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The Magic Hat |
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The shop was called “Western Outfitters” and it was on a side street in
the historic district in old Tombstone, an 1890’s sliver-mining town in
southern Arizona, turned into a tourist trap that is well worth an
afternoon’s visit. The Chamber of Commerce brochure reads…
The main street is
remarkably restored into something like its original wild-west roots. This
is the scene of the OK Corral where Wyatt Earp, "Doc" Holliday,
Virgil Earp and Morgan Earp fought the Clantons and McLaurys. Shoot-outs
are re-enacted several times a day for the tourists, and residents and
shopkeepers wear period customs to give the place color.
I had spent the day taking in all of the options, a carriage ride
tour, the gunfight, drinks at Mad Mary’s, and museums like the fabled
“BirdCage”. The shopkeeper, a
wizened old lady dressed in Indian garb of a vintage that predated the
mining town, approached me and said, “you are looking for something
special?” I told her I wanted a cowboy hat that fit me and that the
ladies wouldn’t laugh at me for wearing. She gave me a knowing grin and
said, “I have a special hat for you”.
She disappeared into the back of the store and soon emerged
carrying a black hat with a gold band.
I tried it on and couldn’t believe it. It fit perfectly and I
liked the way it looked. I
said, “I’ll take it, how much?”
When she said ten dollars, my mouth must have dropped open.
I had looked at so many hats ranging from $50-$200 that the price
seemed unreal. Why, I’ll
bet hats like that haven’t sold for ten dollars since the 1890’s.
I gave her the money and she said, “Put it on right away, it will
bring you good luck. I didn’t have an
opportunity to wear it again for another two weeks, but a trip to an
outdoor Country bar on a Saturday night seemed like just the right
occasion. I donned my jeans
and Stewart boots, a white shirt and my new hat, and I was off to the
races. I hadn’t been there but 20 minutes when a handsome woman standing
next to me making idle conversation suddenly asked me to dance.
I showed her my best Arizona Two-step, and when the music ended, we
walked back to where we were previously standing.
No sooner had the band started playing again when a different lady
asked me to dance and off I went again.
Before the hour past, no less than four women had asked me to
dance. That hasn’t happened to me since I was 16.
It had to be the hat. I keep it carefully
hidden away in a dark closet now. I plan to wear it again this weekend,
but I need to be careful with it. It must have some powerful magic. I have this feeling that if I went back to Tombstone to look
for that shop, that it might not even be there. Probably closed up a
hundred years or so ago.
J Gene Ziegler |
