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The rapid-fire champion chose a man at random from the crowd… He had no idea that…

And because there was nothing in that part of Wyoming on a summer evening that could compete with the smell of horses and dust and the particular electricity of 500 people waiting for something to  happen. John Wayne had not come for the rodeo. He had driven up from his property outside Tucson 3 days earlier looking at horses, working horses, not showpieces, the kind you could trust in rough country.

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And a man he’d done business with for years had mentioned, almost in passing, that a rancher outside Cody had exactly what he was looking for. So, Wayne had driven north, no assistant, no publicist, no itinerary, the way he preferred to travel when travel was for business rather than performance. He was 49 years old that August and he moved through the world differently when nobody was watching, quieter, slower, less of what people expected and more of what he actually was.

He ended up at the Roundup by accident. The horse deal was done by noon and the ranch foreman, a lean sun-damaged man named Abilene Potts, who had lived in Cody his whole life and treated visiting celebrities with the measured indifference of someone who had better things to think about, mentioned that Dale Rorque was doing his annual demonstration that evening.

Said it the way you mention weather. Take it or leave it. Wayne took it. Notice what he looked like walking into that arena because it matters for everything that comes after. Dark trousers, a plain work shirt, a canvas jacket that had seen better decades. No hat. He’d left it in the truck. No holster. He found a seat in the middle of the general admission section, bought a paper cup of coffee from a boy walking the rows, and settled in the way a man settles when he has nowhere else to be and no reason to hurry. The people around him did not

recognize him. A woman two seats over glanced at him once and went back to watching the warm-up acts. A boy of about 10 asked him if that seat was taken. Wayne said, “No, it wasn’t.” And the boy sat down and didn’t look at him again. This was exactly how Wayne liked it and he understood, without needing to think about it, that it was the hat.

People expected John Wayne to look like John Wayne and John Wayne without a hat in the middle of Wyoming was just a large weathered man of a certain age who looked like he knew something about horses. Before we go on, if you’re watching this on TV and you’ve never subscribed to this channel, we’re still under 1,000 subscribers and we’re just getting started.

A subscribe from your phone or tablet takes 5 seconds and it’s the only way to make sure the next story finds you. Dale Rorque took the arena at 7:15. He came in from the south gate the way champions enter, not rushing, not performing, just moving through the space as if the space had been designed specifically to hold him, which in some sense it had.

Rorque was 43 years old, thick through the chest and shoulders with the kind of hands that came from doing real work with them for a long time. He had been the fast draw champion of the Cody Roundup for 12 consecutive years, which was not a record that invited casual comparison. Before Rorque, the record had been four. The crowd knew him.

You could feel it in the way the noise changed when he walked in. Not louder exactly, but different, the way a room changes when someone enters who belongs there more completely than anyone else. Rorque acknowledged this with a single nod. The gesture of a man who had accepted his position long enough that it no longer required comment.

He set up at the draw line, ran through his equipment check, the kind of check that looks like habit but isn’t. Every motion deliberate and sequenced. And then he turned to the crowd. Listen to what he said because this is where the evening stopped being a demonstration and became something else. “I need a volunteer.” Rorque said,  his voice carrying easily in the summer air.

“Anyone here think they can draw faster than me, step down.” He paused. “Man, woman, doesn’t matter. Young, old, doesn’t matter.” Another pause, shorter. “Cowboy, city man, movie star.” He said this last part with a half smile, looking out at the crowd, and the crowd laughed. “All the same to me.” He was scanning as he spoke, not randomly.

Rorque had done this 12 times before and he knew what he was looking for. Not the young men in the front rows who were sitting forward in their seats hoping to be chosen because those men were dangerous in the wrong way. Not the obvious ranchers  and working cowboys who would know what they were doing and make the demonstration competitive when it was supposed to be educational.

He was looking for something specific. His eyes moved across the general admission  section and stopped. The large man in the canvas jacket sitting in the middle of the row, paper coffee cup in one hand, no hat, no holster, relaxed in a way that could be read from a distance as the relaxation of someone who had no idea what fast draw involved.

Rorque had seen every John Wayne picture. He recognized the face and he recognized in the same instant the opportunity. Here was John Wayne sitting in the crowd at the Cody Roundup without a hat, without a holster, looking for all the world like a man who had wandered into the wrong event. And here was Dale Rorque, 12-time champion, with 500 people watching, with a newspaper photographer somewhere in the stands, with the particular kind of pride that builds over 12 consecutive years of being the best at one thing, a real

cowboy versus a movie cowboy, in front of the whole town on a summer evening in Wyoming. Rorque pointed, “You, come down.” The crowd looked. >>  >> The crowd saw what Rorque had seen, a large, hatless, holsterless man with a paper coffee cup, and the crowd drew the same conclusion Rorque had drawn and found it funny, the way a mismatch is always funny before anyone understands what they’re watching.

Wayne looked at the finger pointing at him. He looked at it for a moment with an expression that gave nothing away. Then he handed his coffee cup to the boy sitting next to him and stood up. Stop here and understand something about what Dale Rorque had actually done because this is the part the story always gets wrong. Rorque was not being cruel.

He was not being reckless. He was being strategic in the way that experienced competitors are always strategic, which is to say he was choosing his terrain and his opponent at the same time. He had watched Wayne’s pictures. He knew Wayne could handle a gun on screen. He also knew that on screen and in arena were different worlds, that movie gun work was choreography and demonstration gun work was mechanics, and that the mechanics of fast draw, the specific practiced repetitive mechanics of it, belonged to men who had done nothing

else for years. Wayne was an actor, a famous one, a convincing one, but an actor. Rorque had 12 years of doing one thing and doing it right. The outcome seemed clear. And what Rorque could not have known, what nobody in that arena could have known, and what would take 18 years to fully understand, was why he would never ask for a volunteer again after tonight.

It seemed clear to the crowd, too. As Wayne made his way down from the general admission section to the arena floor, the laughter followed him. Not mean laughter exactly, more the laughter of people who think they know how a story ends. A few people called out. Someone said something about Hollywood. Someone else said something about the movies.

Wayne walked through it the way he walked through most things, >>  >> which was steadily and without apparent concern for what was happening around him. He reached the arena floor. Rorque’s assistant handed him a range holster, standard equipment, properly fitted. Wayne took it with one hand, the leather warm from sitting in the afternoon sun, and put it on with the ease of a man who had done it 10,000  times.

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