Recently, I attended a small gun show in Southern New
Mexico. You would not believe the number
of people who actually seemed to be preparing for the Zombie Apocalypse. Or maybe they were making a movie about the First
World War--it was a little hard to tell from what they were selling.
This was a fairly small show, but I can remember much bigger
shows. When I lived in Galveston, a
friend of mine, Colonel Klink, was the range officer for the local police
department. I’ll leave it to your
imagination how he got the nickname, but twice a year Klink and I would drive
to Houston and attend a gun show at the Astrodome Complex. That show was enormous, and it was almost
impossible to see all the tables in a single day. You could find anything you wanted at that
show—from an elephant gun in .600 Nitro Express to a vintage BB gun.
Klink and I loved that show, we looked forward to it,
discussed what we wanted to find, what we hoped to see and which antique firearms
we might get a chance to actually hold in our hands. While we rarely bought anything, we really loved
that show. There was only one small
problem: Steve.
Have you ever had one of those friends that you didn’t dislike, but you never quite liked? The husband of my wife’s college roommate, Steve,
was an obnoxious pharmacist with decidedly more money than brains, and while we
certainly didn’t want Steve to go to the show with us, somehow he always
managed to bum a ride. And for Steve,
the best part of the trip was that he could actually afford to purchase what Klink and I could only look at.
The ride from Galveston to the Astrodome took over an hour,
and Steve would sit in the back seat of the car listening to Klink and me talk
about what we hoped to see at the gun show.
Now, Steve didn’t know enough about guns to figure out which end of a
rifle to put up to his shoulder, but he knew enough to sit in the back of the
car and learn what it was that we liked.
And as soon as we got to the show, he would disappear among the tables
and we wouldn’t see him again until the prearranged time for us to meet at the
car for the ride back to Galveston. And
invariably, Steve would have purchased whatever it was that Klink and I had discussed
on the ride to the show.
That was always a long ride back to Galveston. There is not much in life worse than a
greedy, nasty little child with a new toy that he damn sure will not
share. Steve would gloat all the way
home. Worse, whatever it was that he had
purchased that day was never quite the same for Klink and me. The very fact that Steve owned the gun
tarnished it just as assuredly as if Steve had stored it in a bucket of salt
water. Something had to be done.
Many beers later, Klink and I finally decided that we would
try to get Steve to buy the most useless, ridiculous, and absurd gun ever made
this side of France. So Klink and I had
to do some research, and there was only one possible scholarly journal to turn
to: Shotgun News. In those days, Shotgun News was a weekly
magazine--each issue about the size and thickness of the Sunday New York
Times. It wasn’t actually a “news”
newspaper—it was more like an “advertising” newspaper. Every gun made and sold in the world was
advertised in that paper. Klink and I
spent an afternoon searching for the perfect--actually the least perfect—gun.
Eventually, we selected a winner.
Or is that a loser?
Strangely, this gun is STILL being made. It is a derringer--one of those very small
handguns with two barrels--one superimposed over the other--that supposedly can
be used for self-defense. Well, not
really. There are a couple of small
problems with derringers. First, the gun
has practically no grip, so at most you can wrap about two fingers around the
gun. This means that it is fairly hard
to hold unless the cartridge you are shooting is too small to be of much use. Secondly, the sight radius (the distance between
the front and rear sight) is so short that you cannot hit anything with the
gun. So the derringer is a gun whose
time never was. At best, the gun is of
marginal use unless you use a very small cartridge and get your attacker to obligingly
hold the end of the barrel in his mouth.
Which is why it is so strange that the company offers a
model chambered for .45-70 (a rifle cartridge).
This is a huge cartridge, so long that the tip of the bullet is flush
with the end of the barrel. This is the
firearm equivalent with putting a short block V8 engine on a wheelbarrow.
Well, the day of the next gun show finally came, and once
again Steve begged a ride from us. On
this trip, Klink and I focused on how much we craved a .45-70 derringer. “What a perfect self-defense gun!” we
said. “It will tear apart a rhino, if
needed.” And so forth and so on for over
an hour.
As soon as we arrived at the show, Steve was off like a shot
(if you will pardon the pun). Klink and
I spent the rest of the day looking at new scopes and shotguns, somewhat
blissful in the knowledge that somewhere in the Astrodome, a moron was
attempting to purchase a midget elephant gun.
And when we gathered back at the car that afternoon, sure
enough, Steve had his prize. The damn
thing was the smallest gun firing the largest cartridge that either Klink or I
had ever seen. All the way home to
Galveston, Steve bragged about that gun, and I will admit that Klink and I
encouraged him, because, this was only step one of our plan. We didn’t take Steve home; we drove directly
to the island’s gun range--we wanted to see Steve shoot the monster.
The police gun range had a 25’ pistol range that was just
perfect. The firing position was covered
with a corrugated metal roof to provide both a little shade and some protection
from the rain. Steve, however, was smart
enough to realize that 25 feet was a little extreme for his gun, so he moved
halfway to the target. Although Klink
and I were a good 30-40 feet away, I can still picture him standing there, left
hand on his hip, his right arm extended as he carefully lined up the two inch sight
radius on his portable howitzer. And I
can absolutely remember him firing
it.
BOOM! Oww! Clang!
The boom was the noise that impossible gun made. The painful oww noise was from Steve; his
right arm seemed to be pointing somewhat crookedly up and slightly behind
him. The clanging noise was the
derringer coming down on the metal roof a dozen feet behind Steve. Strangely, Steve seemed to have missed the
target.
Using a broom, and standing on Klink’s shoulders, we managed
to retrieve the derringer. I don’t think
I ever saw Steve again after that day and I doubt that Klink did either. I know I can remember the last thing that
Steve ever said to either of us.
“You guys want to shoot it?”
Wasn't a derringer the type pf gun used to shoot (not so much kill) Lincoln?
ReplyDeleteYep. A real Henry Deringer (note the spelling difference) .44 flintlock, 6 inches long. He shot Lincoln at point blank range, dropped the single shot gun and fought his wife out of the box with a Bowie knife. Any gun can kill, but that doesn't make it a good gun.
ReplyDeleteThat gun range in Galveston had the Gulf of Mexico behind it. But that bullet that Steve fired came down somewhere.
Max Stanley, the Northrup test pilot, once said, "The Piper Cub is the safest airplane in the world. It can just barely kill you."
ReplyDeleteAnd so it is with the derringer.
Nice picture.
ReplyDeleteI think that we enjoy photos of airplanes, fine cars, and guns because they are all fine machines perfectly refined by function. The old saw about 'Form follows fnction' works perfectly with such devices.
Delete"There is not much in life worse than a greedy, nasty little child with a new toy that he damn sure will not share."
ReplyDeleteThat's the difference between a rival and a good friend. If Steve had used his wealth to supply guns for a mutual stockpile and loaned them to you, then he probably would have been much more popular.
I've thought about that. It's a pity that the only way to try a gun is usually to buy one for yourself, or hope that a private indoor range has one to rent. Maybe, if you're very lucky, you might have a friend who has similar taste.
I have considered forming a social club, where we all go to the range together and try things out. I'm older than most of my friends, and have a larger collection. Hence, I often let others try my guns, so they can learn what they like or don't.