Sixes Wild: Manifest Destiny

Read Sixes Wild: Manifest Destiny Online

Authors: Tempe O'Kun

Tags: #Furry, #Fiction

BOOK: Sixes Wild: Manifest Destiny
6.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Sixes Wild: Manifest Destiny
Tempe O'Kun
Sofawolf Press (2013)
Tags:
Furry, Fiction
Furryttt Fictionttt

On the frontier, death
runs close at hand--so close, some say the dead linger on as echos in
family heirlooms.

Armed with her late father's guns, a sharp wit, and a
quick pair of paws, the gunslinger known as 'Six Shooter' thought she
had a bead on her way in the world. That is, until a routine bit of
larceny drops her into the depths of some very unusual and dangerous
schemes.
Power-mad lions, mind-bending rock, and whispers from her dead
father: these a bunny can handle.
Falling in love with the local
sheriff, though... That's trouble.
 
 
 
 
by Tempe O’Kun
 
 
 
 
Acknowledgements:
 
Sincere thanks to my tireless editorial posse: Shiv, Robin, Rikoshi, Nic, Kyell, Jeff, Edward, and Angela. Other fine folks: Kendra for interpreting for Brian; Dave, Shane, and Will for firepower and the Table’s approval; and Barb, JD, Keiron, and Jen for validating my book about animal people in fancy hats. Kudos to Joe and John for bringing the book into the digital realm.
 
To Jeff, for the chance.
To Ang, for the gumption.
 
Furry Writers’ Guild ~ Cóyotl Award
Best Mature Novel of 2012
 
Sixes Wild: Manifest Destiny © 2011 by Tempe O’Kun. All rights reserved. • No portion of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the express written permission of the copyright holders. • Names, characters, and events portrayed in this publication are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead) is coincidental.
 
Cover and interior art © Shinigamigirl • shinigamigirl.com
Chapter and supplemental art © Yuki • furaffinity.net/user/yuki-chi
Published by: Sofawolf Press, Inc. • PO Box 11868 •
St. Paul, MN 55111-0868 • sofawolf.com
E-book edition: February 2013 • ISBN 978-1-936689-07-1

 

 

Cooler winds breathe through my fur, calling to mind other breath that’s been there.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

 

My name is Six Shooter, and this gun holds half my father’s echo.

The other half? Well, this gun’s mate now adorns that damnable lion’s mantle, just another carnivore trophy. He’s past due for a bullet— ah’ll be sure to pay him with interest... one of these days.

For the most of folks, echoes just give you an edge, a hint of the skills of somebody you lost, tying you to them across the afterlife. Your frontiersman granddaddy’s lucky fire striker might light every time for you, but it that’s the sum of it. Once upon a time, that’s all the guns were for me...

Paw still lingering on my revolver, I sit in the saddle, watching the Arizona sunset. Cooler winds breathe through my fur, calling to mind other breath that’s lingered there. I slip off my pony and tie it to a scrub brush.

I stroll past White Rock’s newest landmark — a great washout across the sand. A smile of pride swaggers across my muzzle. I feel like signing my name as I amble through the long shadows the town casts on it.

It’d be reckless, even by a gunslinging hare’s standards, to walk into town before dark. Nothing helps folk remember your face like a bounty on your head.

‘Yote howls rise and fall a ways off. That would unnerve other folk. Other folk’d also give them trouble, whereas I figure they got no shortage and am keen to leave ‘em to it. ‘Course, if ya believe a certain bloodhound deputy, my ears are so pricked to echoes now the ‘yotes might paint me up and have a dance around me.

I learned more about echoes than I ever cared to, during the business that saw me parted from my other gun. My daddy echoes through his guns— he knew them like the fur of his paws, and I certainly ain’t forgetting.

Since I’m here for the time being, I decide to make the time be useful. Reaching into the saddlebags, I pull out my cleaning kit and turn it over in my paws. Leather is soft, new, with a fancy foreign word tooled on the back. Lawbat says it means “freedom.” Glad he gets the idea about me.

Inside, there’s a couple of little brushes, cleaning rod, little bottle of oil, and a whole mess of flannel scrap. I spread a blanket on the sand, draw, and set down my iron, my back to a rock. I’m accustomed to this with two guns, always having one ready at paw. Walking the world with just the one makes a bun a twitch jumpy. I bite my lip and set myself to patience, if not ease.

Click the hammer back to half-cocked. Swing out the loading gate. Unload with ejector rod. One, two, three, four, five, six. Two’s empty— I feel no urge to blast myself in the hind paw.

Chill cuts through my fur, leaves me wanting for something warm wrapped around me. Damn blanket itches. I miss my lawbat... I remind myself I’m cleaning a gun, not sitting around a sewing circle. Hit the catch, pull the base pin, and tuck it in the corner of my mouth. Fix one of the little flannel squares onto the cleaning rod, swabbing out the barrel and chambers. Only when the last one comes out clean do I know I’m done.

Other books

The Butcherbird by Geoffrey Cousins
Midnight Shadows by Lisa Marie Rice
The Forgotten War by Howard Sargent
Bullyville by Francine Prose
Arms of Nemesis by Steven Saylor
Matilda Bone by Karen Cushman
Birth of a Killer by Shan, Darren
Animals by Emma Jane Unsworth