that Jimmy? It’s Doc Nicholson here.”

“Yes Doc,” Jimmy answered, puzzled why Doc was calling. “What’s up?” He was distracted enough by Anne’s behaviour to miss the joke.

“You tell that little wife of yours her test came back,” Doc Nicholson said. “The answer is ‘yes.’ Congratulations.” Mystified, Jimmy set the phone black in its cradle. He turned to ask Anne what that was all about, but the screen door was swinging shut behind her. Jimmy followed her out on the porch. 

She was sitting on the double rocker, crying. It reminded him of the night they split up; Anne had cried then, and so had he, but not in front of her. When she refused to move out to Alberta with him he’d been certain that getting her diploma was more important to Anne than he was. But that wasn’t it at all. 

“Why are you crying? What’s going on, Anne?” Jimmy asked. “The Doc said the answer was ‘yes’, but what’s the question?” She looked up at him and shook her head. Jimmy sat down and pulled her into his arms. For a moment she struggled as if she wanted to get away, to get some space, but then she relaxed and lay against him.

“If you think I’m crying now, you should have seen me when I saw those coyote pups,” Anne said. “It was like they were the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen.”

Suddenly, Jimmy knew the answer. She lay her head on his shoulder, and he stroked her long hair, as the twilight deepened. One of the coyotes howled at the rising moon. Then its mate joined in.

Love is like that.


Eolas says: “My short stories have been published in Grim & GildedThe Word’s FairePulp Lit, and Agnes and True. My novelette “Party of the Second Part” appeared in Raiders of the Lost Plot: the 2024 Fark Fiction Anthology. My website ishttps://sites.google.com/view/eolaspellorwriter/home


If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines

Please share this post to give it maximum distribution. Exposure is our contributors’ only compensation. Don’t forget to back link to this.

Financial donations through either our GoFundMe or Buy Me a Coffee accounts will help expand our global reach by paying for advertising, more advanced WordPress plans, and expansion into more extensive Content Delivery Networks.



Image generated by AI

“Wild Oats of Home” Short Story by Terril L. Shorb

Desiree Permian’s vision blurred with tears when she found the page.  Encircled in red pencil was Introduction to Veterinary Science.  How could it have been eighteen years since that Junior College class launched her plan to be a veterinarian?  She had been sure her love of critters and straight-As in high school would sail her through the biology and chemistry courses.  But another kind of chemistry had diverted her—six-feet-two inches of it by the name of Will Permian.  She hadn’t been in the course three weeks when he proposed and Desiree dropped her books to pick up pitchforks, crescent wrenches and eventually a seven-pound wriggler christened JoAnn Mae Permian.

She had no regrets about the life she had made with Will and the girls here in the Valley.  It said right in the Good Book, though, there’s a time for all things under the sun.  So she had announced her time had come to begin driving the 21 miles to the J.C. to resume her veterinary classes.  Ellie and JoAnn said, “Cool, Mom.“  Will had offered no opinion until this morning when her hands were full of a mare’s forefoot and a hoof-rasp.  “I had to let the hired hand go.  Found him passed out in the haystack cuddling a whiskey bottle.  Need you to drive barley truck.”  Will’s voice was husky with genuine regret.  “Sorry it shuts the gate on your college thing.”

“I’m already through the gate, Will.”

Will stared at his dusty boots.  “Every available man or woman within fifty miles is on the harvest.  Maybe next year.”

Desiree gently put down the mare’s foreleg and was out of the barn before Will could gather himself to trot after her.

She paused on the screened-in porch, Sampsonite suitcase in hand.  She kissed Will, lay a finger across his questioning mouth.  “I’ll be back in a few days.”  He shuffled into her upraised palm.  “I will be back.  Please get the girls to town so they can buy their wardrobes for school.”

“I’m no good at that girl stuff,” he pouted.

Desiree restrained a giggle.  “They‘ll teach you.”

The old Ford growled up the rocky road above the ranch.  In the side mirror Desiree watched Will’s tall figure remain rigid with disbelief.  Not once in all their years had she walked away from him.  She held back tears, but never eased up on the gas pedal.  Where exactly was she going?  She had enough mad money to buy the distance needed to sort things out.  She could catch the vomit comet out of the county air park and drift over to Denver.  From there–where?  Vegas?  San Francisco?  A bungalow up in the Canadian Rockies?

She slowed for the cattleguard, scanned a track dogging the fence line to the high pastures.  Desiree wheeled onto the road.  Just can’t leave, right Dezi?  She could imagine Will’s gently teasing eyes.  Not so, but she needed one clear view of what she was leaving.  

