
“And that’s another thing,” Herb said, with finality,
“Changing that dang year on everything we write, every January. Goes
against human nature.”
“Well I might just have an answer to your problem,
Herb,” said Doc, sipping and dunking and stirring. “Why don’t we,
here at the philosophy counter, pick out a year we like and stick
with it? Date everything we do with that year. It might start a
movement, you never know.”
Steve looked up from his coffee and twitched his
voluminous mustache then twitched it again to make sure he got
it right the first time.
“So Doc,” he said, “you’re saying we should just pick a year
and live with it? Okay, so which year would you pick?”
“I think it would have more of an effect if it would be the
same year for all of us here. My choice of year might not agree with
yours, you know.”
“I was thinking of 19 and 87, myself,” said Steve. “Won
the team roping that year. Got it on my belt buckle.”
“There you go. You got the right idea, Pard. Herb, how about
you?”
“Dog died. In ’87, I mean. Just woke up one morning and there
she was, dead. I couldn’t do ’87.”
“Sorry, Herb. Dud?”
“Haven’t got to that year yet, Doc,” Dud said. “It’ll be the
year I finish that darn book.”
We all nodded.
“If that there favor-ite year comes in the bowels of the
chicken yard, like it says in the Farmer’s Almanac, that’d be good,
doncha think?”
Doc nodded. “And which year would that be, Windy?”
“Ain’t sure. Don’t have no Farmer’s Almanac at the moment.”
“Let’s get some more coffee and give it some thought,” said
Herb.
“I’ll second that,” said Steve.
“Can’t,” said Windy. “Ain’t been firsted yet.”
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Brought to you by the genuine cowboy music and musings of Steve
Cormier up in New Mexico’s Sandia Mountains. Check him out at
stevecormier.net.