She parked the Ford on Cain Mountain’s shoulder and walked through a stand of aspen tinged gold.  From this perch most of Lansome Valley lay revealed: Resolute rectangles of alfalfa and barley fields flanked the creek and its ruffles of cottonwoods and willows.  Far up-valley the Herm Ranch was a scatter of children’s blocks.  She had been born in one of those blocks and her parents still lived there.  A thousand feet directly below were glimmers of barn, machine shop, calving sheds, and her own house.  Inside, Will and the girls probably huddled around the big oak table to decipher the mystery of the absent wife and mother.

Desiree turned her gaze to the mountain itself, to its sun-cured grasses and splashes of summer’s last wildflowers.  “You’re all so very beautiful!”  Heart-shaped aspen leaves rattled as if to confirm her praise.  Her gaze returned to the valley and to a memory: A third-grade class project to make a paper mache relief map of the United States.  The Rocky Mountains were globs prodded into toothy shapes.  The teacher helped them daub on bright blue creeks and green fields.  All the children placed a gold star on the map to stand for their birthplace and their connection to the greater, geographic scheme of things.  Mrs. Stevens then said,  “Sad to say, children, most of you will leave the protection of your little gold star to make your lives elsewhere between the shining seas.”

Desiree now whispered, “Not me, Mrs. Stevens.  I haven’t left my gold star!”  Her entire life was bounded by these mountains, these pointy dollops on the map of the nation, which lay beyond her experience.  She lay back until the grasses curled around her like a lacy shawl. 

She awoke shivering in the mountain’s shadow.  The airport was an hour’s drive.  She leapt up, squinted down at the shadow line which had crawled to the house.  A rectangle glowed in the upper North bedroom–the girls’ room.  Desiree had stood in that same tall rectangle with her fingers stretched over her belly the night before JoAnn was born.  She had watched the sun disappear beyond the mountain named for her great-great grandparents.  Their log homestead, impossibly small, still stood in rumpled dignity two miles up the valley.  Likely, Grandma Cain had watched her own spot on the mountain crest and uttered prayers to the evening stars for the health of her child soon to breathe the sweet air of Lansome Valley.

The airport could wait.  Desiree retrieved a bedroll and emergency kit from the Ford.  The stars came on thick as frost crystals.  She gathered dry branches from the aspen grove and kindled a small fire away from the precipice and the gaze of anyone in the valley who might glance this way.  Reflection of flames gilded aspen under-leaves and she felt like some storybook princess in an enchanted forest.  A Great Horned owl hooted thrice from the higher darkness.  As if to answer, coyotes yipped from their lair across the valley.  Crickets ratcheted up love songs and a breeze brought delicious fragrances of pine and spruce trees.

Desiree left the fire and sat near the cliff‘s edge, staring tenderly at lights strewn along the valley floor like a strand of pearls.  These were the pearls of her life, her history.  An outsider might proclaim Desiree’s life hopelessly hobbled.  Desiree sometimes felt it too, especially when Will assumed demands of ranch-life always took precedence over her needs.  It could be claustrophobic living under a tiny golden star.  But it afforded something rare and good.   

Hers was a life of rich connections.  She was embroidered right into a quilt panel of bee hum and wild roses.  Morning sun that warmed her shoulders in the garden had fallen upon shoulders of five generations of Cains, Herms and Permians.  Generations of crickets had played their tunes for her ancestors under a starlit canopy that was an enduring roof–no matter what challenges life brought.  Hers was a gift of continuity in a world bent on transforming itself every seven seconds.  She recalled the old saw about not being able to appreciate one’s home until one left.  Well, a thousand feet of altitude had done it.

She no longer needed to fly away, but she did need this place on the durable mountain’s shoulder to prospect for gratitude in a life whose value could get buried in the strata of endlessly busy days.  How wonderful it would be to open an animal biology textbook up here on the mountain and read sentence after sentence without a teen-ager lobbying for maternal attention or a husband insisting that fence posts could not be properly tamped unless she were there to hold them.  When she drove back down into the valley tomorrow she would carry within a new spaciousness to stand resolutely for her right to embark upon the greatest journey of all–her formal education. 

Desiree stared into the campfire.  Sparks rose to dosey-do with the stars.  Anybody could run toward a new horizon.  But if you hunker down in a place you know and love, it is the world that moves toward you.  In a few hours the good earth would tip its forested crown to the flaming orb that touches all.  Desiree gave up a coyote yowl of greeting to that unseen but steadily approaching light.


Terril says of his life: “My life has been spent in rural areas of Montana, Wyoming, and Arizona.  It has been blessed with experiences as a rancher, subsistence farmer, agricultural journalist, teacher, and as photographer and writer.  My work has appeared in Range MagazineMontana MouthfulProjected LettersThe MacGuffinQU Literary JournalCargo Literary MagazinebioStories, and Green Teacher Magazine. “


Please share this story to give it maximum distribution. Exposure is our authors’ only pay. You can also help our contributors gain exposure by back linking to them and to RFM’s homepage.

If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines



Image generated by AI